New Academy (Moscopole)

{{Other uses|New Academy}}

{{Infobox school

| name = New Academy

| native_name = {{lang|grc|Νέα Ἀκαδημία}}, {{lang|grc|Ελληνικό Φροντιστήριο}}

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| established = 1744

| closed = 1769

| type = Academy

| status = destroyed

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| headmaster = 1744-1750 Sevastos Leontiadis
1750-1769 Theodore Kavalliotis

| head_name = Second Master

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| city = Moscopole

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| country = Ottoman Empire

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| picture_caption = Early 20th-century picture of the now destroyed church of Saint John in Moscopole. The New Academy was built on the foreground.

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| picture_caption2 = Early 20th-century picture of the now destroyed church of Saint John in Moscopole. The New Academy was built on the foreground.

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The New Academy or Greek Academy{{Cite book|last=Sampimon|first=Janette |title=Becoming Bulgarian: the articulation of Bulgarian identity in the nineteenth century in its international context: an intellectual history|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XikXAQAAIAAJ&q=%22greek+academy%22%2Bmoschopolis|year=2006|publisher=Pegasus|page=44|isbn=978-90-6143-311-8|quote=One very famous Greek academy was that in Moschopolis, a city now called Voskopoja in the south of Albania}} ({{langx|el|Νέα Ἀκαδημία}}, {{lang|el|Ελληνικό Φροντιστήριο}}) was a renowned educational institution, operating from 1743 to 1769 in Moscopole, an 18th-century cultural and commercial metropolis of the Aromanians and leading center of Greek culture{{Cite book|last1=Cohen|first1=Mark |title=Last century of a Sephardic community: the Jews of Monastir, 1839-1943|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CCfXAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Education+was+so+actively+endorsed+that+Moschopolis+emerged+as+the+leading+center+of+Greek+intellectual+activity+in+the+18th%22

|year=2003|publisher=Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture

|page=13|isbn=978-1-886857-06-3|quote=Moschopolis emerged as the leading center of Greek intellectual activity in the 18th}}{{Cite book|last=Winnifrith|first=Tom |title=Badlands, borderlands: a history of Northern Epirus/Southern Albania

|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dkRoAAAAMAAJ&q=%22This+culture+was+of+course+Greek+culture%2C%22|year=2002|publisher=Duckworth|page=109|isbn=978-0-7156-3201-7|quote=This culture was of course Greek culture}} in what is now southern Albania. It was nicknamed the "worthiest jewel of the city" and played a very active role in the inception of the modern Greek Enlightenment movement.Bardu (2007): 2

Background

Moscopole, currently a small village in southern Albania, used to be an 18th-century city, inhabited then and now predominantly by Aromanians. It became a center of Greek culture, with Greek being the language of education in the local schools, as well as the language of the books published by the local printing house, founded either in 1720 or in 1731. It was the second printing press founded in the Ottoman Empire, after a printing press in Istanbul that also employed the Greek language. Education was so actively promoted, that the city emerged as a leading center of Greek intellectual activity.

An educational institution, called The Greek College, was active in the city as early as 1700.Lloshi (2008) p.103{{cite book|last=Peyfuss|first=Max Demeter|author-link=Max Demeter Peyfuss|title=Die Druckerei von Moschopolis, 1731-1769: Buchdruck und Heiligenverehrung im Erzbistum Achrida|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2MxpAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Neue+Akademie%22|year=1989|publisher=Böhlau|language=de|page=38|isbn=9783205052937 }} Its first director, Chrysanthos, was a monk from Zitsa, while, in 1724, Ioannina born scholar, Nicolaos Stigmis, became schoolmaster.Peyfuss (1976): [https://books.google.com/books?id=ePc2AAAAIAAJ&q=%22neue+akademie%22%2Bmoschopolis p. 116] After 1730 and for a short period, Ioannis Chalkeus an Aristotelian philosopher also taught in the school. During that time the teaching staff included scholars from various ethnic backgrounds: Aromanian, Greek and Albanian.

