Peter the Iberian by Levan Urushadze

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See also Peter the Iberian

This is a signed article by Dr. Levan Urushadze. It may be edited for spelling errors or typos, but not for substantive content except by its author. If you have created a user name and verified your identity, provided you have set forth your credentials on your user page, you can add comments to the botton of this article as Wikinfo:Peer review.

Peter the Iberian (Petre Iberi, secular name: Murvan 411 - 491) was Bishop of Majum (452 - 491). He is thought by some scholars to have written the philosophical work Corpus Areopagiticum, widely attributed to "Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite", a work which influenced medieval Christian philosophy.

Peter was a Georgian (Iberian) Prince, well-known theologist and philosopher, and a Christian Neoplatonist. His father was the King of Iberia Buzmar.

In 430 he founded the Georgian Monastery in Palestine, near Bethlehem. Georgian Professor Shalva Nutsubidze (1888-1969) and Belgian Professor Ernest Honigmann (1892-1954) have published research that argue for the identity of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite and Peter the Iberian (Theory of Nutsubidze-Honigmann, 1942-1952).

Links and Literature

  • Petre Iberi. Works, Tbilisi, 1961 (In Georgian)
  • Ernest Honigmann. Piere l'iberian et les ecrits du Pseudo-Denys l'Areopagite, Bruxelles, 1952
  • Shalva Nutsubidze. Mistery of Pseudo-Dionys Areopagit, Tbilisi, 1942 (In Georgian, summary in English)
  • Shalva Nutsubidze. Peter the Iberian and problems of Areopagitics.- Proceedings of the Tbilisi State University, vol. 65, Tbilisi, 1957 (In Russian)


References

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