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Encyclopedia > Olympiodorus of Thebes

Olympiodorus was an historical writer and notable astrologer (5th century AD), born at Thebes in Egypt, who was sent on a mission to the Huns on the Black Sea by emperor Honorius in 412, and later lived at the court of Theodosius. The record of his diplomatic mission survives in a single epitome:

Donatus and the Huns, and the skillfulness of their kings in shooting with the bow. The author relates that he himself was sent on a mission to them and Donatus, and gives a tragic account of his wanderings and perils by the sea. How Donatus, being deceived by an oath, was unlawfully put to death. How Charaton, the first of the kings, being incensed by the murder, was appeased by presents from the emperor.
— from Photius' Bibliotheca, tr. J.H. Freese

He was the author of a history in 22 books of the Western Empire from 407 to 425. The original is lost, but an abstract is given by Photius, according to whom he was an alchemist. A manuscript treatise on alchemy, reputed to be by him, is preserved in the National Library in Paris, and was printed with a translation by Berthelot in his Collection des alchimistes grecs (1887–1888).


This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Olympiodorus (374 words)
Olympiodorus of Thebes was a Greek pagan historian from Thebes in Egypt, and had an interest in geography which led him to travel widely.
Olympiodorus described his work not as a history, but as source material for a history.
Olympiodorus was frequently referenced by Zosimus, especially for the period between AD 400-425.
buck (996 words)
Dexippus of Athens, Eunapius of Sardis and Olympiodorus of Thebes wrote the history of the Roman Empire in the third, fourth and fifth centuries A.D., respectively.
Olympiodorus never cites Eunapius by name and no parallels have been detected and151; nor would they be expected to shine through Photius’ epitome.
Olympiodorus did not, however, imitate Eunapius’ way of writing history, since among other things he abandoned the regnal structure, included much autobiographical detail and admitted Latinisms and technical jargon.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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