Matthaios Kamariotis

Matthaios Kamariotis (Greek: Ματθαῖος Καμαριώτης; died 1490) was a Greek scholar of the Renaissance era, from Thessaloniki. He was a lecturer at the University of Constantinople and the first director of the Patriarchal Academy of Constantinople (Phanar Greek Orthodox College), founded by the Patriarch Gennadius as a continuation of the University of Constantinople after the Fall of Constantinople.[1]

Works

gollark: ???!
gollark: Thoughts on Embedded HQ9+?
gollark: Yes, it's probably really hard for compilers to optimize it due to the weak type system.
gollark: Plus you have to manually muck with stupid layers of `cmake`, `autoconf`, `automake` and whatever else.
gollark: C, however, does not do this at all sanely for development environments.

See also

References

  1. Kostas Gavroglu, The Sciences in the European Periphery During the Enlightenment, 2001, p. 46
  2. Uppsala Universitaet, Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, Uppsala University Library, 1962, p. 286


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