The Deacon John

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The Deacon John [1]

and orator ( Διάχονος Καὶ Ρήτωρ ) of Constantinople, was a deacon of the great church (St. Sophia) in that city about the end of the 9th century. He wrote Λόγος Εἰς Τὸν Βίον Τοῦ Ἐν Ἁγίοις Πατρὸς Ἡμῶν Ι᾿Ωσήφ , Τοῦ Ὑμνγράφου ( Vita S. Josephi Hymnographi ) , published in the Acta Sanctorum (April 3), vol. 1, a Latin version being given in the body of the work, with a learned Commentarius Proevius at p. 266, etc., and the original in the Appendix, p. 34. Allatius ( De Psellis, c. 30) cites another work of this writer, entitled Τίς Σκοπὸς Τῷ Θεῷ Τῆς Πρώτης Τοῦ Ἀνθρώπου Πλάσεως . Κ . Τ . Λ . ( Quid Est Consilium Dei In Prima Hominis Formatione, Etc. ) . The designation Joannes Diaconus is common to several medieval writers, as John Galenus or Pediasmus; John Hypatius John, deacon of Rome; and, John Diaconus, a contemporary and correspondent of George of Trebizond. See Acta Sanctorum, 1. c.; Fabricius, Biblica Groeca , 10, 264, 11, 654; Cave, Hist. Lit. 2 , Dissertatio 1, 11; Oudin, De Scriptoribus et Scriptis Ecclesiasticis, 2, 335. Smith, Dict. Greek and Roman Biog. 2, 594.

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