New Academy (Moscopole)

New Academy
Νέα Ἀκαδημία, Ελληνικό Φροντιστήριο
Location

Ottoman Empire
Information
TypeAcademy
Established1744
Statusdestroyed
Closed1769
Headmaster1744-1750 Sevastos Leontiadis
1750-1769 Theodore Kavalliotis

Early 20th-century picture of the now destroyed church of Saint John in Moscopole. The New Academy was built on the foreground.

The New Academy or Greek Academy[1] (Greek: Νέα Ἀκαδημία, Ελληνικό Φροντιστήριο) was a renowned educational institution, operating from 1743 to 1769 in Moscopole, an 18th-century cultural and commercial metropolis of the Aromanians and leading center of Greek culture[2][3] in what is now southern Albania. It was nicknamed the "worthiest jewel of the city" and played a very active role in the inception of the modern Greek Enlightenment movement.[4]

  1. ^ Sampimon, Janette (2006). Becoming Bulgarian: the articulation of Bulgarian identity in the nineteenth century in its international context: an intellectual history. Pegasus. p. 44. ISBN 978-90-6143-311-8. One very famous Greek academy was that in Moschopolis, a city now called Voskopoja in the south of Albania
  2. ^ Cohen, Mark (2003). Last century of a Sephardic community: the Jews of Monastir, 1839-1943. Foundation for the Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-886857-06-3. Moschopolis emerged as the leading center of Greek intellectual activity in the 18th
  3. ^ Winnifrith, Tom (2002). Badlands, borderlands: a history of Northern Epirus/Southern Albania. Duckworth. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-7156-3201-7. This culture was of course Greek culture
  4. ^ Bardu (2007): 2