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BLOSSIUS AEMILIUS DRACONTIUS

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 465 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BLOSSIUS

AEMILIUS DRACONTIUS  , of Carthage (according to the early tradition, of
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Spanish origin), Christian poet, flourished in the latter
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part of the 5th century A.D . He belonged to a
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family of landed proprietors, and practised as an advocate in his native place . After the
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conquest of the country by the Vandals, Dracontius was at first allowed to retain possession of his estates, but was subsequently deprived of his
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property and thrown into prison by the Vandal king, whose triumphs he had omitted to celebrate, while he had written a
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panegyric on a
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foreign and hostile ruler . He subsequently addressed an elegiac poem to the king, asking pardon and pleading for release . The result is not known, but it is supposed that Dracontius obtained his liberty and migrated to
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northern Italy in search of peace and quietness . This is consistent with the
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discovery at
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Bobbio of a 15th-century MS., now in the Museo Borbonico at Naples, containing a number of poems by Dracontius (the Carmina mainora) . The most important of his
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works is the De laudibus Dei or De Deo in three books, wrongly attributed by MS. tradition to St Augustine . The account of the creation, which occupies the greater part of the first
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book, was at an early date edited separately under the title of Hexaemeron, and it was not till 1791 that the three books were edited by Cardinal Arevalo . The apology (Satisfactio) consists of 158 elegiac couplets; it is generally supposed that the king. addressed is Gunthamund (484-496) . The Carmina minora, nearly all in
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hexameter verse, consist of school exercises and rhetorical declamations, amongst others the fable of
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Hylas, with a preface to his tutor, the grammarian Felicianus; the rape of
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Helen; the story of Medea; two epithalamia . It is also probable that Dracontius was the author of the Orestis tragoedia, a poem of some x000 hexameters, which in language, metre and general treatment of the subject exhibits a striking resemblance to the other works of Dracontius . Opinions differ as to his poetical merits, but, when due allowance is made for rhetorical exaggeration and consequent want of lucidity, his works show considerable vigour of expression, and a remarkable knowledge of the Bible and of
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Roman classical literature .

End of Article: BLOSSIUS AEMILIUS DRACONTIUS
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