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The Greek Language after Antiquity offers an in-depth look at the diachrony of the Greek language, focusing on a period relatively neglected by modern scholarship: the more than 1,000 years between the end of Antiquity and the early modern period.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
IntroductionDavid Holton and Io Manolessou1. The regional diversification of Greek AD
Io Manolessou2. Investigating the diachronic phonology of Medieval and Modern Greek through graphemic evidence
Nikolaos Pantelidis3. Language contact in Late Medieval Greek: an under-estimated phenomenon?
Theodore Markopoulos4. Philology and ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿: linguistic variation in Medieval and Early Modern Greek from the viewpoint of textual scholarship
Tina Lendari5. Many linguistic ways to tell the same story: the four versions of the Life of Maximos the Hutburner
Martin Hinterberger6. Medieval and Early Modern Greek derivational morphology: the missing chapters
Tina Lendari and Io Manolessou 7. Compounding in Cretan across centuries
Angela Ralli and George Chairetakis8. Issues in the historical semantic analysis of Modern Greek
Christina Bassea-Bezantakou
Über den Autor / die Autorin
David Holton is Emeritus Professor of Modern Greek at the University of Cambridge and an Emeritus Fellow of Selwyn College. He has published widely on Greek language and literature from Late Medieval to Modern, particularly Cretan and Cypriot poetry of the Renaissance period. He edited
Literature and Society in Renaissance Crete (1991; Greek edition 1997). He is the co-author of two grammars of Modern Greek, and he directed the research project that produced
The Cambridge Grammar of Medieval and Early Modern Greek (4 vols., 2019). He holds an honorary doctorate from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (2024).
Io Manolessou is the Acting Director of the Research Centre for Modern Greek Dialects of the Academy of Athens. She holds a PhD in historical linguistics from the University of Cambridge and has published many papers on the history of the Greek language and its dialects. Major contributions include the
Cambridge Grammar of Medieval and Early Modern Greek (co- author, 2019), vol. 7 of the
Historical Dictionary of Modern Greek (chief editor, 2021), and the
Historical Dictionary of the Dialects of Cappadocia (chief editor, 2024).
Zusammenfassung
The Greek Language after Antiquity offers an in-depth look at the diachrony of the Greek language, focusing on a period relatively neglected by modern scholarship: the more than 1,000 years between the end of Antiquity and the early modern period.