Constantine of Kostenets
Template:Short description Constantine of Kostenets (Template:Langx; c. Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". – after 1431),[1] also known as Constantine the Philosopher (Template:Lang-sr-Cyrl-Latn), was a medieval Bulgarian scholar, writer and chronicler, who spent most of his life in the Serbian Despotate. He is best known for his biography of Serbian despot Stefan Lazarević, which George Ostrogorsky described as "the most important historical work of old Serbian literature",[2] and for writing the first Serbian philological study, Skazanije o pismeneh (A History on the Letters). He followed the writing style of the Old Serbian vita, first made popular in the Serbian scriptoria of the 12th century.
Biography
Constantine was born in Bulgaria, probably in Kostenets. In his youth, he attended school in the capital Veliko Tarnovo, and was taught by Andronik, a pupil of Patriarch Evtimiy of Bulgaria. He continued his studies on Mount Athos and in Constantinople. The Ottoman conquest of Tarnovo in 1393 drove him away and he settled in Stefan Lazarević's Serbian Despotate, probably around 1402. He was warmly welcomed by the Despot, also a man of letters and a benefactor of education, and was given the position of educator at his palace in Belgrade. Constantine also frequented the Manasija monastery, where he helped establish the Serbian "Resava School" of literature. His high education, life experience and traveling earned him the nickname of "Filozof" (Philosopher), after Saint Cyril the Philosopher. On top of the travels in his youth, he traveled to the Holy Land and, judging by his description of three missions to the palaces of eastern rulers (Timur, Musa and Mehmed I), he may also have participated.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
After the Despot's death in 1427, Constantine left Belgrade and entered into the service of kesar Uglješa Vlatković, in the area of Vranje, where he later died.Template:Sfn
Constantine's work had a tremendous impact on medieval Serbian literature and education. He introduced many classical Greek elements of literature and philosophy. His frequent citing of ancient philosophers and comparisons of the Despot in the Biography caused many to consider him a precursor to the Renaissance which, due to the Ottoman conquest, never occurred in Serbian culture.Template:Sfn
Biography of Despot Stefan Lazarević
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Legacy
Constantine of Kostenets, Pachomius the Serb, Cyprian, Metropolitan of Kiev, and Gregory Tsamblak were able to continue their literary activities virtually unhampered by any linguistic barrier when moving from the Balkans to Imperial Russia, no different than the role of Latin literature in the Roman Catholic part of medieval Europe. Constantine spoke and wrote a language which could not be identified with either the Bulgarian or Serbian vernaculars. Therefore, it was only natural for medieval Serbian biographers to turn for models to the body of existing vitae written in either Slavonic-Serbian or Church Slavonic language.
See also
References
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Sources
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Further reading
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- "Живот и дейност на Константина Костенецки", Юрдан Трифонов, Списание БАН 66, 1943, pp 223–292. Template:In lang
External links
- Pages with script errors
- 15th-century Bulgarian writers
- Serbian historians
- 15th-century Serbian writers
- 15th-century historians
- Bulgarian male writers
- Medieval Christian devotional writers
- Christian philosophers
- Serbian people of Bulgarian descent
- 1380 births
- 1431 deaths
- Bulgarian philosophers
- 15th-century philosophers
- People from the Serbian Despotate
- Medieval Athos
- Medieval European scribes
- Tarnovo Literary School
- People associated with Mount Athos