"periegesis" meaning in English

See periegesis in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Noun

IPA: /ˌpɛ.ɹɪ.əˈd͡ʒiː.sɪs/ [Received-Pronunciation], /ˌpɛ.ɹi.əˈd͡ʒi.sɪs/ [General-American] Audio: LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-periegesis.wav [Southern-England] Forms: periegeses [plural]
Etymology: Borrowed from Koine Greek περιήγησις (periḗgēsis, “the action of being shown around, as by a guide (chiefly in the titles of works)”), from Ancient Greek περι- (peri-, “peri-, prefix meaning ‘around, surrounding’”) + ἥγησις (hḗgēsis, “command, leading”) (from ἡγέομαι (hēgéomai, “to lead”) + -σῐς (-sis, “suffix forming nouns”)), from περιηγεῖσθαι (periēgeîsthai, “to lead around”); compare Late Latin periegesis. Cognate with Greek περιήγηση (periígisi, “tour, sightseeing”). Etymology templates: {{bor|en|grc-koi|περιήγησις||the action of being shown around, as by a guide (chiefly in the titles of works)}} Koine Greek περιήγησις (periḗgēsis, “the action of being shown around, as by a guide (chiefly in the titles of works)”), {{der|en|grc|περι-||peri-, prefix meaning ‘around, surrounding’}} Ancient Greek περι- (peri-, “peri-, prefix meaning ‘around, surrounding’”), {{m|grc|ἥγησις||command, leading}} ἥγησις (hḗgēsis, “command, leading”), {{m|grc|ἡγέομαι||to lead}} ἡγέομαι (hēgéomai, “to lead”), {{m|grc|-σῐς||suffix forming nouns}} -σῐς (-sis, “suffix forming nouns”), {{m|grc|περιηγεῖσθαι||to lead around}} περιηγεῖσθαι (periēgeîsthai, “to lead around”), {{cog|LL.|periegesis}} Late Latin periegesis, {{cog|el|περιήγηση||tour, sightseeing}} Greek περιήγηση (periígisi, “tour, sightseeing”) Head templates: {{en-noun|periegeses}} periegesis (plural periegeses)
  1. A description of an area or territory. Wikipedia link: Laurentian Library, Pausanias Categories (topical): Geography, Literature Derived forms: periegete, periegetic Coordinate_terms: periplus, terrier Translations (description of an area or territory): περιήγησις (periḗgēsis) [feminine] (Ancient Greek), périégèse (French), Periegese [feminine] (German), Periegesis [feminine] (German)

Inflected forms

Download JSON data for periegesis meaning in English (8.9kB)

