Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Lives of the Sophists. Lives of Philosophers and Sophists [Kõva köide]

Edited and translated by , , Edited and translated by ,
  • Formaat: Hardback, 672 pages, kõrgus x laius: 162x108 mm
  • Sari: Loeb Classical Library
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2023
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674997530
  • ISBN-13: 9780674997530
  • Formaat: Hardback, 672 pages, kõrgus x laius: 162x108 mm
  • Sari: Loeb Classical Library
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jun-2023
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674997530
  • ISBN-13: 9780674997530
"Flavius Philostratus, known as "the Elder" or "the Athenian," was born to a distinguished family with close ties to Lesbos in the later second century, and died around the middle of the third. A sophist who studied at Athens and later lived in Rome, Philostratus provides in Lives of the Sophists a treasury of information about notable practitioners. His sketches of sophists in action paint a fascinating picture of their predominant influence in the educational, social, and political life of the Empire in his time. He is almost certainly the author also of the Life of Apollonius of Tyana (LCL 16, 17, 458) and Heroicus and Gymnasticus (LCL 521). Eunapius (ca. 345-415) was born in Sardis but studied and spent much of his life in Athens as a sophist and historian. His Lives of Philosophers and Sophists covers figures of personal or intellectual significance to him in the period from Plotinus (ca. 250) to Chrystanthus (ca. 380), including one remarkable woman, Sosipatra, and then focuses on Iamblichus and his students. The work's underlying rationale combines personal devotion to teachers and colleagues with a broader attempt to rehabilitate Hellenic cultural icons against the rise of Christianity and the influence of its representatives. This edition of Philostratus and Eunapius thoroughly revises the original edition by Wilmer C. Wright (1921) in light of modern scholarship"--

Two sophists on the history of sophistry.

Flavius Philostratus, known as “the Elder” or “the Athenian,” was born to a distinguished family with close ties to Lesbos in the later second century, and died around the middle of the third. A sophist who studied at Athens and later lived in Rome, Philostratus provides in Lives of the Sophists a treasury of information about notable practitioners. His sketches of sophists in action paint a fascinating picture of their predominant influence in the educational, social, and political life of the Empire in his time. He is almost certainly the author also of the Life of Apollonius of Tyana (LCL 16, 17, 458) and Heroicus and Gymnasticus (LCL 521).

Eunapius (ca. 345–415) was born in Sardis but studied and spent much of his life in Athens as a sophist and historian. His Lives of Philosophers and Sophists covers figures of personal or intellectual significance to him in the period from Plotinus (ca. 250) to Chrystanthus (ca. 380), including one remarkable woman, Sosipatra, and then focuses on Iamblichus and his students. The work’s underlying rationale combines personal devotion to teachers and colleagues with a broader attempt to rehabilitate Hellenic cultural icons against the rise of Christianity and the influence of its representatives.

This edition of Philostratus and Eunapius thoroughly revises the original edition by Wilmer C. Wright (1921) in light of modern scholarship.



Philostratus “the Elder” or “the Athenian” (2nd to mid-3rd c.) and Eunapius (ca. 345–415) provide fascinating intellectual and professional biographies of notable sophists that reveal their predominant influence in the educational, social, religious, and political life of the Empire in their times.
Preface vii
Philostratus
Introduction
2(19)
References
21(5)
General Bibliography
26(6)
Text And Translation
32(2)
Book I
34(144)
Book II
178(191)
Eunapius
Introduction
369(13)
References
382(2)
General Bibliography
384(2)
Text And Translation
386(235)
Rhetorical Glossary 621(14)
Index To Philostratus 635(14)
Index To Eunapius 649
Graeme Miles is Senior Lecturer in Classics at the University of Tasmania.

Han Baltussen is the Walter W. Hughes Professor of Classics at the University of Adelaide.