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Index
Traditio Praesocratica Titel Impressum Preface Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction
1. General remarks (Georg Wöhrle) 2. Preliminary remarks on the Syro-Arabic tradition (Gotthard Strohmaier) 3. How to use this edition
EDITION
Alcaeus (7th–6th cent. BCE) Pherecydes of Syros (6th cent. BCE) Xenophanes (ca. 570–ca. 467 BCE) Heraclitus (ca. 500 BCE) Choerilus of Samos (5th cent. BCE) Herodotus (ca. 485–ca. 424 BCE) Democritus (470/60–380/70 BCE) Hippias of Elis (5th cent. BCE, still active at thebeginning of the 4th cent.) Aristophanes (ca. 450–ca. 385 BCE) Plato (428/7–348/7 BCE) Andron of Ephesus(first half of the 4th cent. BCE) Eudoxus of Cnidus (? 391/0–338/7 BCE) Heraclides of Pontus (ca. 390–after 322 BCE) Aristotle (384–322 BCE) Clytus (student of Aristotle) Dicaearchus (born ca. 375 BCE) Theophrastus (ca. 371/0–287/6 BCE) Chamaeleon (second half of the 4th cent. BCE) Demetrius of Phaleron (ca. 360–280 BCE) Eudemus (born before 350 BCE) Duris of Samos (4th/3rd cent. BCE) Phoenix of Colophon (4th/3rd cent. BCE) Leandr(i)us (= Maeandrius?, early Hellenisticperiod) Callimachus (between 320 and 302–after 246 BCE) Timon of Phlious (ca. 320/15–230/25 BCE) Aristarchus of Samos (ca. 310–230 BCE) Lobon of Argos (3rd cent. BCE) Hermippus of Smyrna (“the Callimachean,” 3rd cent. BCE) Hieronymus of Rhodes (ca. 290–230 BCE) Titus Maccius Plautus (born ca. 250 BCE) Hippobotus (active at the end of the 3rd cent. BCE) Inscription in the Gymnasium of Tauromenium (2nd cent. BCE) Sosicrates (flourished at the beginning of the 2nd cent. BCE) Apollodorus (ca. 180–ca. 110 BCE) Antipater of Sidon (2nd cent.–1st cent. BCE) Marcus Terentius Varro (116–27 BCE) Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE) Nicolaus of Damascus (born ca. 64 BCE) Strabo (before 62 BCE–between 23 and 25 CE) Diodorus Siculus (before 60–after 36 BCE) Didymus Chalcenterus(second half of the 1st cent. BCE) Marcus Vitruvius Pollio(end of the 1st cent. BCE) Anonymous(Antipater of Thessalonica?, born ca. 1 CE) Corpus Hermeticum (1st–3rd Centuries CE) Commentary on Homer, Odyssey, book 20 (1st cent. CE?) Hero (? 1st cent. CE) Heraclitus the Stoic (1st cent. CE, Augustus’s reign–Nero’s reign) Valerius Maximus (first half of the 1st cent. CE) Aristocles of Messene(first half of the 1st cent. CE) Lucius Annaeus Seneca (ca. 1–65 CE) Pamphila (mid-1st cent. CE) Pomponius Mela (mid-1st cent. CE) Gaius Plinius Secundus (23/4–79 CE) Josephus (37/8–? 100 CE) Plutarch (ca. 45–before 125 CE) Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis (67–after 99/100 CE) Sabinus (1st/2nd cent. CE) Agathemerus (1st/2nd cent. CE)108 Pseudo-Plutarch (2nd cent. CE) Pseudo-Hyginus (2nd cent. CE) Maximus of Tyre (2nd cent. CE) Sextus Empiricus (2nd cent. CE) Irenaeus of Lyon (2nd cent. CE) Pseudo-Plutarch (ca. first half of the 2nd cent. CE?) Publius Aelius Phlegon of Tralles (died after 137 CE, freedman of Hadrian) Theon of Smyrna (mid-2nd