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court. Some of the literary pieces attributed to him are unpublished, while still others may be wrongly attributed to him. Even so, there does emerge from these writings the figure of an author in reduced circumstances, with a marked inclination towards begging, who was in close touch with the court
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signify that the author of these poems is a
Prodromos, Theodore Prodromos etc. with further variations. One manuscript of the monastic satire (C) signifies that the author is Hilarion (Ptocho)prodromos, and this name is found again in the poem D. This name has always been identified with the famous
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saves the mice from the housecat in the end. He also wrote "Iambic and
Dactyllic Quatrains on 293 Biblical Verses". The iambic quatrains are in the Vulgar Greek, and the Dactyllic quatrains are in the Homeric Greek. He also wrote two
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The literary activity of
Theodore Prodromos was vast and versatile, and there survive many of his writings in the literary Byzantine Greek language. Taking example by
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that there had actually been two poets of the same name. The evidence was found in one verse among the
Ptochoprodromic writings, where the author praises the
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and conventional treatment, his writings, often produced on some public occasion, provide important information on many aspects of contemporary
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and begging poems, which are marked as ABCDE. The poem A laments over the poet's garrulous wife and calls for help from emperor
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novelist, poet and writer
Theodore Prodromos, who wrote in purist Byzantine Greek. The
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and begs for charity to improve the menu. The poem C, addressed to emperor
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Very little is known about his life. Further developing a genre begun by
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is not all that surprising, as it is already found in the writings of
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Greek Opera Omnia by Migne
Patrologia Graeca with analytical indexes
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401:(r. 1118–1143). The poem B is addressed to a
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