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Themistius

Themistius

c. 317 CEc. 388 CE · Constantinople (Istanbul)

Themistius (c. 317 – c. 388 CE), surnamed Euphrades ("the eloquent"), was a Greek rhetorician, philosopher, and statesman active in Constantinople. He opened a school there in the mid-340s CE and composed close paraphrases of several of Aristotle's works, including the Physics, De anima, De caelo, the Posterior Analytics, and Book Lambda (Book 12) of the Metaphysics, intended to make the Aristotelian texts more accessible. As one of the principal late representatives of the Peripatetic tradition, his interpretation of Aristotle's account of the intellect later influenced medieval thinkers, notably Averroes and, through Latin translation, Thomas Aquinas, as well as Jewish philosophers such as Gersonides and Moses of Narbonne. From around 350 CE he also held a prominent public role, serving as adviser, senator, and ambassador under a succession of eastern Roman emperors, a career documented in his surviving orations.

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Constantinople (Istanbul)קונסטנטינופולOttoman Empire

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About Constantinople (Istanbul)

Major post-1492 Sephardi center under Ottoman protection. Home of R. Yehudah Rosanes (Mishneh L'Melech) and many other Acharonim.

In Constantinople (Istanbul) at the same time

Eutropius, Julian, Emperor of Rome

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In the same place & time

Sages whose lives overlapped with Themistius’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.

In the same tradition

Eutropius, Julian, Emperor of Rome

The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Themistius’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.

Works(5)

Quae Fertur In Aristotelis Analyticorum Priorum Librum I

Constantinople (Istanbul)