Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Moscow Theological Academy (Russian: Московская духовная академия) is a higher educational institution of the Russian Orthodox Church, training clergy, teachers, scholars, and officials. The Academy traces its origin to the Slavic Greek Latin Academy, which was founded in 1685 by the Greek Lichud brothers.

  2. The Slavic Greek Latin Academy (Russian: Славяно-греко-латинская академия) was the first higher education establishment in Moscow. (en) Slavisk-grekisk-latinska akademin (ryska: Славяно-греко-латинская академия) var den första högre institutionen för utbildning i Moskva i Ryssland.

  3. The Likhud Brothers ( Russian: Братья Лихуды) were two Greek monks from Cephalonia who founded and managed the Slavic Greek Latin Academy in Moscow between 1685 and 1694. Their names were Ioannikios Leichoudes ( Greek: Ιωαννίκιος Λειχούδης) or Ioannikii Likhud ( Russian: Иоанникий Лихуд, 1633–1717 ...

  4. Ostroh Academy was based on the traditional Western European education system, presupposing the simultaneous study of the languages to interpret the Holy Scriptures – Greek, Latin and Biblical Hebrew. Ostroh Academy preserved the study of Latin and Greek and supplemented them with local, bookish Slavonic language.

  5. The article’s purpose is the analysis of the evolution process and all its main aspects in the history of Moscow Slavonic-greek-latin Academy of the specified period. At the beginning of the XVIII century Moscow Academy was found on a basis of European «pre-classical» university pattern and became the first higher institute for all social estates in Russia.

  6. 26 de nov. de 2013 · The author of Arithmetica, Leonty Philipovich Magnitsky (1669–1739), had an upbringing similar to Lomonosov’s: He had humble origins in northwest Russia, was dissatisfied with the education he was receiving, and left with a sleigh convoy for Moscow where he was one of the first students to attend the famous Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy in Moscow, and afterward acquired a knowledge of the ...

  7. Among students of Kievo-Mohilanskaya Academy it is worth mentioning a poet, priest and statesman of Peter’s Russia, Feofan Prokopovich (1681-1736), and the Ukrainian philosopher Grigory Skovoroda (1722-1794). There and later, in the Slavic Greek Latin Academy, studied the pioneer of Russian science and literature, Mikhail Lomonosov (1711-1765).