
Contents
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The Scholiast John of Scythopolis The Scholiast John of Scythopolis
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John as Witness of the Origenist Controversy of the Sixth Century John as Witness of the Origenist Controversy of the Sixth Century
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The Critical Edition of the Corpus Dionysiacum Areopagiticum The Critical Edition of the Corpus Dionysiacum Areopagiticum
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Dating John’s Prologue and Scholia Dating John’s Prologue and Scholia
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The Layout of the Critical Edition The Layout of the Critical Edition
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The Tradition of John’s Exemplar The Tradition of John’s Exemplar
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The Codex merus The Codex merus
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The Codex mixtus The Codex mixtus
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The Theological and Philosophical Importance of Prologue and Scholia The Theological and Philosophical Importance of Prologue and Scholia
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The prologue The prologue
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Imitatio apostoli Pauli Imitatio apostoli Pauli
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Teacher–Disciple Relationship Teacher–Disciple Relationship
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The Scholia The Scholia
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On Trinity On Trinity
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On Christology On Christology
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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13 John of Scythopolis and the Dionysian Corpus
Get accessBeate Regina Suchla is Professor of Philosophy at the Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany. Her research interests are in ancient and medieval philosophy, and especially in Neoplatonism. She published many articles, reviews, and books, including the monograph Dionysius Areopagita. Leben –Werk –Wirkung and the critical editions Corpus Dionysiacum I: Dionysii Areopagitae liber De divinis nominibus and Corpus Dionysiacum IV/1: Ioannis Scythopolitani prologus et scholia in Dionysii Areopagitae librum Dedivinis nominibus.
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Published:18 March 2022
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Abstract
The theologian, philosopher, and bishop John of Scythopolis wrote a prologue and scholia to the four treatises and ten letters of Dionysius Areopagita. With this, he was the first scholiast of the Dionysian writings, and his efforts put him at the beginning of a long succession of high-profile commentators and interpreters. His prologue is a well-thought-out composition, which defends the integrity, authenticity, and orthodoxy of the apostolic Dionysius. John’s effort to prove the orthodoxy continues throughout the scholia, which consider the Dionysian treatises and letters primarily from four theological aspects: doctrine of the Trinity, Christology, creation, and eschatology.
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