The Deipnosophists; or, Banquet of the Learned of Athenæus, Vol. 1 (of 3)

Transcriber's Notes:
Greek words that may not display correctly in all browsers are transliterated in the text using hovers like this: βιβλος . Position your mouse over the line to see the transliteration.
Hemistitchs, metrical lines shared between speakers or verses, may not display properly in all browsers. The best way to see appropriately spaced hemistitches is by looking at a text version of this book.
Variations in spelling and hyphenation have been left as in the original.
There are numerous long quotations in the original, many missing the closing quotation mark. Since it is often difficult to determine where a quotation begins or ends, the transcriber has left quotation marks as they appear in the original.
A row of asterisks represents either an ellipsis in a poetry quotation or a place where the original Greek text was too corrupt to be read by the translator. Other ellipses match the original.
Click on the page number to see an image of the page.
LITERALLY TRANSLATED
IN THREE VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
The author of the Deipnosophists was an Egyptian, born in Naucratis, a town on the left side of the Canopic Mouth of the Nile. The age in which he lived is somewhat uncertain, but his work, at least the latter portion of it, must have been written after the death of Ulpian the lawyer, which happened A. D. 228.
Athenæus appears to have been imbued with a great love of learning, in the pursuit of which he indulged in the most extensive and multifarious reading; and the principal value of his work is, that by its copious quotations it preserves to us large fragments from the ancient poets, which would otherwise have perished. There are also one or two curious and interesting extracts in prose; such, for instance, as the account of the gigantic ship built by Ptolemæus Philopator, extracted from a lost work of Callixenus of Rhodes.

of Naucratis Athenaeus
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2011-07-31

Темы

Greece -- Social life and customs; Civilization, Greco-Roman; Dinners and dining -- Greece; Homosexuality -- Greece

Reload 🗙