Dionysios Skylosophos
![]() | You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Greek. (October 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Dionysios Philosophos (Διονύσιος
Early life[edit]
Dionysius was born in 1541 in Aydonat in the Rumelia Eyalet of the Ottoman Empire (modern Paramythia, Thesprotia, Greece).[5] He was of Greek descent from the region of Epirus. At a very young age, Dionysius became a monk at Dichouni in the Ioannina region.
At age 15, he went to Padua where he studied medicine, philosophy, philology, logic, astronomy, and poetry. He took the name "Philosophos" (philosopher).
In 1582, he lived in Constantinople and in 1592 he was elected metropolitan bishop of Larissa and Trikala.[6][7]
Due to his astrology, fortune-telling activities and contacts with demons he was deposed by the Patriarchate of Constantinople.[8]
Rebellions[edit]
Dionysius led a farmer revolt in 1600 in the region of Agrafa. He was demoted from the rank of metropolitan bishop of Larissa for his public speeches inciting rebellion and for his related fundraising activities. He subsequently left for the Republic of Venice where he raised enough funds to pay for a peasant army and tried to get contact with the Pope.
After returning to Greece, he made his headquarters in the Monastery of St. Demetrius in Dichouni (Greek: Διχούνι) of Thesprotia. As a monk, he toured the surrounding villages, raising an army of about 700 men. Armed with simple weapons, his army succeeded in several surprise attacks against the Ottoman garrisons of the area. Encouraged by these successes, he led his army into Ioannina on 11 September 1611. The inhabitants of the city were so surprised by the sight of the armed men and the fires that they turned against each other in confusion, unaware of the purpose of the fighting. This second revolt by Dionysius in 1611 in Ioannina ended in failure as the Ottoman garrison under Aslan Pasha eventually prevailed.[9]
Death[edit]
Dionysius hid in a cave by the lake but was captured. When he was presented to Osman Pasha his famous words were: "I fought in order to free the people from your tortures and your tyranny". Dionysius was tortured and perished upon being flayed alive by the Turks in September 1611. His skin was filled with hay and was paraded around the city,[10] rebuked as the "skylosophos" - rather than "philosophos" (skylos meaning "dog").[11] The term was possibly coined by one of his main opponents, Maximus the Peloponnesian, another monk, loyal to the Patriarchate and the Ottoman Empire.
The Greek population was removed from those houses inside the castle of Ioannina and lost their privileges. The old church of Saint John the Baptist, guardian of the city, dating to the period of Justinian, was destroyed and its monks were killed. The Aslan Pasha Mosque was erected in its place in 1618 to commemorate the success of Aslan Pasha in quelling the rebellion.[12]
References[edit]
- ^ Archivum Ottomanicum 2003, Winnifrith 2002, p. 105
- ^ Robert Liddell (1965). Mainland Greece. Longmans. p. 138. ISBN 9789040109478.
- ^ Angelos Delēvorrias; Elektra Georgoula; Dēmētrēs Arvanitakēs; Anna Ballian; Mouseio Benakē; Onassis Cultural Center (2005). From Byzantium to modern Greece: Hellenic art in adversity, 1453-1830 : from the collections of the Benaki Museum, Athens. Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation ; Athens : Benaki Museum. ISBN 9780977659807.
- ^ Vakalopoulos, Patrinellis (1974). History of the Greek ethnos. Vol. 8. Athens: Athens Publishing House. p. 98.
- ^ Sardelēs 2000, p. 23.
- ^ Ta Nea; Vrellis.
- ^ The Holy Metropolis of Larissa and Tirnavos The Holy Metropolis of Larissa and Tirnavos.
- ^ MacHiel Kiel (1985). Art and Society of Bulgaria in the Turkish Period: A Sketch of the Economic, Juridical, and Artistic Preconditions of Bulgarian Post-Byzantine Art and Its Place in the Development of the Art of the Christian Balkans, 1360/70-1700 : a New Interpretation. Van Gorcum Limited. p. 173. ISBN 978-90-232-2061-9.
- ^ Ta Nea; Vrellis.
- ^ von Hammer-Purgstall 1829.
- ^ Ta Nea; Vrellis.
- ^ Ta Nea; Vrellis.
Sources[edit]
- Archivum Ottomanicum. Vol. 21–23. Mouton. 2003. pp. 224–225.
- Doja, Albert (2022). "Ecclesiastical Pressures and Language Politics: The Boundary Work of Albanian Language in the 17th-18th Centuries". Nationalities Papers. 50 (4): 742–769. doi:10.1017/nps.2021.55. S2CID 248275762.
- M. V. Sakellariou (1997). "The Uprising of Dionysios "Skylosophos"". Epirus, 4000 years of Greek history and civilization. Ekdotikē Athēnōn. pp. 246–. ISBN 978-960-213-371-2.
- von Hammer-Purgstall, Joseph Freiherr (1829). Geschichte des osmanischen Reiches: Bd. 1574-1623. C. A. Hartleben. pp. 442–.
- Sardelēs, Kōstas (2000). "ΔΙΟΝΥΣΙΟΣ
Ο «ΣΚΥΛΟΣΟΦΟΣ» (1541-1611)". To synaxari tou genous. Ekdoseis Harmos. ISBN 9789605271589. - Peter Bartl (1974). Der Westbalkan zwischen spanischer Monarchie und osmanischem Reich: zur Türkenkriegsproblematik an der Wende vom 16. zum 17. In Kommission bei Otto Harrasowitz. ISBN 978-3-447-01553-0.
