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  1. Georgios Gemistos war ein griechischer Philosoph in der Tradition des Platonismus. Er ist in erster Linie unter seinem ab 1439 verwendeten Pseudonym Plethon bekannt, das er als schönere und altertümlicher klingende Wiedergabe der Bedeutung seines Geburtsnamens Gemistos wählte.

  2. Georgios Gemistos Plethon (Greek: Γεώργιος Γεμιστὸς Πλήθων; Latin: Georgius Gemistus Pletho c. 1355 /1360 – 1452/1454), commonly known as Gemistos Plethon, was a Greek scholar and one of the most renowned philosophers of the late Byzantine era. He was a chief pioneer of the revival of Greek scholarship in ...

  3. George Gemistus Plethon was a Byzantine philosopher and humanist scholar whose clarification of the distinction between Platonic and Aristotelian thought proved to be a seminal influence in determining the philosophic orientation of the Italian Renaissance. Plethon studied in Constantinople and at.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. George Gemistos Plethon was a significant philosopher during the last years of Byzantium (c. 1360–1454). His adopted surname Plethon was deliberately chosen as an allusion to Plato.

    • George Karamanolis
  5. Georgios Gemistos war ein griechischer Philosoph in der Tradition des Platonismus. Er ist in erster Linie unter seinem ab 1439 verwendeten Pseudonym Plethon bekannt, das er als schönere und altertümlicher klingende Wiedergabe der Bedeutung seines Geburtsnamens Gemistos wählte.

  6. Georgios Gemistos Plethon (ca. 1355-1452) is one of the greatest and most controversial political theorists produced by the Byzantine Empire. Born in Constantinople, Plethon studied the Neoplatonic and Arab-Aristotelian philosophies in Turkish Adrianople under the direction of Elissaius, a member of the Sultan's literary circle. Exiled from ...

  7. 30. Juni 2015 · Hladký believes that Plethon was “an unorthodox Christian with a strong inclination to ancient thought” (blurb), rather than a pagan. In Part 1, Hladký summarizes Plethon’s social and political reformism as contained in the Address to Theodore (ca. 1415) and Address to Manuel (1418).