FACTOID # 2: Andorra has no unemployment, which is just as well because they have no broadcast TV channels either. What would everyone watch?
 
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Encyclopedia > Stephanus of Byzantium

Stephanus Byzantinus (Stephanus of Byzantium), the author of a geographical dictionary entitled Εθνικα (Ethnica), of which, apart from some fragments, we possess only the meagre epitome of one Hermolaus.


This work was first edited under the title Περι πολεον (Peri poleon, "On Cities") (Aldus, Venice, 1502); the best modern editions are by W Dindorf and others (4 vols., Leipzig, 1825), A Westermann (Leipzig, 1839), and A Meineke (vol. i., Berlin, 1849). Hermolaus dedicates his epitome to Justinian; whether the first or second emperor of that name is meant is disputed, but it seems probable that Stephanus flourished in the earlier part of the 6th century, under Justinian I.


The chief fragments remaining of the original work (which certainly contained lengthy quotations from classical authors and many interesting topographical and historical details) are preserved by Constantine Porphyrogennetos, De administrando imperio, ch. 23 and De thematibus, ii. Io (an account of Sicily); the latter includes a passage from the comic poet Alexis on the Seven Largest Islands. Another respectable fragment, from the article z~un to the end of Io, exists in a manuscript of the Seguerian library.


See the editions of Westermann, Dindorf and Meineke, above noticed; the article "Stephanus Byzant.," in Smith's Dictionary of Ancient Biography, vol. iii.; EH Bunbury, History of Ancient Geography, i. 102, 135, 169; ii. 669?671 (London, 1883); Riese, De Stephani Byzant. auctoribus (Kiel, 1873); J Geffcken, De Stephano Byzantio (Göttingen, 1886); Paul Sakolowski, Fragmenta d. S. von B.;


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


  Results from FactBites:
 
Stephanus of Byzantium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (271 words)
Stephanus Byzantinus (Stephanus of Byzantium), the author of a geographical dictionary entitled Εθνικα (Ethnica), of which, apart from some fragments, we possess only the meagre epitome of one Hermolaus.
Hermolaus dedicates his epitome to Justinian; whether the first or second emperor of that name is meant is disputed, but it seems probable that Stephanus flourished in the earlier part of the 6th century, under Justinian I.
The chief fragments remaining of the original work (which certainly contained lengthy quotations from classical authors and many interesting topographical and historical details) are preserved by Constantine Porphyrogennetos, De administrando imperio, ch.
Bryn Mawr Classical Review 95.12.02 (2542 words)
Stephanus of Byzantium has often been attacked by modern scholars for the artificial nature of the ethnics which he attributes to many sites.
Whitehead concludes: "The value and reliability of Stephanus of Byzantium does therefore come down in the end to the value and reliability of his sources".
I am only pointing out the problem that whenever Stephanus is our only source about the status of a community or the classification of a site, we cannot adopt his assertion automatically, because it might originate in the misunderstanding or alteration of an older source.
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