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DIONYSIUS THRAX (so called because hi...

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 286 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DIONYSIUS THRAX (so called because his
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father was a Thracian)
  , the author of the first Greek grammar, flourished about 100 B.C . He was a native of Alexandria, where he attended the lectures of
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Aristarchus, and afterwards taught rhetoric in Rhodes and Rome . His TEXvn ypaµµaruc , which we possess (though probably not in its
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original form), begins with the definition of grammar and its functions . Dealing next with
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accent, punctuation marks, sounds and syllables, it goes on to the different parts of speech (eight in number) and their inflections . No rules of syntax are given, and nothing is said about style . The authorship of Dionysius was doubted by many of the early
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middle-age commentators and grammarians, and in
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modern times its origin has been attributed to the oecumenical college founded by
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Constantine the
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Great, which continued in existence till 730 . But there seems no reason for doubt; the great grammarians of imperial times (
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Apollonius Dyscolus and Herodian) were acquainted with the
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work in its
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present form, although, as was natural considering its popularity, additions and alterations may have been made later . The eixv,l was first edited by J . A . Fabricius from a
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Hamburg MS. and published in his Bibliotheca Graeca, vi . (ed . Harles) .

An Armenian

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translation, belonging to the 4th or 5th century, containing five additional chapters, was published with the Greek text and a French version, by M . Cirbied (183o) . Dionysius also contributed much to the criticism and elucidation of Homer, and was the author of various other works—amongst them an account of Rhodes, and a collection of MsMrc [ (
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literary studies), to which the considerable fragment in the Stromata (v . 8) of Clement of Alexandria probably belongs .
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Editions, with scholia, by I . Bekker in Anecdote Graeca, ii. and G . Uhlig (1884), reviewed exhaustively by P . Egenolrf in Bursian's Jahresbericht, vol. xlvi . (1888); Scholia, ed . A . Hilgard (1901); see also W . Horschelmann, De Dionysii Thracis interpretibus veteribus (1874) ; J .

E .

Sandys, Hist. of Classical Scholarship, i . (1906) .

End of Article: DIONYSIUS THRAX (so called because his father was a Thracian)
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