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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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.
This biography of a first-century C.E. holy man has become one
of the most widely discussed literary works of later antiquity.
With an engaging style, Philostratus portrays a charismatic teacher
and religious reformer from Tyana in Cappadocia (modern central
Turkey) who travels across the known world, from the Atlantic to
the Ganges. His miracles, which include extraordinary cures and
mysterious disappearances, together with his apparent triumph over
death, caused pagans to make Apollonius a rival to Jesus of
Nazareth.
In a new two-volume Loeb Classical Library edition of
Philostratus's third-century work, Christopher Jones provides a
freshly edited Greek text and a stylish translation with full
explanatory notes. "Apollonius of Tyana" is by far the longest
biography that survives from antiquity. Jones in his Introduction
asks how far it is history and how far fiction, and discusses its
survival from Late Antiquity to modern times.
The "Letters" of Alciphron (second century CE) constitute one of
the most attractive products of the Second Sophistic. They are
fictitious compositions based on an astonishingly wide variety of
circumstances, though the theme of erotic love is constantly
sounded. The imagination shown by the author and his convincing
realism win him a place of distinction in the early development of
romantic prose. The letters, which are highly literary, owing much
to the New Comedy of Menander, purport to give us a sketch of the
social life of Athens in the fourth century BCE. The collection is
arranged in four divisions: Letters of Fishermen; Farmers;
Parasites; Courtesans. Senders and addressees are mostly invented
characters, but in the last section Alciphron presents us with
several attempts at historical fiction, the most engaging being an
exchange of letters between Menander and Glycera.
This volume also includes twenty "Letters of Farmers" ascribed
to Aelian ("c."170-235 CE) and a collection of seventy-three
"Erotic Epistles" of Philostratus (probably Flavius of that name,
also born "c." 170 CE). In style and subject matter these resemble
those of Alciphron, by whom they may have been influenced.
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