Thursday, April 28, 2016

The Platonic Theology of Ioane Petritsi By Levan Gigineishvili (2007)


Ioane Petritsi was a twelfth-century Georgian philosopher, a student of the Constantinopolian philosophic school run by Michael Psellus and, later, John Italus. After returning to his homeland, Georgia, Petritsi sought to initiate Neoplatonic studies at the Gelati monastic school established by the enlightened King David IV the Builder. To that end, Petritsi produced a translation and commentary on Proclus’ Elements of Theology, a comprehensive exposition of the entire Neoplatonic ontological system.

This was the first complete translation of the Elements of Theology, ca. 100 years earlier than the first Latin translation by William Moerbeke, commissioned by St. Thomas Aquinas. The translation required the creation of a philosophic language—a medium for transmitting the extravagant philosophic ideas into Georgian—which Petritsi effectively achieved. In his original commentaries, Petritsi both explains the intricacies of Proclus’ thought and tries to prove the basic affinity between the Platonic and the biblical traditions. The present volume exposes the entire system of Petritsi’s thought upon a background of ideas on Proclus, other Neoplatonists, and the Church Fathers.

Georgian Monks on Mount Athos: Two Eleventh-Century Lives of the Hegoumenoi of Iviron by Tamar Grdzelidze (2009)

This is the first English translation of the Georgian Lives of Euthymios the Hagiorite (955-1028) – along with John the Iberian – and George the Hagiorite (1009-1065). Commemorated as saints of the Orthodox Church, Euthymios and George were distinguished hegoumenoi on Mount Athos during the eleventh century who greatly influenced both the Church of Georgia and Georgian culture. 

Georgian Monks on Mount Athos: Two Eleventh: Century Lives of the Hegoumenoi of Iviron

Ioane Petritsi by Lela Alexidze (2014)

8 - Ioane Petritsi - University Publishing Online

The Life of Peter the Iberian from Lives and Legends of the Georgian Saints by David Marshall Lang

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Christian Literature Translated from Arabic into Georgian by Tamar Pataridze (2013)

* T. PATARIDZE, Christian Literature Translated from Arabic into Georgian : Annual of Medieval Studies at CEU, (19), 2013

Georgia: Bibliography of German Literature / Georgien: Bibliographie des deutschsprachigen Schrifttums (2008)

Sketches of Georgian Church History by Th. E. Dowling (1912)

Dowling, Sketches of Georgian Church History : Dowling : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

La Vie de Georges l’Hagiorite (1009/1010-29 juin 1065) by Bernadette Martin-Hisard (2006)

La Vie de Georges l’Hagiorite (1009/1010-29 juin 1065).

Bibliography on Christianity in Palestine – www.csc.org.il

All the bibliographic data listed below (related to Georgia and Georgians) has been copied from the website of The Center for the Study of Christianity  www.csc.org.il, which is managed by the Center for the Study of Christianity (Israel).  The Center cooperates with the Department of Comparative Religion at The Hebrew University.

The search on this website is possible both through the catalog as well as the directory (by author, year, era, keyword).

The reason titles were copied are the following:
1. The list below unites all the publications that could be found under the following keywords: Georgia, Georgians, Georgian Anachorets.
2. All the links to the available online resources have been added to the posted list.

The Sabaite Heritage in the Orthodox Church from the Fifth Century to the Present by Joseph Patrich (2001)


  1. Mgaloblishvili, Tamila, The Georgian Sabaite (Sabatsminduri) Literary School and the Sabatsmindian Version of the Georgian Mravaltavi (Polykephalon), pp. 229-233 
  2. Gagoshidze, George, Georgian Churches Dedicated to St. Sabas the Purified, pp. 363-384
The Sabaite Heritage in the Orthodox Church from the Fifth Century to the Present

Monday, April 25, 2016

Ancient Georgian Versions of the Old Testament by R. P. Blake (1926)

Ancient Georgian Versions of the Old Testament

Shushanik's Georgian Vita by Margit Biro (1984)

SHUSHANIK'S GEORGIAN VITA

St. Euthymius the Georgian and the Barlaam and Ioasaph Romance D. M. Lang (1955)

Sumbat Davitʿis-dze and the Vocabulary of Political Authority in the Era of Georgian Unification

Sumbat Davitʿis-dze and the Vocabulary of Political Authority in the Era of Georgian Unification by Stephen H. Rapp (2000)

Recent Work on the Georgian New Testament

Recent Work on the Georgian New Testament by D. M. Lang (1957)

Sumerian and Georgian: A Study in Comparative Philology (Continued from 1913, p. 821)

Sumerian and Georgian: A Study in Comparative Philology by M. Tseretheli (1913)

Sumerian and Georgian: A Study in Comparative Philology

Sunday, April 24, 2016

John Rufus: The Lives of Peter the Iberian, Theodosius of Jerusalem, and the Monk Romanus

Edited and Translated with an Introduction and Notes
by Cornelia B. Horn and Robert R. Phenix Jr.
Society of Biblical Literature Atlanta
2008

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Asceticism and Christological Controversy in Fifth-Century Palestine – The Career of Peter the Iberian by C.B. Horn (2005)

Introduction, Table of Contents

Asceticism and ChristologicalControversy in Fifth-CenturyPalestine.pdf

Saint Shushanik of Georgia by Lasha Tchantouridze (2008)

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The Literature of Georgia – A History by R.Rayfield (2013)

Barlaam and Ioasaph by Robert Lee Wolff (1939)

Barlaam and Ioasaph

The Making of Georgian Nation by R. G. Suny (1994)

R. G. Suny - The Making of the Georgian Nation (Studies of Nationalities)

Saturday, April 23, 2016

The Caucasus: Georgia on the Crossroads. Cultural exchanges across the Europe and Beyond, Proceedings (2009)

On_Cosmological_Concepts_and_Archaic_Sym.pdf

Landmarks in Georgian Literature by D.M. Lang (1966)

fulltext_stamped.pdf

The Balavariani (Barlaam and Josaphat) by D. M. Lang (1966)

'Wisdom and Lies': Variations on a Georgian Literary Theme by D. M. Lang (1956)

'Wisdom and Lies': Variations on a Georgian Literary Theme

Georgian Theological Literature by R. P. Blake (1924)

GEORGIAN THEOLOGICAL LITERATURE on JSTOR

Medieval Georgian Historical Literature (7th–15th cc.)

MEDIEVAL GEORGIAN HISTORICAL LITERATURE (VIIth-XVth Centuries)

Georgian Literature in European Scholarship

By Prof. Elguja Khintibidze
(Georgia - 1996)

  • Chapter One: Introduction. 
  • Chapter Two:Towards the History of the Study of Georgian Literature in Europe". 
  • Chapter Three: On the Scholarly Value of Research on Georgian Literature in Europe. 
  • Chapter Four: Conclusion. 
NATO Research Fellowships 1994-1996

Georgian Literature by A. G. Baramidze, D. M. Gamezardashvili

Studies in Medieval Georgian Historiography: Early Texts and Eurasian Contexts

Maximus the Confessor in Ancient Georgian Sources by Lela Khoperia (pp. 134-140)

Maximus the Confessor and Georgia (Table of Contents)

Maximus the Confessor and Georgia (Iberica Caucasia Volume Three)

Georgian Christian Thought and Its Cultural Context

New Perspectives on “The Land of Heroes and Giants”: The Georgian Sources for Sasanian History

UCI-Georgian-Sources-Sasanian-History-FINAL-August-2014-with-sas-paginations.pdf

The Sasanian World through Georgian Eyes – Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature