Nicholas Kalliakis (Νικόλαος Καλλιάκης) | |
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Born | Nicholas Kalliakis (Νικόλαος Καλιάκης) 1645 Candia, Kingdom of Candia, Venetian Empire |
Died | 1707 Padua, Republic of Venice |
Occupation | Philosophy, Greek literature |
Nationality | Greek[1] |
Literary movement | Italian Renaissance |
Nicholas Kalliakis (Greek: Νικόλαος Καλλιάκης, Nikolaos Kalliakis;[2] Latin: Nicolaus Calliachius; Italian: Niccolò Calliachi; c. 1645[3] - 8 May 1707) was a Cretan Greek[4] scholar and philosopher who flourished in Italy in the 17th century. He was appointed doctor of philosophy and theology in Rome,[5] university professor of Greek and Latin[6] and Aristotelian philosophy[7] at Venice in 1666 and professor of belles-lettres[8] and rhetoric[9] at Padua in 1667.
CALLIACHI, (Nicolas) grec de Candie, y naquit en 1645. Il profefla les belles
Cretese Nikolaos Kalliakis
Nicolò Calliachi (1645 — 1707), professore a Padova
Griechen Nicolai Calliachius (1645-1707), Syntagma de Indis scenicis mimorum et pantomimorum
CALLIACHI, (Nicholas,) a native of Candia, where he was born in 1645. He studied at Rome for ten years, at the end of which time he was made doctor of philosophy and theology.
CALLIACHI (NICHOLAS), a native of Cundía, was born in 1646, and after studying at Rome, professed Greek and Latin at Venice, and afterwards philosophy and rhetoric at Padua, where he died on May 8, 1707.
CALLIACHI, (Nicholas,)…In 1666 he was invited to Venice, to take the chair of professor of the Greek and Latin languages, and of the Aristotelic philosophy; and in 1677 he was appointed professor of belles-lettres at Padua, where he died in 1707.
CALLIACHI, (Nicholas,)…In 1666 he was invited to Venice, to take the chair of professor of the Greek and Latin languages, and of the Aristotelic philosophy; and in 1677 he was appointed professor of belles-lettres at Padua, where he died in 1707.
CALLIACHI (NICHOLAS), a native of Cundía, was born in 1646, and after studying at Rome, professed Greek and Latin at Venice, and afterwards philosophy and rhetoric at Padua, where he died May 8, 1707.