Information about Life Of Homer (pseudo Herodotus)
The Life of Homer — its unknown author is referred to as Pseudo-Herodotus — is one among several ancient biographies of the Greek epic poet, Homer. It is distinguished from the others by the fact that it contains, in its first lines, the claim to have been compiled by the early historian Herodotus:
Ingeniously linking the famous poet with various places that figure prominently in his works and in well-known legends about him, the Life depicts Homer as the illegitimate son of Cretheis of Argos and his ward, who was the daughter of Melanopus of Cyme in Aeolis (Asia Minor). Homer, whose name at birth was Melesigenes, was born at neighbouring Smyrna. He went with his schoolteacher on a voyage to Ithaca, where he stayed with a certain Mentor; later he would include Mentor as a character in the Odyssey as acknowledgment to his host. Already a sufferer from eye disease, Homer became blind during the return journey from Ithaca, at Colophon. He then took up poetry in order to make a living.
Having failed in a bid for municipal sponsorship at Cyme, he moved to Phocaea, where another schoolteacher, Thestorides, offered him food and lodging in exchange for the right to record his poetry in writing. Homer had little choice but to accept, and recited to Thestorides the Iliad and the Odyssey.
Thestorides afterwards moved to Chios, where he performed Homer's poems as if they were his own and became famous. Homer heard rumours of this and eventually travelled to Chios also, where he found work as a tutor (the author's inventiveness falters here: there are too many teachers in the story). Thestorides retreated hastily, and it was in Chios that Homer composed those of his supposed works that were meant for children, including the Batrachomyomachia or "Battle of the Frogs and Mice". At the end of his life Homer travelled to Samos; he died at Ios in the course of a voyage to Athens.
The text concludes with a calculation showing that Homer was born 168 years after the Trojan War and 622 years before Xerxes I of Persia (a major figure in the real Herodotus's Histories) invaded Greece. That invasion took place in 480 BC; by this calculation, therefore, Homer was born in 1102 BC. This contradicts the estimate given by the real Herodotus, that Homer lived "not more than 400 years before our own time", thus around 850 BC.
The Pseudo-Herodotean Life of Homer is unique among ancient versions of the poet's life in claiming that writing was known in Homer's circle and that the poems were written down from his recital.[2]
A translation, and a study of this and other ancient biographical material on Homer, are included in Mary R. Lefkowitz's Lives of the Greek poets.
Samos is the name of various places:
Greece:
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- Herodotus of Halicarnassus wrote the following history of Homer's background, upbringing and life, and sought to make his account complete and absolutely reliable.
- :(translation by Mary R. Lefkowitz)
Ingeniously linking the famous poet with various places that figure prominently in his works and in well-known legends about him, the Life depicts Homer as the illegitimate son of Cretheis of Argos and his ward, who was the daughter of Melanopus of Cyme in Aeolis (Asia Minor). Homer, whose name at birth was Melesigenes, was born at neighbouring Smyrna. He went with his schoolteacher on a voyage to Ithaca, where he stayed with a certain Mentor; later he would include Mentor as a character in the Odyssey as acknowledgment to his host. Already a sufferer from eye disease, Homer became blind during the return journey from Ithaca, at Colophon. He then took up poetry in order to make a living.
Having failed in a bid for municipal sponsorship at Cyme, he moved to Phocaea, where another schoolteacher, Thestorides, offered him food and lodging in exchange for the right to record his poetry in writing. Homer had little choice but to accept, and recited to Thestorides the Iliad and the Odyssey.
Thestorides afterwards moved to Chios, where he performed Homer's poems as if they were his own and became famous. Homer heard rumours of this and eventually travelled to Chios also, where he found work as a tutor (the author's inventiveness falters here: there are too many teachers in the story). Thestorides retreated hastily, and it was in Chios that Homer composed those of his supposed works that were meant for children, including the Batrachomyomachia or "Battle of the Frogs and Mice". At the end of his life Homer travelled to Samos; he died at Ios in the course of a voyage to Athens.
The text concludes with a calculation showing that Homer was born 168 years after the Trojan War and 622 years before Xerxes I of Persia (a major figure in the real Herodotus's Histories) invaded Greece. That invasion took place in 480 BC; by this calculation, therefore, Homer was born in 1102 BC. This contradicts the estimate given by the real Herodotus, that Homer lived "not more than 400 years before our own time", thus around 850 BC.
The Pseudo-Herodotean Life of Homer is unique among ancient versions of the poet's life in claiming that writing was known in Homer's circle and that the poems were written down from his recital.[2]
A translation, and a study of this and other ancient biographical material on Homer, are included in Mary R. Lefkowitz's Lives of the Greek poets.
Notes
Bibliography
- Dalby, Andrew (2006), Rediscovering Homer, New York, London: Norton, ISBN 0393057887
- Lefkowitz, Mary R. (1981), The lives of the Greek poets, London: Duckworth, ISBN 0715615904
Homer is the name given to the purported author of the early Greek poems the Iliad and the Odyssey. It is now generally believed that they were composed by illiterate aoidoi (rhapsodes) in an oral tradition in the 8th or 7th century BC.
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Herodotus of Halicarnassus (Greek: Ἡρόδοτος Ἁλικαρνᾱσσεύς Hērodotos Halikarnāsseus
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Alciphron, Greek rhetorician, was probably a contemporary of Lucian (2nd century A.D.). He was the author of a collection of fictitious letters, of which 124 (118 complete and 6 fragments) have been published; they are written in the purest Attic dialect and are considered models
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The Augustan History (Lat. Historia Augusta) is a late Roman collection of biographies, in Latin, of the Roman Emperors, their junior colleagues and usurpers of the period 117 to 284.
