In 1791 Konstantas, together with another cleric and scholar,
Daniel Philippidis wrote the
Geographia Neoteriki (), which is considered as one of the most remarkable works of the
modern Greek Enlightenment. It reflected a new revolutionary era in European history after the outbreak of the
French Revolution and aired sharp social criticism castigating the corruption of the church authorities, the idleness of monasticism and popular superstition. This work was welcomed with enthusiasm by western intellectuals, especially in France; however, it was largely neglected among Greek scholars, mainly due to the vernacular (
Demotic) language the authors used. Konstantas also edited an anonymous work attributed to
Nicholas Mavrocordatos,
Φιλοθέου Πάρεργα (The Parerga of Philotheos), printed in Venice, 1800. Moreover, he translated a number of works including: • Στοιχεία της Λογικής, Μεταφυσικής και Ηθικής (Elements of Logic, Metaphysics and Ethics, by Francesco Soave), Venice, 1804 • Γενική Ιστορία (General history by Abbe Milliot), Venice, 1806 ==References==