Psellos wrote bluntly to a krites who no longer enjoyed philosophy, to help a man from Nicaea recover debts

Summary:
A man from Nicaea claimed many creditors unwilling to pay, and needed the krites of Opsikion to intervene with justice for its own sake and Psellos'. The krites once enjoyed Psellos' philosophising of common life, but now despised it, making him write bluntly 
Dates:
1060 (Uncertain) 
krites of Opsikion (Anonymus 2433)
  • He was asked to intervene to intervene to make Anonymus 2437’s creditors pay their bills, justice for its own sake and Psellos’; the krites once enjoyed Psellos’ philosophising of common life, but now despised it, making him write bluntly (:) Psellos Letters (K - D) 120, 145.22-146.5
man from Nicaea (Anonymus 2437)
  • He claimed many creditors unwilling to pay, and needed Anonymus 2433 to intervene; Psellos wrote bluntly to achieve this, since the krites no longer enjoyed his philosophising of common life (:) Psellos Letters (K - D) 120, 145.22-146.5
Michael Psellos (named Konstantinos till tonsure in 1054) (Michael 61)
  • Anonymus 2437 claimed many creditors unwilling to pay, and needed Anonymus 2433 to intervene, justice for its own sake and Psellos’; the krites once enjoyed Psellos’ philosophising of common life, but now despised it, making him write bluntly (:) Psellos Letters (K - D) 120, 145.22-146.5
  • He wrote to Anonymus 2433, asking him to make Anonymus 2437's creditors pay their bills Psellos Letters (K - D) 120, 145.22-146.5