Niketas David Paphlagon
Niketas David Paphlagon (Greek: Νικήτας Δαβὶδ Παφλαγών), also known as Nicetas the Paphlagonian or Nicetas of Paphlagonia, was a prolific Byzantine Greek writer of the late 9th and early 10th century.[1]
Older scholarship dated Niketas' death to about 890, but more recent research suggests that he was born around 885 and was active as late as 963. He was a disciple of Arethas of Caesarea. In a letter, Arethas calls him a scholastikos, meaning lawyer. "David" appears to be a religious name, which he may have taken later in life.[2] When Arethas, under pressure from Pope Nicholas I, moved to support the tetragamy[a] of the Emperor Leo VI, Niketas distributed all his master's goods to the poor and fled to Thrace. He was arrested and imprisoned in Constantinople. The Patriarch Euthymios I secured his release, but forced him to live in seclusion for two years.[1]
Niketas was a prolific author on Christian topics. He wrote about fifty
Notes
- ^ The legitimization of Leo VI's son by a concubine after his three marriages failed to produce an heir.
References
- ^ ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
- ^ Smithies, Andrew (2013). "Introduction". The Life of Patriarch Ignatius. Dumbarton Oaks. pp. xi–xxxv.
- ^ Nicetas David (2013). Andrew Smithies; John M. Duffy (eds.). The Life of Patriarch Ignatius. Dumbarton Oaks.
- ^ Høgel, Christian (2002). Symeon Metaphrastes: Rewriting and Canonization. Museum Tusculanum Press.
External links
- Nicetas of Paphlagonia, 9th-10th cent. Medieval Manuscripts in Oxford Libraries.