The evolution of Christianity into a logical system which could weather the shocks of millennia, was a Greek thing. The Christian Church was the last great creative achievement of classical Greek culture.
P.L. Fermor, Mani (1958), 214
A digital form of the sadly lost fashion for copying out memorable passages from texts. I kept losing my actual book.
The evolution of Christianity into a logical system which could weather the shocks of millennia, was a Greek thing. The Christian Church was the last great creative achievement of classical Greek culture.
P.L. Fermor, Mani (1958), 214
The conversation drifted inevitably to politics. Like most of the Maniots, he was a firm royalist. I pointed to the poster of M. Petro Mavromichalis and asked if he had voted for him.
'Yes,' he said, 'but I think we should change our deputy....'
...
I asked him who he would prefer to represent the constituency: it was sad to contemplate this uprooting of traditional allegiances. He looked surprised. 'Who? Why, Kyriakos Mavromichalis of course, his brother. Who else?'
P.L. Fermor, Mani (1958), 161
There is a great charm about it all; but it is the art of a civilization that has outlived its political basis, and art of wistful nostalgia for which there was not future. The paintings in the Pantassa at Mistra formed the last important monument of the medieval free Greek world.
S. Runciman, Lost capital of Byzantium (1980), 95-6
All we know of him [Andrew, governor of the Peloponnese] is that he was appointed by 'the pious Emperor Andronicus' - the epithet fits Andronicus II better than Andronicus III, who was not very pious, but it was often given formally to emperors, regardless of their characters - and that he was the father of a saint, Leontius of Achaea, who was noted for his good works later in the century.
S. Runciman, Lost capital of Byzantium (1980), 48
The Cassington Scholar is traditionally given to a free thinker. It's his function to challenge the faith of the Scholars. Naturally he'd say that. But think of Adam and Eve like an imaginary number, like the square root of minus one: you can never see any concrete proof it exists , but if you include it in your equations, you can calculate all manner of things that couldn't be imagined without it.
P. Pullman, Northern Lights (1995), 372-3