cent. CE?) Inscription of a representation of the Seven Sages on the wall of a building in Ostia, Baths of the Seven Sages (mid-2nd cent. CE) Atticus (second half of the 2nd cent. CE) Lucian (between 112 and 125–after 180 CE) Pausanias (ca. 115–after 180 CE) Aelius Aristides (117–177/8 CE) Tatian the Syrian (ca. 120–after 172 CE) Apuleius of Madaura (ca. 125–after 158 CE) Galen (129–ca. 216 CE) Athenagoras the Apologist (end of the 2nd cent. CE) Pseudo-Plutarch (end of the 2nd cent. CE) Diogenes of Oenoanda (turn of the 3rd cent. CE) Alexander of Aphrodisias (turn of the 3rd cent. CE) Clement of Alexandria (ca. 150–211/16 CE) Hippolytus of Rome (ca. 160–235 CE) Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus(ca. 160/70–after 212 CE) Flavius Philostratus (ca. 170–after 212 CE) Claudius Aelianus(before 178–between 222 and 238 CE) Marcus Minucius Felix(active between 197 and 246 CE) Hermias (text probably ca. 200 CE) Achilles Tatius the Astronomer (probably 3rd cent. CE) Fragment of Censorinus (? 3rd cent. CE) Athenaeus of Naucratis(Deipnosophistae ca. 230 CE) Diogenes Laertius (work dated to mid-3rd cent. CE) Porphyry (ca. 234–305/10 CE) Iamblichus of Chalcis (ca. 240–325 CE) Lactantius (ca. 250–325 CE) Arnobius the Elder (ca. 300 CE) Eusebius of Caesarea (before 260–between 337 and 340 CE) Pseudo-Valerius Probus (scripta Probiana) (4th cent. CE) Chalcidius (4th cent. CE) Pseudo-Ausonius (4th cent. CE?) Pseudo-Justin Martyr (early 4th cent. CE) Epiphanius (between 310 and 320–403/2 CE) Decimus Magnus Ausonius (ca. 310–394 CE) Flavius Gaius Iulianus (Julian the Apostate) (Roman emperor 331/2–363 CE) Libanius (314–393 CE) Themistius (ca. 317–ca. 388 CE) Himerius (ca. 320–after 383 CE) Jerome (between 331 and 348–419/20 CE) Ambrose of Milan (ca. 340–397 CE) Tyrannius Rufinus (345–410 CE) Augustine (354–430 CE) Servius Grammaticus (4th/5th cent. CE) Nemesius of Emesa (text ca. 400 CE) Julian of Eclanum (ca. 385–before 455 CE) Theodoret (ca. 393–ca. 466 CE) Aponius (5th cent. CE) Iohannes Stobaeus (5th cent. CE) Syrianus (first half of the 5th cent. CE) Cyril of Alexandria (this work written ca. mid-5th cent. CE) Proclus Diadochus (412 – 485 CE) Sidonius Apollinaris (430/1–480’s CE) Martianus Capella (text probably ca. 470 CE) Pseudo-Galen (compilation completed ca. 500 CE) Iohannes Laurentius Lydus (John the Lydian)(490–ca. 560 CE) Simplicius (ca. 490–560 CE) Iohannes Philoponus (ca. 490–ca. 575 CE) Iohannes Malalas (490/500–after 570 CE) Olympiodorus (born between 495 and 505 CE,still teaching in 565 CE) Olympiodorus (the Alchemist?, possibly identicalwith Olympiodorus – cf. above) Asclepius of Tralles (6th cent. CE) Elias (6th cent. CE) Stephanus of Byzantium (6th cent. CE) Luxurius (work written ca. 534 CE) Anonymous, On the philosophy of Plato (? second half of the 6th cent. CE) Isidore of Seville (ca. 560–636 CE) Theophylactus Simocatta (active ca. 610–640 CE) Chronicon Paschale (between 631 and 641 CE) Iohannes Antiochenus (beginning of the 