Neilos Doxapatres Explained

Neilos Doxapatres (Νεῖλος ὁ Δοξοπατρῆς) was a Byzantine Greek monk, theologian, and writer active in Constantinople and Sicily during the first half of the 12th century.

Biography

Born into a native Greek family[1] [2] [3] of Constantinople,[4] [5] he made his career there, where he held various ecclesiastical and secular high offices; deacon of the Hagia Sophia, patriarchal notary, protoproedros of the protosynkelloi and nomophylax.[6] At some point he became a monk, assuming the monastic name "Neilos", and left for Sicily. According to the prologue of Neilos' work on the patriarchs, he was in Palermo in 1142/43, at the court of king Roger II of Sicily. His signature appears at the bottom of an act, dated 1146, regarding the church of the Martorana in Palermo.[7]

Neilos Doxapatres shares a surname with John Doxapatres, a professor of rhetoric who taught in Constantinople in the eleventh century, but their relationship is unknown.

Works

Two works by Doxapatres have survived:

The Synopsis Canonum written by Alexios Aristenos was falsely attributed to him.[8]

Editions of texts

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Demoen, Kristoffel. The Greek City from Antiquity to the Present: Historical Reality, Ideological Construction, Literary Representation. 2001. Peeters. 978-90-429-0971-7. 147. en. At Roger's court several Greeks were active like Neilos Doxapatres....
  2. Book: Efthymiadis, Stephanos. The Ashgate Research Companion to Byzantine Hagiography. 2016. Routledge. 978-0754650331. I (Periods and Places). en. For instance, Neilos Doxapatres, a Greek theologian of the Norman period, has been suggested as the author of the vita of St Philaretos (...)..
  3. Book: Brotton, Jerry. A History of the World in Twelve Maps. 2012. Penguin Books. 978-1-84614-570-4. en. Roger also sheltered the Greek theologian Nilos Doxapatres, who fled from Constantinople to Palermo around 1140,.... Jerry Brotton.
  4. Book: Glick. Thomas F.. Routledge Revivals: Medieval Science, Technology and Medicine. Livesey. Steven J.. Wallis. Faith. Taylor & Francis. 2016. 978-1-351-67617-5. 189. en. A notitia by Nilos Doxapatres, originally of Constantinople, was presented by him to the Norman King Roger II of Sicily in 1143, about the time when *al-Idrisi was working in Palermo on his world geography (...).. Thomas F. Glick. 2005.
  5. Book: Siecienski, A. Edward. The Papacy and the Orthodox: Sources and History of a Debate. 2017. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-024526-9. 271. en. In 1143 Roger II of Sicily asked Nilos Doxapatres, a native Constantinopolitan serving in Sicily, to answer several questions about the church's patriarchal structure..
  6. [Vitalien Laurent]
  7. Lidia Perria, "Una pergamena greca dell'anno 1146 per la chiesa di S. Maria del Ammiraglio", Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken 61 (1981): 1–24.
  8. Karl Krumbacher, Geschichte der byzantinischen Literatur (Munich, 1897), 607.