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- From: hide@unlinfo.unl.edu (harry ide)
- Newsgroups: sci.classics
- Subject: Re: Sulla and Aristotle
- Date: 6 Nov 1992 14:54:52 GMT
- Organization: University of Nebraska--Lincoln
- Lines: 26
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- allen-benjamin@yale.edu (Benjamin Allen) writes:
-
- >Isaac Asimov's Book of Facts reports that a large cache of previously lost
- >works of Aristotle was discovered by Sullan troops in 80 B.C. Does anyone
- >know the source of this story, and if so, which works they were?
-
- Strabo _Geographica_ 13.1.54 and Plutarch _Sulla_ 26. Strabo says that
- Aristotle gave his library to Theophrastus, and Theophrastus to
- Neleus, who went to Skepsis, and handed it on to others. They hid
- the books to protect them from the Attalian kings looking for books
- for the library at Pergamum, and Apellikos eventually got hold of
- them. Sulla then took Apellikos's library, which got to the bookseller
- Tyrannion. Andronikos got a copy from him, and it became at
- least part of the basis for Andronikos's edition of Aristotle's works,
- which is the basis for our current editions. Neither Strabo nor
- Plutarch lists the works in this library.
-
- There's been a lot of discussion about this story. Some people think
- this was the only copy of the unpublished works of Aristotle's (which
- are the only ones now extant). It seems much more likely that there
- were other copies in Aristotle's school. There is, for example, evidence
- that Hellenistic philosophers knew some of Aristotle's works (though
- that's controversial).
-
- Harry A. Ide
- hide@unlinfo.unl.edu
-