40:
915:
635:
220:(Ἐκλογῶν, ἀποφθεγμάτων, ὑποθηκῶν βιβλία τέσσαρα ). He quoted more than five hundred writers, generally beginning with the poets, and then proceeding to the historians, orators, philosophers, and physicians. The works of the greater part of these have perished. It is to him that we owe many of our most important fragments of the dramatists. He has quoted over 500 passages from
955:
297:). The introduction to the whole work, treating of the value of philosophy and of philosophical sects, is lost, with the exception of the concluding portion; the second book is little more than a fragment, and the third and fourth have been amalgamated by altering the original sections. Each chapter of the four books is headed by a title describing its matter.
362:
The third and fourth books are an anthology devoted to subjects of a moral, political, and economic kind, and maxims of practical wisdom. The third book originally consisted of forty-two chapters, and the fourth of fifty-eight. These two books, like the larger part of the second, treat of ethics; the
305:
We learn from
Photius that the first book was preceded by a dissertation on the advantages of philosophy, an account of the different schools of philosophy, and a collection of the opinions of ancient writers on geometry, music, and arithmetic. The greater part of this introduction is lost. The close
215:
Stobaeus' anthology is a collection of extracts from earlier Greek writers, which he collected and arranged, in the order of subjects, as a repertory of valuable and instructive sayings. The extracts were intended by
Stobaeus for his son Septimius, and were preceded by a letter briefly explaining the
316:
The first two books consist for the most part of extracts conveying the views of earlier poets and prose writers on points of physics, dialectics, and ethics. The first book was divided into sixty chapters, the second into forty-six, of which the manuscripts preserve only the first nine. Some of the
138:, was the compiler of a valuable series of extracts from Greek authors. The work was originally divided into two volumes containing two books each. The two volumes became separated in the manuscript tradition, and the first volume became known as the
395:(Zurich, 1543; Basle, 1549; Zurich; 1559), and another by Gaisford (Oxford, 1822, 4 vols. 8vo.). The first edition of the whole of Stobaeus together was one published at Geneva in 1609. The next major edition of the whole corpus was that by
190:
Nothing of his life is known. The age in which he lived cannot be fixed with accuracy. He quotes no writer later than the early 5th century, and he probably lived around this time. His surname apparently indicates that he was a native of
521:
The entire work has not been translated into any modern language. However, many of the individual authors have been collected and translated separately as part of collections of those authors' fragments.
363:
third, of virtues and vices, in pairs; the fourth, of more general ethical and political subjects, frequently citing extracts to illustrate the pros and cons of a question in two successive chapters.
812:
240:(9th century), that the work was originally divided into four books and two volumes, and that surviving manuscripts of the third book consist of two books which have been merged.
788:
324:
His knowledge of physics — in the wide sense which the Greeks assigned to this term — is often untrustworthy. Stobaeus betrays a tendency to confound the dogmas of the early
263:). In most of the manuscripts there is a division into three books, forming two distinct works; the first and second books forming one work under the title
655:
650:
975:
985:
890:
556:
536:
Hermetica II: The
Excerpts of Stobaeus, Papyrus Fragments, and Ancient Testimonies in an English Translation with Notes and Introductions
162:
contains extracts from hundreds of writers, especially poets, historians, orators, philosophers and physicians. The subjects range from
970:
835:
203:, would probably indicate that he was a Christian, or at least the son of Christian parents, However, from his silence in regard to
182:, and maxims of practical wisdom. The work preserves fragments of many authors and works which otherwise might be unknown today.
928:
980:
779:
243:
At some time subsequent to
Photius the two volumes were separated, and the two volumes became known to Latin Europe as the
783:
433:
380:
407:(Berlin, 1884–1912, 5 volumes). Wachsmuth and Hense's edition attempts, as far as possible, to restore the text of the
933:
233:
758:
534:
540:
196:
135:
39:
509:
317:
missing parts of the second book (chapters 15, 31, 33, and 46) have, however, been recovered from a 14th-century
592:
336:. For part of the first book and much of the second, it is clear that he depended on the (lost) works of the
251:
respectively. Modern editions have dropped these two titles and have reverted to calling the entire work the
476:
846:
828:
Stobaeana: tradizione manoscritta e storia del testo dei primi due libri dell’Antologia di
Giovanni Stobeo
763:
600:
919:
914:
341:
376:
216:
purpose of the work and giving a summary of the contents. The full title, according to
Photius, was
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One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Ioannis
Stobaei Florilegium, ad manuscriptorum fidem emendavit et supplevit Thomas Gaisford
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Ioannis
Stobaei Florilegium, ad manuscriptorum fidem emendavit et supplevit Thomas Gaisford
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Pichugina*, Victoria K.; Bezrogov, Vitaly G.; Volkova, Yana A. (30 September 2019).
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880:
863:
847:"Quotation As Basis For Education: Experience Of "Anthology" By Ioannes Stobaeus"
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17:
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659:. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 929.
