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Maximus and Planudes
The maps in surviving manuscripts of Ptolemy's Geographia, however, date only from about 1300, after the text was rediscovered by Maximus Planudes.
** Maximus Planudes, Byzantine grammarian and theologian
* Maximus Planudes, Byzantine grammarian and theologian ( approximate date ; d. 1330 )
This work largely survives in the Greek Anthology -- the edition by Maximus Planudes preserves examples not found elsewhere.
; these contain a collection that was compiled by Maximus Planudes.
One of the epigrams attributed to him on the authority of Maximus Planudes is a eulogy on the celebrated Hypatia, daughter of Theon of Alexandria, whose death took place in 415.
In a careful examination of these prose Aesopian fables, which had been handed down in various collections from the time of Maximus Planudes, Bentley discovered traces of versification, and was able to extract a number of verses which he assigned to Babrius.
Maximus Planudes, less often Maximos Planoudes (, c. 1260-c. 1305 ) was a Greek monk, scholar, anthologist, translator, grammarian and theologian at Constantinople.
Maximus Planudes lived during the reigns of the Eastern Roman Emperors, Michael VIII and Andronicos II.
es: Maximus Planudes
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The scholar Maximus Planudes also made an edition of the Greek Anthology, which while adding some poems, primarily deleting or bowdlerizing many of the poems he felt were too explicit.
The extent of our obligations may be ascertained by a comparison between his anthology and that of the next editor, the monk Maximus Planudes ( AD 1320 ), who has not merely grievously mutilated the anthology of Cephalas by omissions, but has disfigured it by interpolating verses of his own.
# REDIRECT Maximus Planudes
In 1301 AD, a scholar named Maximus Planudes put together a bowdlerized version of the Cephalan book, which became very popular in the Greek part of the οiκουμένη.
* Maximus Planudes, ca.
: PG 147: Nicephorus Callistus Xanthopoulos, Callistus and Ignatius Xanthopuli monks, Patriarch Callistus of Constantinople, Callistus Telicoudes, Callistus Cataphugiota, Nicephorus monk, Maximus Planudes
Among these great intellects and strong characters of the 12th century several theologians are especially conspicuous, for example Eustathius of Thessalonica, Michael Italicus, and Michael Acominatus ; in the 13th and 14th centuries several secular scholars, like Maximus Planudes, Theodorus Metochites, and above all, Nicephorus Gregoras.

Maximus and Turkish
For reasons unknown, Maximus left public life and took monastic vows at the monastery of Philippicus in Chrysopolis, a city across the Bosporus from Constantinople ( later known as Scutari, the modern Turkish city of Üsküdar ).

Maximus and scholar
Maximus the Confessor ( Greek Μάξιμος ο Ομολογητής ) also known as Maximus the Theologian and Maximus of Constantinople ( c. 580 – 13 August 662 ) was a Christian monk, theologian, and scholar.
As a patristics scholar, Hart is especially concerned with the Greek tradition, with a particular emphasis on Gregory of Nyssa and Maximus the Confessor.

Maximus and theologian
* Maximus the Confessor, Byzantine theologian
Other than the work by the Christian universalist theologian Johannes Scotus Eriugena in Ireland, Maximus was largely overlooked by Western theologians until recent years.
* Maximus the Confessor ( c. 580 – 662 ), theologian

Turkish and scholar
* 1925 – Bülent Ecevit, Turkish politician, poet, writer, scholar, and journalist, Prime Minister of Turkey ( d. 2006 )
* Sadri Maksudi Arsal, prominent Tatar and Turkish statesman, scholar and thinker.
The term has been described by Frenchman Félix Buffière in 1980 and Pakistani scholar Tariq Rahman, who argued that " ephebophilia " should be used in preference to " homosexuality " when describing the aesthetic and erotic interest of adult men in adolescent boys in classical Persian, Turkish or Urdu literature.
* Mensur Akgün, Turkish scholar
After Harrow Amery went to Balliol College, Oxford, where he performed well: he gained a First at in classical moderations in 1894 ; in literae humaniores in 1896 ; he was proxime accessit ( runner-up ) to the Craven scholar in 1894 and Ouseley scholar in Turkish in 1896, also winning a half-blue in cross-country running.
* İsmail Beşikçi, Turkish scholar
A mufti (, &# x200a ;, Turkish: müftü ) is a Sunni Islamic scholar who is an interpreter or expounder of Islamic law ( Sharia and fiqh ).
As a Turkish scholar has observed:
Turkish scholar Abdülbaki Gölpinarli sees even the Kizilbash of the 16th century-a radical Shī ‘ a movement in Persia which helped the Safavid dynasty establish this branch of Islam as the dominant religion of Iran-as " spiritual descendants of the Khurramites " and, hence, of the Mazdakites.
In the Islamic world, the atlas was partially translated by the Turkish scholar Katip Çelebi.
* Mahmud al-Kashgari, Turkish scholar
Shibli was a versatile scholar in Arabic, Persian, Hindi, Turkish and Urdu.
Following a 1984 campaign by Turkish scholar Nusret Sancaklı denouncing the use of this name for brothels, the new name " soapland " was the winning entry in a nationwide contest to rename them.
See also Benjamin Schatzma's " Journal d ' un interné, Volume II ", the works of historian and university scholar Esther Benbassa, and the article by Claude Wainstain on Necdet Kent, another " Turkish Schindler ", whose biography seems also legendary.
Kâmran İnan ( Hizan, Bitlis, 1929 ), a well known Turkish politician, diplomat, and scholar was from Bitlis.
His father, Sadreddin Yuksel, an Islamic scholar, taught Arabic at a Turkish university.
German Swiss scholar Hans-Lukas Kieser writes that the documents related to fifteen Turkish ministers published by V. Dadrian show best the ministers ' conception of their responsibility in the " abuses " committed against Ottoman Armenians.
In this context, Turkish scholar Abdülbaki Gölpinarli sees the Kizilbash as " spiritual descendants of the Khurramites ".
According to Turkish scholar Abdülbaki Gölpinarli, the Qizilbash (" Red-Heads ") of the 16th century-a religious and political movement in Azerbaijan that helped to establish the Safavid dynasty-were " spiritual descendants of the Khurramites ".

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