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DIO CHRYSOSTOM (c. A.D. 40-115)

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 280 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DIO

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CHRYSOSTOM (c. A.D. 40-115)  , Greek sophist and rhetorician, was born at Prusa (mod . Brusa), a
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town at the
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foot of Mount
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Olympus in Bithynia . He was called
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Chrysostom ("
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golden-mouthed ") from his eloquence, and also to distinguish him from his grandson, the historian Dio Cassius; his surname Cocceianus was derived from his
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patron, the emperor Cocceius Nerva . Although he did much to promote the welfare of his' native place, he became so unpopular there that he migrated to Rome, but, having incurred the suspicion of Domitian, he was banished from Italy . With nothing in his
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pocket but
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Plato's
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Phaedo and
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Demosthenes' De falsa legatione, he wandered about in
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Thrace,
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Mysia, Scythia and the
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land of the
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Getae . He returned to Rome on the accession of Nerva, with whom and his successor Trajan he was on intimate terms . During this period he paid a visit to Prusa, but, disgusted at his reception, he went back to Rome . The place and date of his
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death are unknown; it is certain, however, that he was alive in 112, when the younger Pliny was governor of Bithynia . Eighty orations, or rather essays on
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political, moral and philosophical subjects, have come down to us under his name; the Corinthiaca, however, is generally regarded as
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spurious, and is probably the
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work of Favorinus of Arelate . Of the extant orations the following are the most important:—Borysthenitica (
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xxxvi.), on the advantages of monarchy, addressed to the inhabitants of Olbia,and containing interesting information on the
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history of the Greek colonies on the shores of the Black Sea; Olympica (xii.), in which
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Pheidias is represented as setting forth the principles which he had followed in his statue of
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Zeus, one passage being supposed by some to have suggested Lessing's
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Laocoon; Rhodiaca (xxxi.), an attack on the Rhodians for altering the names on their statues, and thus converting them into memorials of famous men of theday (an imitation of Demosthenes' teptines); De regno (i.–iv.), addressed to Trajan, a eulogy of the monarchical form of government, under which the emperor is the representative of Zeus upon earth; De Aeschylo et Sophocle et Euripide (lii.), a comparison of the treatment of the story of
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Philoctetes by the three
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great Greek tragedians; and Philoctetes (fix.), a
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summary of the prologue to the lost
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play by Euripides . In his later
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life, Dio, who had originally attacked the philosophers, himself became a convert to Stoicism . To this period belong the essays on moral subjects, such as the denunciation of various cities (Tarsus, Alexandria) for their immorality .

Most pleasing of all is the Euboica (vii.), a description of the

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simple life of the herdsmen and huntsmen of Euboea as contrasted with that of the inhabitants of the towns . Troica (xi.), an attempt to prove to the inhabitants of Ilium that Homer was a liar and that Troy was never taken, is a good example of a sophistical rhetorical exercise . Amongst his lost
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works were attacks on philosophers and Domitian, and Getica (wrongly attributed to Dio Cassius by Suidas), an account of the manners and customs of the Getae, for which he had collected material on the spot during his banishment . The style of Dio, who took Plato and
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Xenophon especially as his
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models, is pure and refined, and on the whole
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free from rhetorical exaggeration . With Plutarch he played an important
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part in the revival of Greek literature at the end of the 1st century of the Christian era .
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Editions: J . J . Reiske (
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Leipzig, 1784); A . Emperius (Bruns-
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wick, 1844) ; L . Dindorf (Leipzig,1857) ; H. von Arnim (Berlin, 1893-1896) . The ancient authorities for his life are
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Philostratus, Vit . So ph. i .

7;

Photius, Bibliotheca,
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cod . 209 ; Suidas, s.v.; Synesius, Mane On Dio generally see H. von Arnim, Leben and Werke
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des
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Dion von Prusa (Berlin, 1898) ; C . Martha,
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Les Moralistes sous l'
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empire romain (1863); W . Christ, Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur (1898), § 520; J . E . Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship (2nd ed., 1906); W . Schmid in Pauly-Wissowa's Realencyclopadie, v. pt . 1 (1905) . The Euboica has been abridged by J . P . Mahaffy in The Greek
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World under
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Roman Sway (1890), and there is a
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translation of Select Essays by Gilbert Wakefield (1800) .

End of Article: DIO CHRYSOSTOM (c. A.D. 40-115)
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