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Alexandros Pallis (Greek: Αλέξανδρος Πάλλης) (Piraeus, 1851 – Liverpool, 1935) was a Greek educational and language reformer who translated the New Testament into Modern Greek. The publication, in the Acropolis newspaper, caused riots in Athens in 1901 in which 8 people died. The New Testament in Modern Greek was not legalised until 1924.[1]
Pallis had lived in Manchester from 1869 to 1875, in India from 1875 to 1894, then in Liverpool until his death. He subsidized from abroad much of the literary and scholarly output in demotic Greek from 1900 until the First World War, including his own translations of Homer.
Pallis considered it was "common sense" that John the Baptist was a vegetarian.[2]
The ecologist Marietta Pallis and the Tibetan traveller Marco Pallis were his children.
See also
Neophytos Vamvas 1776-1866
Maximos of Gallipoli
Νέα Διαθήκη, κατά το Βατικανό Χειρόγραφο, Αλέξανδρος Πάλλης
References
^ Peter Mackridge Language and national identity in Greece, 1766-1976
^ James A. Kelhoffer The diet of John the Baptist: "Locusts and wild honey" in synoptic and . p19
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