•
Leo Allatius ( – 1669), Rome, librarian of the
library of Vatican •
George Amiroutzes (1400–1470), Florence, Aristotelian •
Henry Aristippus of Calabria (1105–10 – 1162) •
Michael Apostolius ( – after 1474 or 1486), Rome •
Arsenius Apostolius ( – 1538), Venice, bishop of Monemvasia •
John Argyropoulos ( – 1487), Universities of Florence, Rome •
Simon Atumano (14th century), Bishop of Gerace in Calabria •
Bessarion (1403–1472), Catholic cardinal •
Barlaam of Seminara (–1348), he taught
Petrarch some rudiments of Greek language •
Zacharias Calliergi (fl. 1499–1515), Rome •
Laonicus Chalcocondyles (), historian, Athens •
Demetrius Chalcondyles (1423–1511), Padua, Florence, Milan •
Theofilos Chalcocondylis, Florence •
Manuel Chrysoloras ( – 1415), Florence, Pavia, Rome, Venice, Milan •
John Chrysoloras, scholar and diplomat: relative of
Manuel Chrysoloras, patron of
Francesco Filelfo •
Andronicus Contoblacas, Basel, teacher of
Johann Reuchlin •
Johannes Crastonis (d. after 1497), Modena, Greek-Latin dictionary •
Andronicus Callistus (1400 – ), Rome, Bologna, Florence, Paris, cousin of Theodorus Gaza •
Demetrius Cydones (1324–1398),
Mesazon of the Byzantine Empire •
Mathew Devaris (fl. 1552–1550), Rome •
Demetrios Ducas (), Spain •
Elia del Medigo (), Venice, Rome, Padua, Jewish philosopher •
Antonios Eparchos (1491–1571), Venice, scholar and poet •
Antonio de Ferraris ( – 1517), academic, doctor and humanist •
Theodorus Gaza (), first dean of the University of Ferrara, Naples and Rome •
George Gemistos Plethon (/1360 – 1452/54), teacher of
Bessarion •
George of Trebizond (1395–1486), Venice, Florence, Rome •
George Hermonymus (before 1435 – after 1503),
University of Paris, teacher of
Erasmus,
Reuchlin,
Budaeus and
Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples •
Georgios Kalafatis (ca. 1652 – ca. 1720), Greek professor of theoretical and practical medicine •
Andreas Musalus (ca. 1665/6 – ca. 1721), Greek professor of mathematics, philosopher and architectural theorist •
Nicholas Kalliakis (Nicolai Calliachius) (1645–1707), a
Greek scholar and philosopher who flourished in Italy. •
Mathaeos Kamariotis (d. 1490), Constantinople •
Isidore of Kiev (1385–1463) •
Ioannis Kigalas (ca. 1622 – 1687), Greek scholar and professor of Philosophy and Logic •
Ioannis Kottounios ( – 1658), Padua •
Konstantinos Kallokratos (b. 1589), Calabria •
Constantine Lascaris (1434–1501),
University of Messina •
Janus Lascaris or
Rhyndacenus ( – 1535), Rome •
Leonard of Chios (), Greek-born Roman Catholic prelate •
Nikolaos Loukanis (16th century), Venice •
Maximus the Greek ( – 1556) studied in Italy before moving to Russia •
Maximos Margunios (1549–1602), Venice •
Marcus Musurus ( – 1517), University of Padua •
Michael Tarchaniota Marullus (с. 1458 – 1500), Ancona and Florence, friend and pupil of
Jovianus Pontanus •
Leonardos Philaras (1595–1673), an early advocate for
Greek independence •
Maximus Planudes (), Rome, Venice, anthologist, mathematician, grammarian, theologian •
Franciscus Portus (1511–1581), Venice, Ferrara, Geneva •
John Servopoulos (fl. 1484–1500), scholar, professor, Oxford •
Nikolaos Sophianos ( – after 1551), Rome, Venice: scholar and geographer, creator of the
Totius Graeciae Descriptio •
Nicholas Leonicus Thomaeus (1456–1531), Venice, Padua •
Iakovos Trivolis (d. 1547), Venice •
Gregory Tifernas (1414–1462), Paris, teacher of
Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples and
Robert Gaguin •
Gerasimos Vlachos (1607–1685), Venice •
Francesco Maurolico (1494–1575), mathematician and astronomer from Sicily ==Painting and music==