Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Cornelius Nepos





Article  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

Edit  





Cornelius Nepos (/kɔːrˈnliəs ˈnpɒs, ˈnɛpɒs/; c. 110 BC – c. 25 BC) was a Roman biographer. He was born at Hostilia, a village in Cisalpine Gaul not far from Verona.

Cornelius Nepos

Biography

edit

Nepos's Cisalpine birth is attested by Ausonius, and Pliny the Elder calls him Padi accola ("a dweller on the River Po", Naturalis historia III.127). He was a friend of Catullus, who dedicates his poems to him (I.3), Cicero and Titus Pomponius Atticus. Eusebius places him in the fourth year of the reign of Augustus, which is supposed to be when he began to attract critical acclaim by his writing. Pliny the Elder notes he died in the reign of Augustus (Natural History IX.39, X.23).

Works

edit

De viris illustribus

edit

Nepos's De viris illustribus consisted of parallel lives of distinguished Romans and foreigners, in sixteen books. It originally included "descriptions of foreign and Roman kings, generals, lawyers, orators, poets, historians, and philosophers". However, the sole surviving book (which is thought to be complete) is the Excellentium imperatorum vitae ("Lives of the Eminent Commanders"), which covers commanders and generals (imperatores);[1] its contents are as follows:

Two additional lives survive from elsewhere in the De viris illustribus:

The Excellentium imperatorum vitae appeared in the reign of Theodosius I, as the work of the grammarian Aemilius Probus, who presented it to the emperor with a dedication in Latin verse. He claims it to have been the work of his mother or father (the manuscripts vary) and his grandfather. Despite the obvious questions (such as why the preface addressed to someone named Atticus when the work was supposedly dedicated to Theodosius), no one seemed to have doubted Probus's authorship. Eventually Peter Cornerus[citation needed] discovered in a manuscript of Cicero's letters the biographies of Cato and Atticus. He added them to the other existing biographies, despite the fact that the writer speaks of himself as a contemporary and friend of Atticus, and that the manuscript bore the heading E libro posteriore Cornelii Nepotis ('from the last book of Cornelius Nepos'). At last Dionysius Lambinus's edition of 1569 bore a commentary demonstrating on stylistic grounds that the work must have been of Nepos alone, and not Aemilius Probus. This view has been tempered by more recent scholarship,[citation needed] which agrees with Lambinus that they are the work of Nepos, but that Probus probably abridged the biographies when he added the verse dedication. The Life of Atticus, however, is considered to be the exclusive composition of Nepos.

Other works

edit

Nearly all of Nepos's other writings are lost, but several allusions to them survive in works by other authors. Aulus Gellius's Attic Nights are of special importance in this respect.

Pliny the Younger mentions verse written by Nepos, and in his own Life of Dion, Nepos himself refers to a work of his own authorship, De Historicis. If a separate work, this would be from a hypothesized De Historicis Latinis, only one book in the larger De Viris Illustribus (see above), although exclusively comprising biographies of Romans. Pliny also mentions a longer Life of Cato at the end of the extant Life of Cato, written at the request of Titus Pomponius Atticus, the "complete biography" now lost.

edit

While the historical Cornelius Nepos does not appear in fiction, his name is used by the German Romantic author Achim von Arnim for one of the characters in his novella Isabella of Egypt [de; fr].[2] Contrary to the historical Cornelius, who has been thought of as a writer of simple, less elegant prose, as evidenced through his writing,[3] this Cornelius is a Mandrake, a root creature created from a hangman's tears, and dug up on a dark night at 11 at night, who is a treasure finder, desiring to become more important than what he is. Desiring to be a Field Marshal in the Holy Roman Empire, Cornelius serves the title character, Isabella, helping her by digging up treasures for them, while rejecting the very notion of being considered a Mandrake in society.

An analogy to historical contexts, Arnim names the mandrake Cornelius Nepos, in an effort to implement what Tzvetan Todorov calls "the fantastic",[4] a genre that sets what is real against what is imaginary or supernatural; to transmit to society that life is not as simple as we make it out to be. Here, Nepos is used to convey that idea, that when the real Nepos is set against that of the supernatural mandrake, the reader and society at large, cannot be certain as to which is the real and which is the imaginary, a microcosm of the "uneasy conscience of the nineteenth century."[5]

References

edit

Citations

edit
  1. ^ a b c Roberts, Arthur W. Selected Lives from Cornelius Nepos. Boston: Ginn & Company, 1895.
  • ^ Achim von Arnim (1997) [1812]. Isabella von Ägypten. Translated by Bruce Duncan. Edward Mellon Press. ISBN 9780773484399.
  • ^ Stephen Stem (2021). The Political Biographies of Cornelius Nepos. University of Michigan Press. p. 16. ISBN 9780472118380.
  • ^ Tzvetan Todorov (1992). The Fantastic: A Structural Approach to a Literary Genre. Translated by Richard Howard. University of California Press. pp. 134–135. ISBN 9780520912083.
  • ^ Azade Seyhan (1992). Representation and its Discontents: The Critical Legacy of German Romanticism. University of California Press. pp. 134–135. ISBN 9780520912083.
  • Further reading

    edit
    edit
  • Resources in other libraries
  • Resources in other libraries

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cornelius_Nepos&oldid=1234962714"
     



    Last edited on 17 July 2024, at 01:39  





    Languages

     


    العربية
    Azərbaycanca
    Български
    Català
    Čeština
    Dansk
    Deutsch
    Ελληνικά
    Español
    Esperanto
    Euskara
    فارسی
    Français
    Furlan
    Galego

    Հայերեն
    Bahasa Indonesia
    Interlingua
    Íslenska
    Italiano
    עברית
    Latina
    Magyar
    مصرى
    Nederlands

    Norsk bokmål
    Plattdüütsch
    Polski
    Português
    Русский
    Shqip
    Sicilianu
    Slovenčina
    Српски / srpski
    Srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски
    Suomi
    Svenska
    Türkçe
    Українська
    West-Vlams

     

    Wikipedia


    This page was last edited on 17 July 2024, at 01:39 (UTC).

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Terms of Use

    Desktop