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KNOW
MORE ABOUT ATHENAEUS / ATHINEOS |
ATHENAEUS
The Deipnosophists, I, Books
1-3.106e
Translated by Charles Burton Gulick
Athenaeus (AD ca. 170–ca. 230), a Greek of
Naucratis in Egypt, lived in Rome and wrote a historical work
now lost. Of the fifteen books of his surviving
Deipnosophists ('Sophists at Dinner'), the first two and
parts of the third, eleventh, and fifteenth exist only in
summary, the rest apparently complete. In it he pretends to tell
a friend about a banquet at a scholar's house whither the
learned guests brought extracts from poetry for recitation and
discussion. Much of the matter however concerns the food
provided and accessories. One learns about cooks, strange
dishes, wines, menu cards, and countless other matters.
Athenaeus was an antiquarian. The whole work, which mentions
nearly eight hundred writers and two thousand five hundred
writings, is a large treasury of information not only about
table matters but also music, dances, games, and all sorts of
literary subjects. And it abounds in quotations, mostly made
direct by Athenaeus himself, from authors whose writings have
not survived.
The Loeb Classical Library edition of The Deipnosophists is in seven
volumes. There is a comprehensive index in the final volume.
OTHER HARVARD BOOKS BY ATHENAEUS
The Deipnosophists, II, Books 3.106e-5
The Deipnosophists, III, Books 6-7
The Deipnosophists, IV, Books 8-10
The Deipnosophists, V, Books 11-12
The Deipnosophists, VI, Books 13-14.653b
The Deipnosophists, VII, Books 14.653b-15
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/L204.html
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