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CULTURE
AND COSMOS Volume 6 Number 1
Spring/Summer 2002
Demetra
George Manuel
I Komnenos and Michael Glykas: A Twelfth-Century Defence and Refutation of
Astrology, Part
3, pp. 23-43. Abstract.
Michael Glykas is generally known as a learned
conservative theologian who wrote a refutation of Byzantine Emperor Manuel
Komnenos' defence of astrology in the latter half of the twelfth century.
However there exists substantial evidence that Michael Glykas had a dual
identity as the shadowy Michael Sikidites who in his youth was known for his
occult interests, suspected of political sedition against Manuel, and imprisoned
and blinded as punishment for sorcery. With skill and critical astuteness,
Glykas directs his refutation not so much against Manuel's philosophical
arguments as against the claims of his evidence, and thus seeks to cast doubt
upon the moral and literary integrity of his Emperor in an attempt to redeem his
own reputation. Within half a century of the reintroduction of astrology to the
West, Glykas was the first person in many centuries to stir up all the old
Christian objections against the fatalism of the stars. |