Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Meletius Smotrycki (auch Smotrizki, Smotriski, u. ä., lateinisch Meletius Smotriscius; weltlicher Name Maxim, Pseudonym Theophil Ortolog; * um 1577; † 17. jul. / 27. Dezember 1633 greg., Dermań, Wolhynien, Königreich Polen-Litauen) war ein ruthenischer Gelehrter, Philologe, Schriftsteller und Theologe.

  2. Meletius Smotrytsky (Ukrainian: Мелетій Смотрицький, romanized: Meletij Smotryćkyj; Belarusian: Мялецій Сматрыцкі, romanized: Mialiecij Smatrycki; Russian: Мелетий Смотрицкий, romanized: Meletiy Smotritsky; Polish: Melecjusz Smotrycki), né Maksym Herasymovych Smotrytsky (c. 1577 ...

    • "Slavonic Grammar with Correct Syntax" (1619)
    • Herasym Smotrytsky
  3. ISBN 9780916458553. Publication date: 07/28/1995. Meletij Smotryc’kyj was one of the outstanding figures in the great flourishing of Orthodox spirituality that occurred in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century in response to the challenge posed first by Polish heterodox religious movements, and later by the Polish Counter-Reformation.

  4. www.encyclopediaofukraine.com › displaySmotrytsky, Meletii

    Smotrytsky, Meletii [Смотрицький, Мелетій; Smotryc’kyj, Meletij] (secular name: Maksym), b 1577 in Smotrych, Podilia (now in Dunaivtsi raion, Khmelnytskyi oblast), d 27 December 1633 at the Derman Monastery, Volhynia. Philologist, churchman, and polemicist; son of Herasym Smotrytsky.

  5. Meletij Smotryc´kyj (ca. 1577–1633), a man of great learning and wide cultural horizons, was one of the outstanding figures of the cultural revival in the Ukrainian and Belorussian lands of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.

  6. Meletij Smotryc'kyj (ca. 1577-1633) was one of the outstanding figures in Ruthenian (Ukrainian) letters during the great flourishing of the late sixteenth and the early seventeenth century.

  7. SMOTRYTSKYI, MELETII (c. 1577 – 1633), Orthodox archbishop of Polatsk, bishop of Vitsyebsk and Mstsisla ů, archimandrite of the monastery of the Vilnius Orthodox Brotherhood of the Descent of the Holy Spirit; subsequently, following his conversion to the Uniate church, archbishop of Hierapolis and archimandrite of the Uniate monastery in ...