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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GAG-GEO |
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GAZA, THEODORUS (c. 1400-1475) , one of the Greek scholars who were the leaders of the revival of learning in the 15th century, was born at Thessalonica. On the capture of his native city by the Turks in 1430 he fled to Italy. During a three years' residence in Mantua he rapidly acquired a competent knowledge of Latin under the teaching of Vittorino da Feltre, supporting himself meanwhile by giving lessons in Greek, and by copying manuscripts of the ancient classics.l In 1447 he became professor of Greek in the newly founded university of Ferrara, to which students in great
1 According to Voigt, Gaza came to Italy some ten years later from Constantinople, where he had been a teacher or held some clerical office. the Greek and Latin Churches; and in 1450, at the invitation of Pope
Alphonso
opinion of most of his learned contemporaries, but still higher in that of the scholars of the succeeding generation. His Greek grammar (in four books), written in Greek, first printed at Venice in 1495, and afterwards partially translated by Erasmus
Dionysius
Halicarnassus
opinion of Erasmus
See G. Voigt, Die Wiederbelebung des klassischen Alterlums (1893), and article by C. F. Bahr in Ersch and Gruber's Allgemeine Encyklopddie. For a complete list
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