Ancient Literacies

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Table 10.1. (Continued)


No. Publication


Date and Prov
enance Size Brief Description^1

and 296 rolls,
it seems

indicates the number of rolls of
each author’s works present in
the collection. Philosophical
authors named: Geminus,
Diogenes of Babylonia, [?] ‘‘a
Socratic,’’ [Zeno?] of Tarsus,
[Zeno?] of Citium, Hierocles.
Medical authors named:
Glaucon, Xenophon, Chrysip
pus, Thessalus (?), Erasistratus,
Themison, Harpocration.
Summary numbers state
how many of the mss. were
opisthographs (at least 51 of
the philosophical works,
it appears) and what appear to
be the total number of rolls
in each category: 142 philo
sophical, and 296 (medical, or
perhaps the total collection).
8 Otranto 18 P.
Turner 9


Early fourth
centuryA.D.,
Hermopolis
Magna

About 15
authors or
commentaries
on authors

Five or six works, probably
commentaries, are followed by
several fragmentary names of
authors and then a number
of historical works. The com
mentaries are on Archilochus,
Callimachus, Aeschines,
Demosthenes (two different
ones), and Homer. The frag
mentary names include
Callinichus and Ru[fus?].
Then follow: Herodotus,
Xenophon, Aristotle,
Thucydides, Xenophon again,
and Callinichus.


  1. There are numerous problems in reading authors and titles. For the sake of consistency, I follow
    Otranto’s readings, and in the discussion that follows I avoid drawing inferences from names or titles that
    are uncertain.

  2. In the listing of what appears to be Homer’sOdyssey, Book 7 may be omitted. If so, it is possible that
    that book was not present in this collection of volumes, or misshelved, or perhaps the compiler of the list
    omitted it by mistake.

  3. We cannot tell if ‘‘Selections from the Orators’’ is the title of a specific work or a heading in the list
    similar to the ‘‘dialogues’’ in line 2 of the list of Plato’s works that we looked at above.

  4. In the listing of the books of theOdyssey, Books 3 and 4 are listed after Book 24. Because of a lacuna in
    the preceding line, we cannot know if these were second copies of Books 3 and 4, or if the compiler had
    omitted them at their proper place and inserted them only here, at the end. Either explanation implies an
    actual collection of books.

  5. Each of the names Crito, Simon, and Cebes is modified by the adjective ‘‘Socratic.’’ It is not clear
    whether these are authors or titles.

  6. Puglia 1996, 64-5, suggested that the last lines of the list, which are separated from the works of
    Xenophon by a space and which give not the names of individual works but rather the names of authors
    only (Homer, Menander, etc.), might record not rolls but codices. As Puglia noted, the ‘‘complete extant
    works’’ of an author—the meaning we have tentatively assigned to the Greek‹óÆ å•æßóŒðåôÆØÞ—might
    have been contained conventionally in a set number of codices, one or more depending upon the author.
    While there are problems with this—as Joseph Farrell has pointed out to me, the phrase‹óÆ å•æßóŒðåôÆØÞ
    is certainly not the most obvious way to specify ‘‘codex’’—it should be considered a possible explanation
    of the unusual nature of this list.

Free download pdf