7th cent.) Georgius Syncellus (died shortly after 810 CE) Frechulf of Lisieux (first half of the 9th cent. CE) Pseudo-Ammonius (? mid-9th cent. CE) Hunain ibn Ishaq (809–873 CE) Qusta ibn Luqa (died ca. 912 CE) Symeon Logothetes (10th cent. CE) Suda (10th cent. CE) Siwan al-hikma (The Vessel of Wisdom) (10th cent. CE) Pseudo-Gabir ibn Hayyan (mid-10th cent. CE) Constantine VII Porphyrogennetus (906–959 CE) Ibn an-Nadim (died 995 or 998 CE) Al-Biruni (973–1048 CE) Ibn Sīnā (Avicenna) (before 980–1037 CE) Al-Mubassir ibn Fatik (11th cent. CE) Iohannes Mauropus (ca. 1000–between 1075 and 1081 CE) Peter Damian (ca. 1007–1072 CE) Michael Psellus (ca. 1018–ca. 1078 CE) Iohannes Italus (ca. 1023–after 1083 CE) Sa’id al-Andalusi (1029–1070 CE) Iohannes Siceliotes (end of the 11th cent. CE) Eustratius (11th/12th cent. CE) Georgius Cedrenus (11th/12th cent. CE) William of Conches (ca. 1080–1154 CE) Ibn Bağğa (ca. 1085–1139 CE) Aš-Šahrastānī (1086–1153 CE) Hugh of St. Victor (ca. 1096 –1141 CE) Heliodorus (12th cent. CE) Iohannes Galenus Grammaticus (? first half of the 12th cent. CE) Iohannes Tzetzes (ca. 1110–1185 CE) John of Salisbury (ca. 1115–1180 CE) Philip of Harvengt (died in 1183 CE) Eustathius of Thessalonica (ca. 1115–1195 CE) Nizami (1141–before 1200) Anonymous (13th cent. CE) Ibn al-Qifti (1172–1248 CE) Anonymous (Gnomologium from before 1260 CE) Albertus Magnus (ca. 1193–1280 CE) Barhebraeus (1225/6–1286 CE) Georgius Pachymeres (1242–after 1307 CE) Ibn Abi Usaybi’a (d. 1270 CE) Theodorus Metochites (1270–1332 CE) Sophonias (turn of the 14th cent. CE) Anonymous (13th/14th cent. CE) Thomas Triclinius (turn of the 14th cent. CE) Manuel Philes (ca. 1275–1345 CE) Nicephorus Gregoras (ca. 1294–ca. 1359 CE) Gnomologium Vaticanum (14th cent. CE) Georgius Gemistus Plethon (ca. 1355/60–1452 CE) Scholia on Homer (2nd cent. CE) Scholia on Aratus (2nd/3rd cent. CE) Scholia on Dionysius Periegetes (turn of the 5thcent. CE) Scholia on Plato (after Proclus, 5th cent. CE) Scholion in Aristotelem (6th cent. CE) Scholia on Plato (after the 6th cent. CE, possibly byHesychius) Scholia on Basil (beginning of the 7th to end of the9th Centuries CE) Scholia on Lucian (11th cent. CE?) Scholia on Hesiod (12th cent. CE?) Scholia on Pindar (before the 13th cent. CE) Scholia on Aristophanes (13th/14th cent. CE) Scholia on Aristophanes (beginning of the 14th cent. CE) Scholia on Homer (date uncertain) Alcaeus Pherecydes of Syros Xenophanes Heraclitus Choerilus of Samos Herodotus Democritus Hippias of Elis Aristophanes Plato Andron of Ephesus Eudoxus of Cnidos Heraclides of Pontus Aristotle Clytus Dicaearchus Theophrastus Chamaeleon (second half of the 4th cent. BCE) Demetrius of Phaleron (ca. 360–280 BCE) Eudemus (born before 350 BCE) Duris of Samos (4th/3rd cent. BCE) Phoenix of Colophon (4th/3rd cent. BCE) Leandr(i)us (= Maeandrius?, early Hellenisticperiod) Callimachus (between 320 and 302–after 246 BCE) Timon of Phlious (ca. 320/15–230/25 BCE) Aristarchus of Samos (ca. 310–230 