Vladislav grammar

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Wladislav Gramatik (also written Vladislav Gramatik , Serbian - Cyrillic Владислав Граматик , Bulgarian Владислав Граматик ; * 15th century in Novo Brdo , Serbian despotate ; † ??) was a Bulgarian scholar and monk. Its collections of manuscripts and translations are reference works for Bulgarian and Serbian literature from the 13th and 15th centuries.

Life

Wladislaw Gramatik was born in 1456 in Novo Brdo , which belonged to the Serbian despotate . It is believed that he was trained at the Resava School, which the student of Scripture School Tarnow , Constantine of Kostenets was founded. In 1455 he went to Mlado Nagoričane north of Kumanovo . He spent most of his life in the Matejče Monastery, but he also spent some time in the Rila Monastery where he wrote the Rila Legend (or Rila Panegyric).

Writings and manuscripts

Christova has arranged some of the texts of Vladislav chronologically, starting with the 1465 collection, followed by the Zagreb collection (1469), the Adrianti collection (1473), the Rila legend (1479) (Bulgarian Легендата за Рила и Пирин) and two more Collections of texts compiled in the 1470s and 1480s.

literature

  • Ivan Snegarow: История на Охридската архиепископия. Том 1 .: От основаването й до завладяването на Балканския полуостров от турците. (from the Bulgarian The History of the Archdiocese of Ohrid. Volume 1. From the beginning to the Ottoman rule) Sofia, 1924. (Second edition, Verlag Marin Drinow, Sofia 1995, p. 312 ff.)
  • Gerhard Podskalsky : Theological literature of the Middle Ages in Bulgaria and Serbia 815-1459. Beck, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-406-45024-5 , p. 10ff.
  • Gjuzelev, Vassil: The medieval Bulgarian cultural heritage in our present. In: Network magazine of the Alfred Toepfer Foundation. FVS, 2005.
  • G. Danchev: Вести за дейността на Кирил и Методий, съхранени за науката от Владислав Граматик. In: Славянска филология. Volume 21, 1993, pp. 58-64.
  • B. Christowa: Опис на ръкописите на Владислав Граматик. (from the Bulgarian list of Wladislaw Gramatik's manuscripts), Veliko Tarnowo 1996.

Individual evidence

  1. See: Iwan Snegorow Gerhard Podskalsky