Eustathius, Macrembolites, active 12th century

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Eustathius, Macrembolites, active 12th century
Name (Cyrilic)
Евмафий Макремволит, 12 в.
Other forms of name
Eustathius, Macrembolites, 12th cent
Macrembolites, Eustathius, 12th cent
Eustachius, Macrembolites, 12th cent
Eustathios, Makrembolites, 12th cent
Makrembolites, Eustathios, 12th cent
Eumathius, 12th cent
Евмафий Макремболит, XII в
Макремволит Евмафий, 12 в
Start period
11
Place of residence/headquarters
Istanbul (Turkey)
Field of activity
Romances, Byzantine
Associated Language
grc
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 161422536
Wikidata: Q952161
Library of congress: n 87911061
Sources of Information
  • The Author's Из истории византийского романа, 1979.
  • Wikipedia www site, 18 July 2013:Eustathios Makrembolites (latinized as Eustathius Macrembolites, Byzantine revivalist of the Greek romance, flourished second half of 12 century CE)
  • Византийская любовная проза, 1995:table of contents (Евмафий Макремболит)
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Wikipedia description:

Eustathios Makrembolites (Greek: Εὐστάθιος Μακρεμβολίτης; fl. c. 1150–1200), Latinized as Eustathius Macrembolites, was a Byzantine revivalist of the ancient Greek romance, flourished in the second half of the 12th century CE. He is sometimes conflated/equated with his contemporary, the Eparch of the City Eumathios Makrembolites (Greek: Εὐμάθιος Μακρεμβολίτης). His title Protonobilissimus shows him to have been a person of distinction and, if he is also correctly described in the manuscripts as chief keeper of the ecclesiastical archives, he must have been a Christian. He was the author of a Byzantine novel, The Story of Hysmine and Hysminias, in eleven books. Although he borrowed from Homer and other Attic poets, the chief source of his phraseology was the rhetorician Choricius of Gaza. The style is remarkable for the absence of hiatus and a laboured use of antithesis. The digressions on works of art, apparently the result of personal observation, are considered by some scholars the best part of the work. The novel enjoyed a later influence in connection with the story tradition of Apollonius of Tyre—Eustathius' scene of the storm at sea and the heroine offered as a sacrifice being adapted in Book 8 of the Confessio Amantis of John Gower and, by way of that, forming a portion of the plot of William Shakespeare's Pericles, Prince of Tyre (particularly in Act III). A collection of eleven Riddles, of which solutions were written by the grammarian Manuel Holobolos, is also attributed to Eustathius.

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