Periodic Reporting for period 3 - PURA (PURism in Antiquity: Theories of Language in Greek Atticist Lexica and their Legacy)
Período documentado: 2024-01-01 hasta 2025-06-30
PURA seeks to build a bridge between ancient and modern purist theories by producing the first diachronic study of Greek purism, the texts which upheld it, and their legacy in later ages. We have three objectives.
Our first objective is to make the theories of these intricate texts accessible outside the traditional format of critical editions and more approachable for non-experts. PURA has achieved this objective by creating the Digital Encyclopedia of Atticism (www.atticism.eu) a web-based open-access platform which collects the output of our linguistic, philological and paleographic study of Atticist lexica.
Our second objective is to comprehensively map Atticist theories. To achieve this objective PURA is performing a diachronic linguistic analysis of the lexica which studies the history and evolution of Atticist features across the whole history of the language: Ancient, Medieval and Modern Greek. This part of our work informs the lexicographical articles of the Digital Encyclopedia of Atticism and will feed the first two volumes of the project monograph: The Roots of Atticism (to appear in 2024) and The Age of Atticism (to appear in 2027).
Our third objective is to study the intellectual and cultural legacy of Atticism in the Middle Ages and early modern age. We are charting the history of the main Atticist lexica as books: from the production of manuscripts at Byzantium to their arrival in Humanist Italy down to their first circulation in print across Italy and the rest of Europe in the Renaissance. This part of our work has been published in the codicological articles of the Digital Encyclopedia of Atticism from 2024, in a series of journal articles, and will also be part of vol. 3 of the project monograph, The Legacy of Atticism (to appear in 2027).
Overall, to date PURA has produced 295 publications (see the full list here: https://pric.unive.it/projects/pura/publications(se abrirá en una nueva ventana)) and several more are forthcoming.
Philological study of Greek lexicography. PURA’s cross-textual approach is enabling the study of Greek lexica and their linguistic theories in a more in-depth and organic manner than has been attempted before. By the end of PURA, we will have produced a significant number of lexicographical entries on Atticist lexica which will enable important advances in the understanding of the relationship between individual lexica and how this tradition was received in the Byzantine age. Many of these insights also feed the second part of vol. 1 of the project monograph and will be made available in vols. 2 & 3. We also expect to propose a new model for the critical edition of some of these materials.
Extrapolation of linguistic theories from lexica. PURA is mapping the contents of Atticist lexica by linguistic level (phonology, nominal and verbal morphology, word formation, syntax, the lexicon). By the end of PURA, we expect to have achieved a complete description of Attic Greek according to the Atticists. Through DEA and the project monograph we will produce the first full study of the linguistic theories of Atticism and the first to consider them under the sociolinguistic category of language purism.
The manuscript tradition. The mapping of the manuscripts of Pollux’ Onomasticon has produced significant advances, leading to a re-definition of the relations between manuscripts and their families, and making the case for a new critical edition. We have now extended this approach to Moeris lexicon and by the end of PURA we will have a full mapping also of the Eclogue. This will be the first comprehensive study of the tradition of Atticist lexicography from a cultural and historical perspective. It will open new interpretative possibilities, among which new ways to edit these works in the future.
Digital approaches to Greek lexicography. PURA has designed a research infrastructure for the annotation and commentary of Greek lexica. DEA has become a reference resource in Greek lexicography and historical linguistics. By the end of the project, DEA will host no less than 280 lexicographical entries dealing with more than 600 lemmas from Atticist lexica plus many more from Byzantine and other sources. This corpus will be fully representative of the theories and many layers of Atticism, providing a non-static, evolving reference source which may well be further implemented after the end of the project.