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  "lang_code": "en",
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          "word": "periegete"
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          "text": "a periegesis of Greece",
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          "ref": "1797, “Dionysius”, in Colin Macfarquhar, editor, Encyclopædia Britannica; or, A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Miscellaneous Literature; [...] In Eighteen Volumes, Greatly Improved, 3rd edition, volumes VI (DIA–ETH), Edinburgh: Printed for A[ndrew] Bell and C[olin] Macfarquhar, →OCLC, page 33, column 1",
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          "ref": "1843 May, “Art. I.—1. Griechische Heroen Geschichten. Von B. G. Niebuhr an seinen Sohn erzählt. Hamburg, 1842. Grecian Heroic Stories; related by B[arthold] G[eorg] Niebuhr to his Son.”, in The Westminster Review, American edition, volume XXXIX, number LXXVII, New York, N.Y.: Published by Leonard Scott & Co., 112 Fulton Street, →OCLC, page 158",
          "text": "[H]ad we been able to obtain a periegesis of Greece for the year 776 b.c., we should have discovered from one end of the country to the other nothing but legends, preached by the men of genius, received both with earnest emotion and with sincere faith by the hearers.",
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          "text": "Where did Cassiodorus read that the Huns were the neighbors of the Seres, supposedly the Chinese? There is little doubt that his source was one of the popular compendia which, directly or indirectly, went back to Dionysius [Periegetes]' Periegesis. Cassiodorus recommended \"the map of Dionysius\" to his monks. It is not particularly significant that in both the Getica and the Periegesis the Caspian Sea is a gulf of the ocean; this was a belief held and combatted since the time of the Ionian geographers.",
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          "text": "A periegesis is usually understood to be a geographical catalogue, cast in the form of a tour, often of a local area but sometimes more extended in scope. The form is related to local history. Modem scholarship has established that there was a specifically periegetic form of historiography, stretching back at least to the third century b.c.; […]",
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          "text": "This inquiry into Pausanias' generic affinities may seem to have come up with mostly negative results: the Periegesis is not a travel guide; it is not a geography; it is not a work like that of Herakleides Kritikos; it is not a full-blown imitation of Herodotean historiography, nor of Arrianic epistolography; it is not a periplous, and it is not, finally, a periegesis.",
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          "text": "Few readers approach Pausanias' Periegesis from the beginning, sailing round Cape Sounion and arriving in Athens, before following his convoluted routes through Greece. Not many, in fact, have read the whole work, but almost anyone with an interest in ancient Greece will have 'come across' Pausanias – usually by looking up particular passages: the Periegesis contains useful material for many purposes.",
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  "etymology_text": "Borrowed from Koine Greek περιήγησις (periḗgēsis, “the action of being shown around, as by a guide (chiefly in the titles of works)”), from Ancient Greek περι- (peri-, “peri-, prefix meaning ‘around, surrounding’”) + ἥγησις (hḗgēsis, “command, leading”) (from ἡγέομαι (hēgéomai, “to lead”) + -σῐς (-sis, “suffix forming nouns”)), from περιηγεῖσθαι (periēgeîsthai, “to lead around”); compare Late Latin periegesis. Cognate with Greek περιήγηση (periígisi, “tour, sightseeing”).",
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          "text": "Dionysius, a learned geographer, to whom is attributed a Periegeſis, or Survey of the Earth, in Greek verse.",
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          "ref": "1843 May, “Art. I.—1. Griechische Heroen Geschichten. Von B. G. Niebuhr an seinen Sohn erzählt. Hamburg, 1842. Grecian Heroic Stories; related by B[arthold] G[eorg] Niebuhr to his Son.”, in The Westminster Review, American edition, volume XXXIX, number LXXVII, New York, N.Y.: Published by Leonard Scott & Co., 112 Fulton Street, →OCLC, page 158",
          "text": "[H]ad we been able to obtain a periegesis of Greece for the year 776 b.c., we should have discovered from one end of the country to the other nothing but legends, preached by the men of genius, received both with earnest emotion and with sincere faith by the hearers.",
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          "text": "Where did Cassiodorus read that the Huns were the neighbors of the Seres, supposedly the Chinese? There is little doubt that his source was one of the popular compendia which, directly or indirectly, went back to Dionysius [Periegetes]' Periegesis. Cassiodorus recommended \"the map of Dionysius\" to his monks. It is not particularly significant that in both the Getica and the Periegesis the Caspian Sea is a gulf of the ocean; this was a belief held and combatted since the time of the Ionian geographers.",
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          "text": "There is not a single ancient Greek source that depicts someone using maps in a practical situation. […] '[G]eographical knowledge' did not depend on maps, but on other media, such as travel reports, sea journeys and periegeses, descriptions of a particular country. Geography relied on words and discourses, on human memory.",
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          "text": "A periegesis is usually understood to be a geographical catalogue, cast in the form of a tour, often of a local area but sometimes more extended in scope. The form is related to local history. Modem scholarship has established that there was a specifically periegetic form of historiography, stretching back at least to the third century b.c.; […]",
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  "translations": [
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      "code": "fr",
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      "sense": "description of an area or territory",
      "word": "périégèse"
    },
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      "sense": "description of an area or territory",
      "tags": [
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      "word": "Periegese"
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    {
      "code": "de",
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      "tags": [
        "feminine"
      ],
      "word": "Periegesis"
    },
    {
      "code": "grc",
      "lang": "Ancient Greek",
      "roman": "periḗgēsis",
      "sense": "description of an area or territory",
      "tags": [
        "feminine"
      ],
      "word": "περιήγησις"
    }
  ],
  "word": "periegesis"
}

This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-05-16 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-05-02 using wiktextract (e268c0e and 304864d). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

If you use this data in academic research, please cite Tatu Ylonen: Wiktextract: Wiktionary as Machine-Readable Structured Data, Proceedings of the 13th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC), pp. 1317-1325, Marseille, 20-25 June 2022. Linking to the relevant page(s) under https://kaikki.org would also be greatly appreciated.