1. According to Fuchs, F., Die höheren Schulen von Konstantinopel im Mittelalter (Byzantinische Archiv 8, Leipzig - Berlin 1926), p. 55, Karykes’ school was in Smyrna. Constantinides, C.N., Higher education in Byzantium in the Thirteenth and early Fourteenth centuries (1204- c.1310) (Nicosia 1982), p. 7, challenges this opinion and counter-proposes Nicaea, based on the fact that Blemmydes does not report Smyrna as the place where he had studied. The existence of the school is evidence that letters slourished and Theodore Hexapterygos, Nikephoros Blemmydes and George Babouscomites moved there, as it happened with the Church of St. Tryphon, which led to the foundation of the School of Philosophy and the Patriarchal School. 2. Karykes asked for an answer and an interpretation of the phrase “ὃς οὐκ ἐπορεύθη ἐν βουλῇ ἀσεβῶν μακάριος ἀνὴρ ἐστὶ” (“blessed be he who did not head for a gathering of impious people”). Blemmydes commented extensively on the syntaxis mistake and the ambiguous use of the pronoun, which, according to him, may as well have been attributed to male animals. After correcting the expression to “ὁ ἀνήρ, ὅστις δὲν πορεύεται ἐν βουλῇ ἀσεβῶν, μακάριός ἐστι” (“blessed be the man who did not head for a gathering of impious people”), he proceeded to the interpretation of the psalm of David. See Nicephori Blemmydae, Curriculum vitae et carmina (Περὶ τῶν κατ’ αὐτόν διήγησις μερική), publ. A. Heisenberg (Leipzig 1896), pp. 55-56. 3. See Μηλιαράκης, Α., Ιστορία του βασιλείου της Νίκαιας (Athens 1898), pp. 311-312. 4. As regards the duties of the hypatos ton philosophon, Constantinides supposed that in the case of the people appointed by Theodore I Laskaris, namely Theodore Eirenikos and Demetrios Karykes, it is possible that the title did no longer entail the same responsibilities as before. See Constantinides, C.N., Higher education in Byzantium in the Thirteenth and early Fourteenth centuries (1204-c.1310) (Nicosia 1982), pp. 115-116. 5. About the office of hypatos ton philosophon, its history and title, see Fuchs, F., Die höheren Schulen von Konstantinopel im Mittelalter (Byzantinische Archiv 8, Leipzig - Berlin 1926), p. 55 ff. |