BCE) Lobon of Argos (3rd cent. BCE) Hermippus of Smyrna (“the Callimachean,” 3rd cent. BCE) Hieronymus of Rhodes (ca. 290–230 BCE) Titus Maccius Plautus (born ca. 250 BCE) Hippobotus (active at the end of the 3rd cent. BCE) Inscription in the Gymnasium of Tauromenium Inscription in the Gymnasium of Tauromenium (2nd cent. BCE) Sosicrates (flourished at the beginning of the 2nd cent. BCE) Apollodorus (ca. 180–ca. 110 BCE) Antipater of Sidon Marcus Terentius Varro (116–27 BCE) Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE) Nicolaus of Damascus (born ca. 64 BCE) Strabo (before 62 BCE–between 23 and 25 CE) Diodorus Siculus (before 60–after 36 BCE) Didymus Chalcenterus (second half of the 1st cent. BCE) Marcus Vitruvius Pollio(end of the 1st cent. BCE) Anonymous(Antipater of Thessalonica?, born ca. 1 CE) Corpus Hermeticum (1st–3rd Centuries CE) Commentary on Homer, Odyssey, book 20 (1st cent. CE?) Hero (? 1st cent. CE) Heraclitus the Stoic (1st cent. CE, Augustus’s reign–Nero’s reign) Valerius Maximus (first half of the 1st cent. CE) Aristocles of Messene(first half of the 1st cent. CE) Lucius Annaeus Seneca (ca. 1–65 CE) Pamphila (mid-1st cent. CE) Pomponius Mela (mid-1st cent. CE) Gaius Plinius Secundus (23/4–79 CE) Josephus (37/8–? 100 CE) Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis (67–after 99/100 CE) Sabinus (1st/2nd cent. CE) Agathemerus (1st/2nd cent. CE) Pseudo-Plutarch (2nd cent. CE) Pseudo-Hyginus (2nd cent. CE) Maximus of Tyre (2nd cent. CE) Sextus Empiricus (2nd cent. CE) Irenaeus of Lyon (2nd cent. CE) Publius Aelius Phlegon of Tralles (died after 137 CE, freedman of Hadrian) Theon of Smyrna (mid-2nd cent. CE?) Inscription of a representation of the Seven Sages on the wall of a building in Ostia, Baths of the Seven Sages (mid-2nd cent. CE) Atticus (second half of the 2nd cent. CE) Lucian (between 112 and 125–after 180 CE) Pausanias (ca. 115–after 180 CE) Aelius Aristides (117–177/8 CE) Tatian the Syrian (ca. 120–after 172 CE) Apuleius of Madaura (ca. 125–after 158 CE) Galen (129–ca. 216 CE) Athenagoras the Apologist (end of the 2nd cent. CE) Pseudo-Plutarch (end of the 2nd cent. CE) Chamaeleon Demetrius of Phaleron Eudemus Duris of Samos Phoenix of Colophon Leandr(i)us (= Maeandrius?) Callimachus Timon of Phlious Aristarchus of Samos Lobon of Argos Hermippus of Smyrna Hieronymus of Rhodes T. Maccius Plautus Hippobotus Sosicrates Apollodorus M. Terentius Varro Antipater of Sidon (2nd cent.–1st cent. BCE) M. Tullius Cicero Nicolaus of Damascus Strabo Diodorus Siculus Didymus Chalcenterus M. Vitruvius Pollio Anonymous(Antipatros von Thessalonica?) Corpus Hermeticum Commentary on Homer, Odyssey, book 20 Hero Heraclitus the Stoic Valerius Maximus Aristocles of Messene L. Annaeus Seneca Pamphila Pomponius Mela C. Plinius Secundus Josephus Plutarch D. Iunius Iuvenalis Sabinus Agathemerus Pseudo-Plutarch Pseudo-Hyginus Maximus of Tyre Sextus Empiricus Irenaeus of Lyon Pseudo-Plutarch Publius Aelius Phlegon of Tralles Theon of Smyrna