Claudian, Volume II

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A01=Claudian
Ancient poets
Arcadius
Author_Claudian
Byzantine ministers
Category=DNL
Claudian
Claudius Claudianus
Elegiac poetry
Epic poetry
Epigrams
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eq_biography-true-stories
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Getic war
Gothic war
Honorius
Idylls
Late Antiquity
Latin poetry
Loeb Classical Library
Milan
Mythological epic
Panegyric
Phoenix poem
Rape of Proserpina
Roman court poet
Roman Empire
Roman literature
Roman poets
Rome
Stilicho

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674991514
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 108 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 1922
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Late antique court poetry.

Claudius Claudianus, Latin poet of great affairs, flourished during the joint reigns (AD 394–5 onwards) of the brothers Honorius (Emperor in the West) and Arcadius (in the East). Apparently a native of Greek Alexandria in Egypt, he was, to judge by his name, of Roman descent, though his first writings were in Greek, and his pure Latin may have been learned as a foreign language. About AD 395 he moved to Italy (Milan and Rome) and though really a pagan, became a professional court poet composing for Christian rulers works which give us important knowledge of Honorius’ time.

A panegyric on the brothers Probinus and Olybrius (consuls together in 395) was followed in the subsequent ten years by other poems (mostly epics in hexameters): in praise of consulships of Honorius (AD 395, 398, 404); against the Byzantine ministers Rufinus (396) and Eutropius (399); in praise of the consulship (400) of Stilicho (Honorius’ guardian, general, and minister); in praise of Stilicho’s wife Serena; mixed metres on the marriage of Honorius to their daughter Maria; on the war with the rebel Gildo in Africa (398); on the Getic or Gothic war (402); on Stilicho’s success against the Goth Alaric (403); on the consulship of Manlius Theodorus (399); and on the wedding of Palladius and Celerina. He also composed non-official poems such as the three books of a mythological epic on the Rape of Proserpina, unfinished as was also a Battle of Giants (in Greek). Noteworthy are Phoenix, Senex Veronensis, elegiac prefaces, and the epistles, epigrams, and idylls.

Through the patronage of Stilicho or through Serena, Claudius in 404 married well in Africa and was granted a statue in Rome. Nothing is known of him after 404. In his works can be found true poetic as well as rhetorical skill, command of language, polished style, diversity, vigor, satire, dignity, bombast, artificiality, flattery, and other virtues and faults of the age.

The Loeb Classical Library edition of Claudian is in two volumes.

Maurice Platnauer (1887–1974) was Fellow and Vice-Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford.

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