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DIONYSIUS HALICARNASSENSIS (" of Hali...

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 286 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DIONYSIUS HALICARNASSENSIS (" of Halicarnassus ")  , Greek historian and teacher of rhetoric, flourished during the reign of Augustus . He went to Rome after the termination of the
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civil
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wars, and spent twenty-two years in studying the Latin language and literature and preparing materials for his
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history . During this period he gave lessons in rhetoric, and enjoyed the society of many distinguished men . The date of his
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death is unknown . His
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great
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work, entitled `PmµaIKil apXawXoyia (
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Roman Antiquities), embraced the history of Rome from the mythical period to the beginning of the first Punic War . It was divided into twenty books,—of which the first nine remain entire, the tenth and
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eleventh are nearly
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complete, and the remaining books exist in fragments in the excerpts of
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Constantine Porphyrogenitus and an epitome discovered by Angelo Mai in a Milan MS . The first three books of Appian, and Plutarch's
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Life of Camillus also embody much of Dionysius . His chief
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object was to reconcile the Greeks to the
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rule of Rome, by dilating upon the good qualities of their conquerors . According to him, history is philosophy teaching by examples, and this idea he has carried out from the point of view of the Greek rhetorician . But he has carefully consulted the best authorities, and his work and that of Livy are the only connected and detailed extant accounts of early Roman history . Dionysius was also the author of several rhetorical
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treatises, in which he shows that he has thoroughly studied the best Attic
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models:—The
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Art of Rhetoric (which is rather a collection of essays on the theory of rhetoric), incomplete, and certainly not all his work; The Arrangement of Words (IIEpt avvBEaews Lvoµarwv), treating of the combination of words according to the different styles of oratory; On Imitation (IIEpi Atpejaeses), on the best models in the different kinds of literature and the way in which they are to be imitated—a fragmentary work; Commentaries on the Attic Orators (IIEpi Twv apxaiwv prlrbpwv inro,uvrlµaruagoi), which, however, only
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deal with
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Lysias, Isaeus, Isocrates and (by way of supplement)
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Dinarchus; On the admirable Style of
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Demosthenes (IIEpi Tfjs XEKTUCTJS tlri,uoaNeovs OeLvbTriros); and On the Character of Thucydides (IIEpi Too eo
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wai.3ov xapaKefiFos), a detailed but on the whole an unfair estimate . These two treatises are supplemented by letters to Cn .

Pompeius and Ammaeus (two) . Complete edition by J . J .

Reiske (1774-1777) ; of the Archaeologia by A . Kiessling and V . Prou (1886) and C . Jacoby (1885-1891); Opuscula by Usener and Radermacher (1899); Eng.
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translation by E.Spelman (1758) . A full bibliography of the rhetorical
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works is given in W . Rhys Roberts's edition of the Three
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Literary Letters (1901) ; the same author published an edition of the De corn positione verborum (1910, with trans.) ; see also M .
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Egger, Denys d'Halicarnasse (1902), a very useful
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treatise . On the
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sources of Dionysius see O . Bocksch, " De fontibus
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Dion .

Halicarnassensis " in Leipziger Studien, xvii . (1895) . Cf. also J . E .

Sandys, Hist. of Class . Schol. i . (1906) .

End of Article: DIONYSIUS HALICARNASSENSIS (" of Halicarnassus ")
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