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96:. Apuleius introduces his novel with the words "At ego tibi sermone isto Milesio varias fabulas conseram" ("But let me join together different stories in that Milesian style"), which suggests not each story is a Milesian tale, but rather the entire joined-together collection. The idea of the Milesian tale also served as a model for the episodic narratives strung together in
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XXXII ("Surena, calling together the senate of
Seleucia, laid before them certain wanton books, of the writings of Aristides, his Milesiaka; neither, indeed, was this any forgery, for they had been found among the baggage of Rustius, and were a good subject to supply Surena with insulting remarks
196:—if in fact he was the author—praised Aristides in passing, saying that after a day of listening to erotic stories he felt like Aristides, "that enchanting spinner of bawdy yarns". This suggests that the lost
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This resulted in "a complicated narrative fabric: a travelogue carried by a main narrator with numerous subordinate tales carried by subordinate narrative voices". The best complete example of this would be
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137:; fl. 2nd century BCE), who was a writer of shameless and amusing tales notable for their salacious content and unexpected plot twists. Aristides set his tales in
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who every now and then would relate how he encountered other characters who told him stories which he would then incorporate into the main tale through the
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In 2010, Nicholas Chong published retold
Milesian tales in his book "The Milesian and Malesian Tales", in which he mentions an Arcadian human sacrifice.
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had for its framing device
Aristides himself, retelling what he had been hearing of the goings-on at Miletus.
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text nor the Latin translation survived. The lengthiest survivor from this literature is the tale of "
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Though the idea of the
Milesian tale served as a model for the episodic narratives strung together in
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upon the Romans, who were not able even in the time of war to forget such writings and practices.")
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Aristidean saucy and disreputable heroes and spicy, fast-paced anecdote resurfaced in the medieval
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in 53 BCE, some
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observed, "makes us deeply regret the disappearance of the others".
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Later, in the first century BCE, the serious-minded historian
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Apuleius
Madaurensis, Lucius; trans. Lindsay, Jack (1960).
484:. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p.
62:. According to most authorities, a Milesian tale is a
92:, a Roman novel written in the second century of the
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540:. The Society for Classical Studies. Archived from
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266:(second century CE), neither Aristides's original
591:"Sacrifice in honour of Lycian Zeus in Arcadia"
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54:) is a genre of fictional story prominent in
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300:The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature
74:featuring love and adventure, usually of an
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534:"The Milesian Tale: Short Story or Novel?"
441:Walsh, P.G. (1968). "Lucius Madaurensis".
27:Genre of classical Greek and Roman fiction
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351:technique of narrative impersonation".
395:: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
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7:
513:, Preface to the First Edition, 1870
417:—"fables"— understood,
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821:Ancient Greek erotic literature
558:The Milesian and Malesian Tales
561:. London: Olympia Publishers.
295:" is in Aristides' tradition.
232:mosaic depicting a scene from
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274:", found in Apuleius, which
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156:translated Aristides into
331:Gottskálk Jensson of the
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755:The Wonders Beyond Thule
738:Metiochus and Parthenope
555:Chong, Nicholas (2010).
333:University of Copenhagen
154:Lucius Cornelius Sisenna
254:Gaius Petronius Arbiter
78:or titillating nature.
724:by Pseudo-Callisthenes
699:Leucippe and Clitophon
666:Chaereas and Callirhoe
511:Vikram and the Vampire
343:told from memory by a
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326:Marguerite of Navarre
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135:Ἀριστείδης ὁ Μιλήσιος
801:Ancient Greek novels
639:Ancient Greek novels
544:on 22 February 2008.
532:Jensson, Gottskalk.
127:Aristides of Miletus
121:originates from the
18:Aristides of Miletus
713:Other prose fiction
693:Xenophon of Ephesus
660:Heliodorus of Emesa
593:. 28 September 2012
538:www.apaclassics.org
298:M. C. Howatson, in
775:Apollonius of Tyre
647:Surviving romances
518:2007-03-13 at the
276:Sir Richard Burton
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194:Lucian of Samosata
811:Erotic literature
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759:Antonius Diogenes
721:Alexander Romance
677:Daphnis and Chloe
568:978-1-84897-067-0
293:The Miller's Tale
214:defeat of Carrhae
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374:. Archived from
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162:Milesiae fabulae
160:under the title
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48:fabula milesiaca
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595:. Retrieved
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728:Babyloniaca
508:R. Burton,
64:short story
795:Categories
732:Iamblichus
655:Aethiopica
597:2022-08-02
426:Plutarch,
382:2006-07-09
349:rhetorical
341:travelogue
321:Heptameron
318:, and the
94:Common Era
806:Fabulists
577:692271402
409:In Latin
316:Boccaccio
311:Decameron
249:Satyricon
230:Byzantine
206:, in his
198:Milesiaka
123:Milesiaka
117:The name
103:Satyricon
98:Petronius
44:Milesiaka
40:Μιλησιακά
671:Chariton
516:Archived
411:Milesiae
391:cite web
345:narrator
284:fabliaux
204:Plutarch
170:ribaldry
84:Apuleius
72:folktale
46:; Latin:
816:Miletus
463:1086837
443:Phoenix
428:Crassus
415:fabulae
413:, with
337:Denmark
289:Chaucer
178:Tristia
143:Sybaris
139:Miletus
750:Lucian
682:Longus
575:
565:
492:
461:
308:, the
220:Legacy
189:Erotes
76:erotic
459:JSTOR
358:Notes
268:Greek
176:, in
158:Latin
131:Greek
70:, or
68:fable
50:, or
36:Greek
573:OCLC
563:ISBN
490:ISBN
397:link
291:'s "
256:and
247:The
174:Ovid
58:and
30:The
757:by
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730:by
702:by
691:by
680:by
669:by
658:by
451:doi
328:".
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