- Winnifrith, Tom (2002). Badlands, Borderlands: A History of Northern Epirus/Southern Albania. Duckworth. ISBN 978-0-7156-3201-7.
- Ioannis Kaphetzopoulos; Charalambos Flokas; Angeliki Dima-Dimitriou (2000). The struggle for Northern Epirus. Hellenic Army General Staff, Army History Directorate. ISBN 978-960-7897-40-4.
- O Larisses-Trikkes Dinysios II Philosophos o hleuastikos epikletheis "Skylosophos", "Epirotika Chronika". nr. 8, 1933
- “
Ε thnic and Religious Composition of Ottoman Thesprotia in the 15th to 17th centuries” (with M. Oğuz and F. Yaşar), in : B. Forsén & E. Tikkala (eds.), Thesprotia Expedition II. Environment and Settlement Patterns, Helsinki 2011, 347-389 - L. Vranoussis, Dionysos Skylosophos Revoltes et demarches pour la liberation de la Grice (1598-1611) dans le cadre d'une croisade
- (in Greek) Dionysius the Philosopher, Metropolitan of Larissa- Analytical Biography (Ta Nea, 17 August 2000).
- (in Greek) Vrellis, Paul. "Wax Effigy of Dionyisus in the Vrellis Museum". Άλφασταρ Ελλάς
Α .Ε . 1998–1999. Retrieved on September 12, 2008. "Γεννήθηκεσ τ α μέρη της Παραμυθιάςκ α ι πολύ νέος έγινε καλόγεροςσ τ ο Διχούνι. Αργότερα σπούδασεσ τ α μεγάλα Ευρωπαϊκά κέντρα της εποχής (Βενετία, Πάδοβα) φιλοσοφία, φιλολογίακ α ι ιατρική. Συνέχισε τις σπουδέςτ ο υ σ τ η ν Κωνσταντινούπολημ ε λογική, ποίηση, γραμματικήκ α ι αστρονομία, μέχριτ α 34 χρόνιατ ο υ .Μ ε τ α δύο αγροτικά κινήματαπ ο υ έκανε - το 1600 και 1611, έδωσεσ τ ο ραγιά φωςκ α ι πίστηγ ι α ξεσηκωμό.Τ ο ν έπιασανο ι Τούρκοι (μ ε προδοσία), κάτω απότ ο τζαμίτ ο υ κάστρουτ ω ν Γιαννίνωνκ α ι τ ο ν έγδαραν ζωντανό -σ ε ηλικία 70 χρόνων. Προηγουμένως, όταντ ο ν παρουσίασανσ τ ο ν Οσμάν πασά, είπε άφοβα: "πολέμησαγ ι α ν α ελευθερώσωτ ο ν λαό απότ α βάσανακ α ι τ η ν τυραννία σας". Ένα μέρος της σπηλιάς όπου μαρτύρησε θέλησαν ' αποδώσω.Γ ι α τ η ν φυσιογνωμίατ ο υ , μελέτησαμ ι α μικρογραφία χειρόγραφουπ ο υ βρέθηκεσ τ η ν μονή Προδρόμου Σερρών, καθώςκ α ι πολλές περιγραφές βιογράφωντ ο υ .Τ ο ν απεικονίζωσ τ α 3/4 της πρώτης ώρας από τις 5 ώρεςπ ο υ κράτησετ ο μαρτύριότ ο υ . Δείχνωτ η ν προσφοράτ ο υ αγώνατ ο υ προς εμάς,μ ε τ ο ματωμένο δεξί μισάνοιχτο χέριτ ο υ .Σ τ ο πρόσωπότ ο υ έδωσατ η ν έκφρασητ ο υ πόνουκ α ι της καρτερικότητας. Αντίθετα χαρακτήρισα τους δύο δήμιους - έκφραση μίσουςκ α ι εκδίκησης." - Kotzageorgis, Phokion. "VI. Ottoman Macedonia (late 14th–late 17th century)"
External links[edit]
- "Exhibits prior to 1821 War of Independence - Dionysius the Philosopher". Archived from the original on 2013-06-23. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
- Μαξίμου ιερομονάχου
τ ο υ Πελοποννησίου λόγος στηλιτευτικός κατά Διονυσίουτ ο υ επικληθέντος Σκυλοσόφουκ α ι τ ω ν συναποστησάντων αυτώ εις Ιωάννιναε ν έτει 1611 (Polemic of Maximus the Peloponnesian against Dionysius)
- 1560s births
- 1611 deaths
- People from Thesprotia
- Greek Christian monks
- Executed Greek people
- Greek torture victims
- 17th-century executions by the Ottoman Empire
- 17th-century Greek clergy
- People executed by flaying
- Greeks from the Ottoman Empire
- Rebels from the Ottoman Empire
- Bishops of Larissa
- Ottoman Thessaly
- People excommunicated by Eastern Orthodox Church bodies
- 16th-century Greek philosophers
- 17th-century Greek philosophers
- 16th-century Greek clergy
- 16th-century Greek politicians
- 17th-century Greek politicians