History

File:Shkolla-e-voskopojes.jpg or Gregory of Durrës.]]

In 1738, Sevastos Leontiadis, a scholar and priest from Kastoria (now Greece), was put in charge.Kekridis (1989): p. 41 It was during his directorate that the school was upgraded and endowed with additional classes. In 1744 the school was named New Academy and in 1750 it was re-housed in a new, imposing building. In accordance to 18th-century Greek educational mores, a school could only acquire the title 'Academy' if it achieved a higher standard of educational quality and prestige.Kekridis (1989): p. 42 Similar educational institutions this period were operating in a number of urban center in the Ottoman Empire: Bucharest, Iași, Ioannina, Istanbul (Constantinople).Peyfuss (1976): [https://books.google.com/books?id=ePc2AAAAIAAJ&q=1744%2B%22Akademien+bestanden%22 p. 116]

It was also alternatively called Ellinikon Frontistirion ({{langx|el|Ελληνικόν Φροντιστήριον}} Greek College). In 1750 Theodore Kavalliotis, already a member of the teaching staff since 1743, became the headmaster of the New Academy.{{Cite book|last=Mikropoulos|title=Elevating and Safeguarding Culture Using Tools of the Information Society: Dusty traces of the Muslim culture| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=optXTg3ovBYC&q=moschopolis |year=2008|publisher=Earthlab|pages=315–316|isbn=978-960-233-187-3|first=Tassos A.}} Kavalliotis was instrumental in establishing the reputation of the Academy, which, under his direction, reached its floruit.Kekridis (1989): p. 282 Becoming the virtual soul of the Academy, Kavalliotis taught grammar, poetry, philosophical disciplines, and theology. Moreover, with the purpose of meeting class needs, he wrote a number of introductory manuals in Greek, as well as treatises and other material, necessary for teaching, many of which are still preserved in unpublished manuscripts.Bardu (2007): 4-5

Apart from Kavalliotis, another teacher of the New Academy was the owner of the Academy's printing press, Georgios Konstantinidis known as well as Gregory of Durrës, although Robert Elsies believes they are two different people.{{cite web|last=Elsie|first=Robert|url=http://www.albanianliterature.net/authors_early/gregory_of_durres/gregory.html|title=GREGORY OF DURRËS|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113235236/http://www.albanianliterature.net/authors_early/gregory_of_durres/gregory.html|archive-date=2012-01-13}} Gregory was also responsible for the printing of the books that were taught at the school.Peyfuss (1976): [https://books.google.com/books?id=ePc2AAAAIAAJ&q=%22neuen+akademie%22 p. 117] He taught from 1745 to 1748.Kekridis (1989): p. 44 The printing house had notably close ties to the Monastery of Saint Naum, near Ohrid. Notably 19 publications from Moscopole's printing press, mainly religious ones, appeared until 1760. The last known publication of the press was the Introduction to Grammar by Kavalliotis.

Aftermath

The New Academy, was destroyed during the first wave of destruction of Moscopole, by Muslim Albanian bands in 1769.{{cite book|last1=Stavrianos|first1=Leften Stavros|title=The Balkans Since 1453|date=2000|publisher=Hurst|isbn=9781850655510|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xcp7OXQE0FMC&pg=PA278|language=en|quote=In 1769 the Moslem Albanians were permitted to wipe out completely the prosperous town of Moschopolis with a population of sixty thousand Greeks and Vlachs.}}Sakellariou (1997): [https://books.google.com/books?id=UV1oAAAAMAAJ&q=%22A+similar+contribution+was+made+by+Moschopolis%2C+where+the+New+Academy+described+a+brilliant+trajectory+for+decades+and+ceased+to+operate+only+after+the+destruction+of+the+city+in+1769.%22 p. 268]. Although the city never rose to its former glory, a new Greek school was established at the end of the 18th century whose headmaster at 1802 was Daniel Moscopolites. This school functioned the following decades, thanks to donations and bequests mainly by baron Simon Sinas, a member of the Moscopolean diaspora.Sakellariou (1997): [https://books.google.com/books?id=UV1oAAAAMAAJ&q=%22In+Moschopolis%2C+where+there+had+been+an+earlier+famous+school+(see+page+259)%2C+a+Greek+school+was+founded+at+the+end+of+the+eighteenth+century+(in+1802+the+headmaster+was+Daniel+Moschopolitis)%2C+which+functioned+as+a+mutual+instruction+which+functioned+as+a+mutual+instruction+school+over+the+following+decades%2C+thanks+mainly+to+donations+and+bequests+by+baron+Simon+Sinas+of+Moschopolis p. 308] The school functioned until the 1916 wave of destruction, and its last director was Theophrastos Georgiadis.Kekridis (1989): p. 29

