Mazaris (Greek: Μάζαρις; fl. c. 1415) was a late Byzantine Greek writer known only for having authored a satirical text entitled Mazaris' Journey to Hades. Although his identity and first name are unknown, Mazaris has been tentatively identified with at least two known historical personalities of the same name, one Manuel Mazaris, who was a hymnographer and served as protonotarios of Thessaloniki, and one Maximus Mazaris, who was a monk and author of a text on grammatical rules.[1] According to yet another hypothesis, however, these two were actually the same person.[2] Because of this uncertainty, the author of the Journey is mostly referred to simply by his family name.
The Journey to Hades is believed to have been written between January 1414 and October 1415. It contains elements of social satire targeting the Byzantine ruling elite, but also some information about the lower classes in the Peloponnese, including some remarks about the various ethnic groups that made up its population.
Footnotes
edit- ^ Romano, La satira bizantina, quoting E. Trapp, Prosopogr. Lex.
- ^ "ShowCategory". Archived from the original on 2006-05-11. Retrieved 2006-04-11.
References
edit- Mazaris: Mazaris' Journey to Hades: or, Interviews with dead men about certain officials of the imperial court. Greek text with translation, notes, introduction and index. (Seminar Classics 609). Buffalo NY: Dept. of Classics, State University of New York at Buffalo, 1975.
- R. Romano (ed.): La satira bizantina dei secoli XI-XV. Turino: Unione Tipografica, 1999.
- E. Trapp: Prosopographisches Lexikon der Palaiologenzeit. Vienna, 1985.