John of Scythopolis and the Dionysian Corpus
Annotating the Areopagite
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£240.00
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780198269700
Number of Pages: 304
Published: 03/09/1998
Width: 14.4 cm
Height: 22.4 cm
John, the sixth-century orthodox bishop of Scythopolis in Palestine, was the first of many authors to comment upon the highly influentional Pseudo-Dionysian writings (such as The Mystical Theology). Here translated and interpreted, John's Prologue and Scholia (marginalia) have only recently been separable from later comments. They present his complex theological and philosophical observations on the Dionysian texts. The book begins with
the general outlines of the appearance and reception of the Dionysian corpus in the sixth century, followed by an overview of the career and works of John of Scythopolis. Written around AD 540, John's own comments in the Prologue provide the outline for introducing the concerns dominating his Scholia: biblical, classical, and
patristic sources; liturgical terminology and context; orthodox and heretical doctrines of the Trinity, Christology, creation, and eschatology; Dionysian authenticity; Neoplatonism and John's unacknowledged quotations from Plotinus. Most of the Scholia and all of the Prologue are translated and annotated in order to present the first of many layers of Dionysian interpretation.
It not only provides an English translation of a classical theological work but has also now opened the door for further research into John of Scythopolis Journal of Early Christian Studies This is a very clear, extremely well-written, balanced and highly informative work Journal of Early Christian Studies