The Wandering Greeks: From Italy to Russia
If there was one constant in the lives of seventeenth-century Greeks interested in education, it was mobility. Whether in search for basic literacy or training in a craft, a doctoral degree or employment as teachers, Greeks of the time were obliged to move, oftentimes very far from their birthplace....
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creator | Nikolaos A. Chrissidis |
description | If there was one constant in the lives of seventeenth-century Greeks interested in education, it was mobility. Whether in search for basic literacy or training in a craft, a doctoral degree or employment as teachers, Greeks of the time were obliged to move, oftentimes very far from their birthplace.¹ Natives of Crete and the Ionian Islands, in particular, enjoyed the advantages that citizenship of the Venetian Republic afforded. The Serenissima zealously strove to restrict the number of Greeks who sought educational opportunities in institutions outside its Italian domains. To this end, it provided special incentives to ensure that its Ionian |
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Chrissidis</creatorcontrib><description>If there was one constant in the lives of seventeenth-century Greeks interested in education, it was mobility. Whether in search for basic literacy or training in a craft, a doctoral degree or employment as teachers, Greeks of the time were obliged to move, oftentimes very far from their birthplace.¹ Natives of Crete and the Ionian Islands, in particular, enjoyed the advantages that citizenship of the Venetian Republic afforded. The Serenissima zealously strove to restrict the number of Greeks who sought educational opportunities in institutions outside its Italian domains. 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Whether in search for basic literacy or training in a craft, a doctoral degree or employment as teachers, Greeks of the time were obliged to move, oftentimes very far from their birthplace.¹ Natives of Crete and the Ionian Islands, in particular, enjoyed the advantages that citizenship of the Venetian Republic afforded. The Serenissima zealously strove to restrict the number of Greeks who sought educational opportunities in institutions outside its Italian domains. To this end, it provided special incentives to ensure that its Ionian</abstract><pub>Cornell University Press</pub></addata></record> |
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source | Project MUSE Open Access Books; De Gruyter Open Access Books; OAPEN; DOAB: Directory of Open Access Books |
title | The Wandering Greeks: From Italy to Russia |
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