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Cyme, (or Kymi, also: Phriconis), modern Namurt was an ancient Greek city in Aeolis (Asia Minor) close to the kingdom of Lydia. The Aeolians regarded Cyme as the largest and most important of their twelve cities, which were located on the coastline of Asia
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Aeolia may mean:
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- Another name for Aeolis in Anatolia.
- An older name for Thessaly before the Greek Dark Ages.
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Smyrna(Σμύρνη)
Ancient City of Greece
(Izmir)
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Ancient City of Greece
(Izmir)
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Ithaca
Ιθάκ?
Vathi, South Ithaca
Geography
Island Chain: Ionian Islands
Area:[1] 117.812 km (0 sq.mi.
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Ιθάκ?
Vathi, South Ithaca
Geography
Island Chain: Ionian Islands
Area:[1] 117.812 km (0 sq.mi.
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In Greek mythology, Mentor was the son of Alcumus and, in his old age, a friend of Odysseus. When Odysseus left for the Trojan War he placed Mentor in charge of his son, Telemachus, and of his palace.
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Colophon (Greek Κολοφών) was a city in the region of Lydia in antiquity dating from about the turn of the first millenium-BC.
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Phocaea(Φώκαια)
Ancient City of Greece
(Foça)
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Ancient City of Greece
(Foça)
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Thestorides of Phocaea was a legendary or semi-legendary early Greek poet, one of those to whom the epic Little Iliad was ascribed.
Thestorides figures as a major character in the fictional Life of Homer fraudulently ascribed to Herodotus.
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Thestorides figures as a major character in the fictional Life of Homer fraudulently ascribed to Herodotus.
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iLiad is an electronic handheld device, or e-book device, which can be used for document reading and editing. Like the Sony Reader, the iLiad makes use of an electronic paper display.
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Description
Main specifications:- an 8.1-inch (20.
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The Odyssey (Greek Οδύσσεια (Odússeia)) is one of two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to the Ionian poet Homer. The poem is commonly dated circa 800 to circa 600 BC.
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Chios
Χίο?
Chios as seen from space, in June 1996
Geography
Island Chain: North Aegean
Area:[1] 842.289 km (0 sq.mi.
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Χίο?
Chios as seen from space, in June 1996
Geography
Island Chain: North Aegean
Area:[1] 842.289 km (0 sq.mi.
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Batrachomyomachia (Gr. βάτραχος, frog, μῦς, mouse, and, μάχη, battle) or the
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Samos is the name of various places:
Greece:
- Samos Island is a Greek island of the Aegean. The adjective "Samian" is used to describe the island's products, people, and history, in particular:
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Ios or IOS may refer to:
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- Ios Island, an island in the Cyclades group in the Aegean Sea
- Internet operating system, software containing sets of procedures and functions providing the framework for the high-level implementation and operation of Internet based
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Trojan War was waged, according to Greek mythology, against the city of Troy by the armies of the Achaeans (Mycenaean Greeks), after Paris of Troy stole Helen from her husband Menelaus, king of Sparta.
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Xerxes I of Persia, the Great
Great King (Shah) of Persia, Pharaoh of Egypt
Relief of an Achaemenid king, possibly Xerxes or Darius, on the wall of Persepolis Palace[1]
Reign 485 BC to 465 BC
Coronation October 485 BC
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Great King (Shah) of Persia, Pharaoh of Egypt
Relief of an Achaemenid king, possibly Xerxes or Darius, on the wall of Persepolis Palace[1]
Reign 485 BC to 465 BC
Coronation October 485 BC
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Histories or, in Latin, Historiae is the name of several works from Antiquity:
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- by Herodotus, see The Histories of Herodotus
- by Timaeus of Tauromenium
- by Polybius
- by Tacitus, see Histories (Tacitus)
- by Pliny the Elder, see Natural History (Pliny) (
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11st century BC - 10th century BC
1130s BC 1120s BC 1110s BC - 1100s BC - 1090s BC 1080s BC 1070s BC
1109 BC 1108 BC 1107 BC 1106 BC 1105 BC
1104 BC 1103 BC 1102 BC 1101 BC 1100 BC
- - State leaders - Sovereign states
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1130s BC 1120s BC 1110s BC - 1100s BC - 1090s BC 1080s BC 1070s BC
1109 BC 1108 BC 1107 BC 1106 BC 1105 BC
1104 BC 1103 BC 1102 BC 1101 BC 1100 BC
- - State leaders - Sovereign states
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Events and trends
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9th century BC - 8th century BC
880s BC 870s BC 860s BC - 850s BC - 840s BC 830s BC 820s BC
859 BC 858 BC 857 BC 856 BC 855 BC
854 BC 853 BC 852 BC 851 BC 850 BC
- - State leaders - Sovereign states
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880s BC 870s BC 860s BC - 850s BC - 840s BC 830s BC 820s BC
859 BC 858 BC 857 BC 856 BC 855 BC
854 BC 853 BC 852 BC 851 BC 850 BC
- - State leaders - Sovereign states
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Events and trends
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Mary R. Lefkowitz (born 1935) and Professor Emerita of Classical Studies at Wellesley College in Massachusetts, United States.
She earned her B.A. from Wellesley College in 1957 and received her Ph.D. in Classical Philology from Radcliffe College (Harvard University) in 1961.
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She earned her B.A. from Wellesley College in 1957 and received her Ph.D. in Classical Philology from Radcliffe College (Harvard University) in 1961.
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Rediscovering Homer is a 2006 book by Andrew Dalby. It sets out the problems of origin, dating and authorship of the two ancient Greek epics, Iliad and Odyssey, usually attributed to Homer.
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