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DIO See also: Greek sophist and rhetorician, was See also: born at Prusa (mod
.
See also: Brusa), a See also: town at the See also: foot of See also: Mount See also: Olympus in See also: Bithynia
.
He was called See also: Chrysostom (" See also: golden-mouthed ") from his eloquence, and also to distinguish him from his See also: grandson, the historian Dio Cassius; his surname Cocceianus was derived from his See also: patron, the emperor Cocceius See also: Nerva
.
Although he did much to promote the welfare of his' native place, he became so unpopular there that he migrated to See also: Rome, but, having incurred the suspicion of See also: Domitian, he was banished from See also: Italy
.
With nothing in his See also: pocket but See also: Plato's See also: Phaedo and See also: Demosthenes' De falsa legatione, he wandered about in See also: Thrace, See also: Mysia, See also: Scythia and the See also: land of the See also: Getae
.
He returned to Rome on the accession of Nerva, with whom and his successor Trajan he was on intimate terms
.
During this See also: period he paid a visit to Prusa, but, disgusted at his reception, he went back to Rome
.
The place and date of his See also: death are unknown; it is certain, however, that he was alive in 112, when the younger See also: Pliny was governor of Bithynia
.
Eighty orations, or rather essays on See also: political, moral and philosophical subjects, have come down to us under his name; the Corinthiaca, however, is generally regarded as See also: spurious, and is probably the See also: work of See also: Favorinus of Arelate
.
Of the extant orations the following are the most important:—Borysthenitica (See also: xxxvi.), on the advantages of See also: monarchy, addressed to the inhabitants of Olbia,and containing interesting information on the See also: history of the Greek colonies on the shores of the Black See also: Sea; Olympica (xii.), in which See also: Pheidias is represented as setting forth the principles which he had followed in his statue of See also: Zeus, one passage being supposed by some to have suggested Lessing's See also: 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 See also: form of See also: government, under which the emperor is the representative of Zeus upon See also: earth; De Aeschylo et Sophocle et Euripide (lii.), a comparison of the treatment of the See also: story of See also: Philoctetes by the three See also: great Greek tragedians; and Philoctetes (See also: fix.), a See also: summary of the prologue to the lost See also: play by See also: Euripides
.
In his later See also: 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 (See also: Tarsus, Alexandria) for their immorality
.
Most pleasing of all is the Euboica (vii.), a description of the See also: 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 See also: Homer was a liar and that Troy was never taken, is a See also: good example of a sophistical rhetorical exercise
.
Amongst his lost See also: works were attacks on philosophers and Domitian, and Getica (wrongly attributed to Dio Cassius by Suidas), an account of the See also: manners and customs of the Getae, for which he had collected material on the spot during his banishment
.
The See also: style of Dio, who took Plato and See also: Xenophon especially as his See also: models, is pure and refined, and on the whole See also: free from rhetorical exaggeration
.
With Plutarch he played an important See also: part in the revival of Greek literature at the end of the 1st century of the Christian era
.
See also: Editions: J
.
J
.
See also: Reiske (See also: Leipzig, 1784); A
.
Emperius (Bruns-See also: wick, 1844) ; L
.
See also: Dindorf (Leipzig,1857) ; H. von See also: Arnim (Berlin, 1893-1896)
.
The See also: ancient authorities for his life are See also: Philostratus, Vit
.
So ph. i
.
7; See also: Photius, Bibliotheca, See also: cod
.
209 ; Suidas, s.v.; See also: Synesius, Mane On Dio generally see H. von Arnim, Leben and Werke See also: des See also: Dion von Prusa (Berlin, 1898) ; C
.
Martha, See also: Les Moralistes sous l'See also: 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
.
See also: Mahaffy in The Greek See also: World under See also: Roman Sway (1890), and there is a See also: translation of Select Essays by See also: Gilbert Wakefield (1800)
.
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