Inscription of a representation of the Seven Sages on the wall of a building in Ostia, Baths of the Seven Sages Atticus Lucian Pausanias Aelius Aristides Tatian the Syrian Apuleius of Madaura Galen Athenagoras the Apologist Pseudo-Plutarch Diogenes of Oenoanda Alexander of Aphrodisias Clement of Alexandria Hippolytus of Rome Quintus Sept. F. Tertullianus Flavius Philostratus Claudius Aelianus M. Minucius Felix Hermias Achilles Tatius the Astronomer Fragmentum Censorini Athenaeus of Naucratis Diogenes Laertius Porphyry Iamblichus of Chalcis Lactantius Arnobius the Elder Eusebius of Caesarea Pseudo-Valerius Probus (scripta Probiana) Chalcidius Pseudo-Ausonius Pseudo-Justin Martyr Epiphanius D. Magnus Ausonius Flavius C. Iulianus Apostata Libanius Themistius Himerius Jerome Ambrose of Milan Tyrannius Rufinus Augustine Servius Grammaticus Nemesius of Emesa Julian of Eclanum Theodoret Aponius Iohannes Stobaeus Syrianus Cyril of Alexandria Proclus Diadochus Sidonius Apollinaris Martianus Capella Pseudo-Galen Iohannes L. Lydus Simplicius Iohannes Philoponus Iohannes Malalas Olympiodorus Olympiodorus (the Alchemist ?, perhaps identicalwith Olympiodorus, cf. above.) Asclepius of Tralles Elias Stephanus of Byzantium Luxurius Anonymous On the philosophy of Plato Isidore of Seville Theophylactus Simocatta Chronicon Paschale Iohannes Antiochenus Georgius Syncellus Frechulf of Lisieux Pseudo-Ammonius Ḥunain ibn Isḥāq Qusṭā ibn Lūqā Symeon Logothetes Suda Ṣiwān al-ḥikma Pseudo-Ğābir ibn Ḥayyān Constantine VII Porphyrogennetus Ibn an-Nadīm Al-Bīrūnī Ibn Sina (Avicenna) Al-Mubaššir ibn Fātik Iohannes Mauropus Peter Damian Michael Psellus Iohannes Italus Ṣā‘id al-Andalusī Iohannes Siceliotes Eustratius Georgius Cedrenus William of Conches Ibn Bāǧǧa Aš-Šahrastānī Hugh of St. Victor Heliodorus Iohannes Galenus Grammaticus Iohannes Tzetzes John of Salisbury Philip of Harvengt Eustathius of Thessalonica Niẓāmī Anonymous Ibn al-Qifṭī Anonymous Albertus Magnus Barhebraeus Georgius Pachymeres Ibn Abī Uṣaybi‘a Theodorus Metochites Sophonias Anonymous Thomas Triclinius Manuel Philes Nicephorus Gregoras Gnomologium Vaticanum Georgius Gemistus Plethon Scholia in Homerum Scholia in Aratum Scholia in Dionysium Periegetam Scholia in Platonem Scholion in Aristotelem Scholia in Platonem Scholia in Basilium Scholia in Lucianum Scholia in Hesiodum Scholia in Pindarum Scholia in Aristophanem Scholia in Aristophanem Scholia in Homerum
APPENDIX/ END MATERIAL Abbreviations Textual Editions of the Greek and Latin Authors Textual Editions of the Arabic and Persian Authors Literature on Greek and Latin Authors Literature on Arabic and Persian Authors Concordance
TP → DK DK → TP
Catalogue of Testimonia Alphabetical Author Index Subject Index Index of Names, Places and Peoples Greek – English Index Latin – English Index Persian-English Index Arabic-English Index English – Greek/Latin Glossary English – Persian Glossary English – Arabic Glossary
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