97:
may be most interesting for its discussion of the eleven phases of the Moon, because it gives us a clear treatment of a topic whose influence on Greek astrological speculation has likely been much underestimated The Moon's phases are probably the single most influential factor in
175:
In the several hundred years following Paulus and
Hephaistio, there continued to be an active astrological tradition, some works of which have come down to us, including writings by
130:
in astrological analysis, and of the influence of planetary aspects as they apply and separate (the
Hellenistic understanding of which is considerably at odds with modern practice.)
141:, a long and very detailed summary of the astrological technique of his time, which has come down to us intact. Contemporaneous with Paulus, an anonymous writer had produced a
218:("Doctrine of Paulus") is sometimes thought to be derived from the work of Paulus. However, this notion has been rejected by other scholars in the field, notably by
66:. We know he was regarded as a considerable authority because we have the record of a series of lectures given on his work by the respected Neo-Platonist philosopher
82:
have been translated together, giving a view of the development of astrological technique and contemporary attitudes towards astrology from the tumultuous late
467:
452:
427:
422:
396:
394:
457:
442:
432:
58:, where astrology was also at its most sophisticated. In his lifetime, Rome's power was declining and the capital of the
437:
261:
133:
At the time Paulus wrote, there was notable intellectual consolidation taking place in astrology. Forty years earlier,
462:
417:
360:, trans. Robert Schmidt, ed. Robert Hand, The Golden Hind Press, Berkeley Springs, WV, second edition, revised, 1993.
447:
134:
67:
38:), which was written in 378 AD, is a treatment of major topics in astrology as practiced in the fourth century
336:
256:
Late
Classical Astrology: Paulus Alexandrinus and Olympiodorus (with the Scholia of later Latin Commentators
55:
39:
142:
364:
Late
Classical Astrology: Paulus Alexandrinus and Olympiodorus, with the Scholia from Later Commentators
309:
Book III. Project
Hindsight, Greek Track, Vol. VIII (The Golden Hind Press, Berkeley Springs, WV, 1994.
176:
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148:
155:
dealt with stars in the context of the astrological chart; a few decades later came three books (
103:
214:
127:
23:
87:
265:
402:
366:, trans. Dorian Giesler Greenbaum, ed. Robert Hand, ARHAT Publications, Reston, VA, 2001.
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some two centuries later (in 564 AD), in
Alexandria. These lectures were preserved in a
302:
63:
411:
222:
who stated that "...the identification of Paulus
Alexandrinus with the author of the
219:
206:
119:
202:
193:), which exerted a very considerable influence on the astrological thinking of the
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59:
320:
The Shape of
Ancient Thought: Comparative Studies in Greek and Indian Philosophies
111:
385:
185:
123:
51:
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in 379 AD, which is our best record of how practical astrologers of the
258:). Archive for the Retrieval of Historical Astrological Texts (ARHAT)
190:
164:
152:
115:
380:
194:
389:
Late
Classical Astrology: Paulus Alexandrinus and Olympiodorus
376:
Dorian
Gieseler Greenbaum's website on Hellenistic astrology:
114:
astrological technique, although the scientifically minded
183:(6th or 7th century), and, in the 5th or 6th century,
212:
An important Indian astrological treatise called the
102:
charts of the Hellenistic period, going back beyond
50:Little is known about Paulus' life. He lived in
189:(spuriously attributed for many centuries to
8:
54:, one of the most scholarly cities of the
339:, 1978, pgs. 437-438. Also see Pingree,
238:(ed. by E. Boer), Teubner, Leipzig, 1958.
110:are the Lots, which were at the core of
248:
126:, and gives an extensive treatment of
86:through the even more unstable early
7:
22:was an astrological author from the
197:and on European astrologers of the
118:avoids them. Paulus also discusses
468:Ancient Romans from unknown gentes
14:
333:The Yavanajataka of Sphujidhvaja
322:, Allworth Press, 2001, pg. 385.
387:—excerpt from Introduction to
343:, Centaurus 14, 1969, 172–241.
1:
106:. Also very important in the
453:4th-century Egyptian people
144:Treatise on the Fixed Stars
484:
341:The Later Paulisasiddhanta
428:Ancient Greek astrologers
423:Ancient Roman astrologers
167:with earlier traditions.
458:4th-century Greek people
290:Late Classical Astrology
278:Late Classical Astrology
135:Julius Firmicus Maternus
337:Harvard Oriental Series
236:Elementa apotelesmatica
443:Roman-era Alexandrians
292:, 2001, pp. 101–111ff.
433:Ancient Greek writers
356:Paulus Alexandrinus,
163:(415 AD) integrating
398:—quoting from Paulus
358:Introductory Matters
280:, 2001, pp. 92–97ff.
161:Hephaistio of Thebes
32:Introductory Matters
438:4th-century writers
378:Classical Astrology
331:See David Pingree,
226:is totally false".
26:. His extant work,
20:Paulus Alexandrinus
463:4th-century Romans
418:4th-century births
401:Project Hindsight
318:Thomas McEvilley,
264:2009-04-23 at the
177:Julian of Laodicea
159:) by the Egyptian
104:Dorotheus of Sidon
78:and Olympiodorus'
62:had been moved to
16:Ancient astrologer
215:Paulisa Siddhanta
74:and both Paulus'
24:late Roman Empire
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448:Roman-era Greeks
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224:Paulisasiddhanta
88:Byzantine Empire
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373:
371:Further reading
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266:Wayback Machine
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205:periods. (See:
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307:The Anthology.
303:Vettius Valens
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157:Apotelesmatika
64:Constantinople
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179:(c. 500 AD),
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120:dodekatemoria
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351:Translations
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203:Early Modern
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149:Roman period
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138:
137:had written
132:
108:Introduction
107:
95:Introduction
94:
92:
79:
76:Introduction
75:
71:
68:Olympiodorus
60:Roman Empire
49:
40:Roman Empire
36:Introduction
35:
31:
27:
19:
18:
404:—on Paulus.
112:Hellenistic
56:Roman world
412:Categories
335:, Vol. 2,
243:References
186:Centiloquy
124:monomoiria
80:Commentary
72:Commentary
52:Alexandria
28:Eisagogika
181:Rhetorius
100:katarchic
46:Biography
262:Archived
199:Medieval
139:Mathesis
268:, 2001.
191:Ptolemy
165:Ptolemy
153:Ptolemy
116:Ptolemy
171:Legacy
151:after
84:Empire
230:Works
207:Lilly
195:Arabs
30:, or
301:See
201:and
128:sect
122:and
93:The
34:(or
209:.)
414::
305:,
90:.
42:.
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