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Very good!
Kyriakos and Anastasios lived in 6th century like Romanos (c. 490-556). I do not know if the latter was the emperor, but Anastasius I (c. 431 – 9 July 518), his explicits opinions about monophysitism could be a motivation to compose hymns, although the favorite genres by Cyril of Alexandria () and Severus of Antioch (c. 459/465-538) were hymns of the tropologion, not so much kontakia, but since it was a Syriac genre, why not?
You should definitely mention Jacob of Edessa (c. 640-708) who created the liturgy of Jerusalem, but also made a redaction of the Syriac translation of the tropologion and his contemporary Germanus I of Constantinople (c. 634—c. 732) who established an important school of hymnography in Constantinople. You can find the Russian essay by Alexandra Nikiforova about him (Kassia was deeply influenced by his poetry, see Simić).
I quote for you two passages from Nikiforova's study of the oldest Greek tropologion of Sinai (Sin.Gr. ΜΓ 56+5), apart from earlier papyrus fragments:
The old stratus
"Most of the monostrophes belonging to the old strata can be found in the Lenten, Sacred Triduum, Pascha, Nativity of Christ, and Theophany cycles. These chants usually were passed on without any musical-poetical pattern and are mostly anonymous.
Turning now to the new-strata hymnography, I would like to mention in this tropolgion the interpolation of the second ode, which is the most archaic evidence of this phenomenon known today, and which influenced later Greek, Georgian, Syriac, and Slavonic manuscript menaia. At the beginning of 8 th Century, John of Damascus and Cosmas of Jerusalem carried out a reform in canon writing. They stopped composing for the second ode in nine-ode canons, at the same time preserving the memory of the nine-ode structure, which was treated as sacred. Our tropologion preserves this transitional moment and an attempt to interpolate a second ode into new canons, since the tropologion was ordered to the liturgical practices of the Old Iadgari. In our tropologion the second ode was interpolated five times–in the canons of John and Cosmas for Nativity of Christ and Theophany (rubrics 3, 8, 10) and the two-ode canon for Holy Tuesday (rubric 35). These two approaches to canon composition existed in the 7 th and 8 th centuries: some continued to write canons with a second ode (Old Iadgari, Andrew of Crete and Germanos) and some began to write them without a second ode (John and Cosmas). This situation continued to exist in the 9th Century, when hymnographers composed both nine and eight ode canons without any logical explanation for their choice. But finally, the new trend of canons without the second ode replaced the old one."
The new stratus
"It is fortunate that many attributed hymns are available in Sin.Gr.ΜΓ 56+5, primarily the hymns of John of Damascus (†before 754) and Cosmas of Jerusalem († circa 752). Dimitrios Skrekas studied the iambic canons attributed to John of Damascus in the tropologion, which are some of the earliest and best witness the liturgical poems of this hymnographer. 87 “John the Monk” is mentioned as the author of eight canons–for the Forefeast of the Nativity of Christ (rubric 1), Forefeast of Theophany (rubric 8), Saint Babylas (15 January, rubric 18), Saint Euthymius the Great (20 January, rubric 22), Pascha (rubric 40), New Sunday (rubric 41), the Apparition of Holy Cross over Jerusalem (6 May, rubric 54), and Pentecost (rubric 68). “Cosmas the Monk,” according to the inscriptions in the codex, is the author of six canons–for the Nativity of Christ (25 December, rubric 3), Theophany (6 January, rubric 10), Saint Gregory the Theologian (24 January, rubric 24), the Meeting of our Lord in the Temple (2 February, rubric 28. 3), Holy Thursday (rubric 37), and Pentecost (rubric 65). It seems likely that these two writers are also the authors of many stichera and heirmoi, as well as some other anonymous canons. Thus, according to the manuscript tradition, the canon to Saint Basil the Great (1 January, rubric 5) was a masterpiece of John and the canon to Saint George (23 April, rubric 44), of Cosmas. Only one canon, of Saints Faith, Hope, and Love, (1 June, rubric 69) is attributed in the Tropologion to the famous author of the Old Iadgari “Andrew of Jerusalem” and it is clear the we deal now with a new redaction of the book."
Do not forget the Greek hymnographers who made the first translation into Old Church Slavonic into Glagolithic script, at least Cyril, Methodius and Clement of Ohrid. It does not matter, if they were born in Macedonia or in so-called Bulgaria, they were in charge by knyaz Boris, but also earlier by the King of Moravia (Pannonia). Just forget about national narratives, they are not helpful for the proper understanding and the protagonists could not know about the current territory of the state Bulgaria (founded by the end of the 19th century) -- Platonykiss ( talk) 22:59, 24 November 2020 (UTC)
These may be included at some point but as of now the scope of the list seems to suggest otherwise Aza24 ( talk) 05:34, 10 January 2021 (UTC)
Name | Lifetime | Nationality | Works | Picture | Ref(s) |
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Panagiotes the New Chrysaphes | c. 1620–25 – after 1682 | Romaic–Greek | Composer |
[1] | |
Petros Bereketis | 17th century | Byzantine | Composer |
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Petros Peloponnesios | c. 1735 – 1778 | Byzantine | Composer |
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Peter the Byzantine | fl. 1770 – 1808 | Byzantine | Composer and chanter |
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Chourmouzios the Archivist | c. 1770 – 1840 | Greek | Composer | ||
Chrysanthos of Madytos | c. 1770 – 1846 | Byzantine | Composer? and chanter |
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Gregorios the Protopsaltes |
References
Reminder to add the three woman composers from Touliatos-Banker, 1984, p. 80. Aza24 ( talk) 23:54, 8 September 2021 (UTC)
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From here: "This compositional activity continued well into the 15th century and beyond, notably in the work of John Kladas, a composer whose main theme was the Virgin Mary (his Akathistos Hymn is highly regarded to this day), and of composers such as John Laskares, Manuel Argyropoylos, Manuel Vlateros, and Manuel Gazes. In the mid-14th century Manuel Chrysaphes emerged as a key figure, with a pivotal and multifaceted body of work, but his contemporaries Gregory Alyates, Gerasimos Chalkeopoulos, Mark, Bishop of Korinthos, and John Plousiadenos were hardly less influential." [2] – Aza24 ( talk) 04:48, 13 February 2022 (UTC)