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387:(Oxford, 1850). The first edition of books 3 and 4 was that edited by
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38:
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authors, it has also been inferred that he was not a
Christian.
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of it only, where arithmetic is spoken of, is still extant.
105:
93:
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Iōannou
Stobaiou Anthologion – Ioannis Stobæi Florilegium
421:
Iōannou Stobaiou Anthologion – Ioannis Stobæi Florilegium
79:
73:
379:(Antwerp, 1575). There were subsequent editions made by
851:
European Proceedings of Social and Behavioural Sciences
391:(Venice, 4to. 1536). Three editions were published by
789:
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
108:
87:
82:
76:
399:(Leipzig, 1855–1864). The modern edition is that by
154:). Modern editions now refer to both volumes as the
99:
90:
796:Scott, Walter; Ferguson, Alexander Stewart (1936).
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70:
597:A Comprehensive Dictionary of the English Language
471:Ioannis Stobaei Eclogarum Physicarum et Ethicarum
232:. It is evident from this summary, preserved in
277:), the third book forming another work, called
882:Thinking Through Excerpts: Studies on Stobaeus
737:
383:(Göttingen, 1792–1801, in 4 vols. 8vo.), and
8:
218:Four Books of Extracts, Sayings and Precepts
146:) and the second volume became known as the
809:Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities
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815:. New York. Harper and Brothers. 1898.
47:of Stobaeus, from the 1536 edition by
7:
879:Reydams-Schils, Gretchen J. (2011).
25:
953:
913:
633:
60:
976:Ancient Macedonian anthologists
800:. Vol. 1. Clarendon press.
774:– via Tertullian Project.
759:"167. John Stobaeus, Anthology"
482:Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense,
411:as it was written by Stobaeus.
328:, and he occasionally mixes up
826:Dorandi, Tiziano, ed. (2023).
1:
986:5th-century Byzantine writers
938:(original Ancient Greek text)
533:Litwa, M. David, ed. (2018).
375:of books 1 and 2 was that by
27:5th-century Greek anthologist
864:10.15405/epsbs.2019.09.02.72
952:(public domain audiobooks)
792:. Volume 3, pp. 914–5.
484:Eclogues Volumes 1–2 (1884)
265:Physical and Moral Extracts
1002:
971:Ancient Greek anthologists
929:Stobaeus – Perseus Catalog
541:Cambridge University Press
458:Florilegium Vol 1–2 (1855)
293:
274:Ἐκλογαὶ φυσικαὶ καὶ ἠθικαί
273:
122:
29:
738:Scott & Ferguson 1936
510:Weidmannsche Buchhandlung
367:Editions and Translations
593:Joseph Emerson Worcester
488:Florilegium Vol 1 (1894)
199:, while his given name,
656:Encyclopædia Britannica
778:Charles Peter Mason, "
599:, Philadelphia, 1888,
260:
130:5th-century AD), from
52:
30:For the composer, see
981:Roman-era Macedonians
708:Mason 1870, pp. 914–5
549:10.1017/9781316856567
466:Eclogues Vol 1 (1860)
42:
805:Peck, Harry Thurston
228:, and over 200 from
326:Ionian philosophers
49:Vettore Trincavelli
918:Works by or about
197:Macedonia Secundus
164:natural philosophy
123:Ἰωάννης ὁ Στοβαῖος
53:
946:Works by Stobaeus
934:Excerpt from the
892:978-2-503-52976-9
740:, pp. 82–85.
651:Stobaeus, Joannes
558:978-1-107-18253-0
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885:. Brepols.
857:: 630–638.
764:Bibliotheca
475:, Leipzig:
389:Trincavelli
357:Florilegium
338:Peripatetic
280:Florilegium
261:Anthologium
249:Florilegium
238:Bibliotheca
224:, 150 from
195:capital of
152:Florilegium
45:Florilegium
965:Categories
941:(in Greek)
924:Wikisource
813:"Stobaeus"
575:References
508:, Berlin:
444:, Volume 4
437:, Volume 3
430:, Volume 2
423:, Volume 1
405:Otto Hense
294:Ἀνθολόγιον
168:dialectics
798:Hermetica
717:Photius,
580:Citations
567:217372464
528:Hermetica
448:Clarendon
409:Anthology
377:G. Canter
330:Platonism
319:gnomology
289:Anthology
271:; Greek:
253:Anthology
226:Sophocles
222:Euripides
205:Christian
180:economics
160:Anthology
156:Anthology
148:Anthology
136:Macedonia
950:LibriVox
920:Stobaeus
870:22 March
786:(1870),
780:Stobaeus
504:Appendix
456:(1855),
446:Oxford:
344:and the
311:Eclogues
285:Sermones
269:Eclogues
247:and the
230:Menander
176:politics
144:Eclogues
140:Extracts
898:3 March
770:3 March
755:Photius
748:Sources
644::
245:Eclogae
234:Photius
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499:(1912)
342:Aetius
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