Notable alumni

References

{{reflist|2}}

Sources

  • {{citation|last=Bardu|first=Nistor|year=2007|title=Eighteenth Century Aromanian Writers: the Enlightenment and the Awakening of National and Balkan Consciousness|journal=Philologica Jassyensia|url=http://iit.iit.tuiasi.ro/philippide/asociatia/asociatia_admin/upload/III_1_Bardu.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110818085355/http://iit.iit.tuiasi.ro/philippide/asociatia/asociatia_admin/upload/III_1_Bardu.pdf|archive-date=2011-08-18}}
  • {{citation|url=http://phdtheses.ekt.gr/eadd/handle/10442/1624?locale=en |script-title=el:Θεόδωρος Αναστασίου Καβαλλιώτης (1718; 1789). Ο Διδάσκαλος του Γένους |author= Kekridis Eustathios |year= 1989 |work= Aristotle University of Thessaloniki |doi=10.12681/eadd/1624 |language=el, en |access-date=2010-09-11}}
  • {{citation|title=Rreth Alfabetit te shqipes |trans-title=Around the Albanian Alphabet)|last=Lloshi |first=Xhevat|year=2008 |publisher=Logos |isbn=978-9989-58-268-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9_gXTda0HS8C&q=gjuha+letrare+dhe+gjuha+standarde&pg=PA191 |language= sq |access-date=2010-06-01}}
  • {{citation| last= Peyfuss |first= Max Demeter |author-link = Max Demeter Peyfuss | title=Die Akademie von Moschopolis und ihre Nachwirkungen im Geistesleben Sudosteuropas| url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ePc2AAAAIAAJ|work= Wissenschaftspolitik im Mittel- und Osteuropa: Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaften, Akademien und Hochschulen im 18. und beginnenden 19. Jahrhundert|pages=114–128 |isbn=978-3-921515-00-6 |year=1976 |publisher=Hobbing |language=de}}
  • {{Cite book|last1=Sakellariou|first1=M. V. |title=Epirus, 4000 years of Greek history and civilization

|year=1997|publisher=Ekdotikē Athēnōn|isbn=978-960-213-371-2}}

Further reading

  • {{citation|last=Shuteriqi|first=Dhimitër S.|title=Historia e letërsisë shqipe|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rbFQ55oPe-QC|year=1971|publisher=Enti i teksteve dhe i mjeteve mësimore i Krahinës Socialiste Autonome të Kosovës|language=sq}}
  • {{citation|last=Várvaro|first=Alberto|title=Congresso Internazionale di Linguistica e Filologia Romanza ; 1: Napoli, 15 - 20 aprile 1974|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yaaRVbPsNoQC&pg=PA431|year=1978|publisher=John Benjamins Publishing Company|language=it|isbn=978-90-272-0941-2|pages=431}}

{{Modern Greek Enlightenment}}

{{Moscopole}}

{{Northern Epirus}}

Category:Education in the Ottoman Empire

Category:Modern Greek Enlightenment

Category:Moscopole

Category:1743 establishments in Europe

Category:1769 disestablishments

Moscopole

Category:1743 establishments in the Ottoman Empire