Search: in
Apion
Apion in Encyclopedia Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Videos     Books     Software     DVDs  
       





Apion

Apion (20s BC - c. 45-48 AD), Graeco-Egyptian grammarian, sophist and commentator on Homer, was born at the Siwa Oasis, and flourished in the first half of the 1st century AD.

Apion studied at Alexandria. He settled in Rome at an unknown date. Apion taught rhetoric until the reign of Claudius.[1] He wrote several works, none of which has survived. The well-known story "Androclus and the Lion", which is preserved in Aulus Gellius [2] is from his work: Aegypytiacorum ("Wonders of Egypt"). The surviving fragments of his work are printed in the Etymologicum Gudianum, ed. Sturz, 1818.

Following intra and inter-communal violence in Alexandria a deputation of Greeks and a deputation of Jews was sent to Rome to argue community interests before Caligula (in 40) in response to conflict between Greeks, Jews and Egyptians. Apion's criticisms of Jewish culture and history were replied to by Josephus in Against Apion.

Notes

References

  • Cynthia Damon, "'The Mind of an Ass and the Impudence of a Dog:' A Scholar Gone Bad," in Ineke Sluiter and Ralph M. Rosen (eds), Kakos: Badness and Anti-value in Classical Antiquity (Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2008) (Mnemosyne: Supplements. History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity, 307),

External links

bg: ca:Api Pleistonices de:Apion es:Api n fr:Apion (grammairien) hr:Apion it:Apione he: ( ) pl:Apion pt:Api o ru: ( ) sh:Apion sv:Apion






Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article



Search for Apion in Tutorials
Search for Apion in Encyclopedia
Search for Apion in Videos
Search for Apion in Books
Search for Apion in Software
Search for Apion in DVDs
Search for Apion in Store




Advertisement




Apion in Encyclopedia
Apion top Apion

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2011-2013 TutorGig.info All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement