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See also: father of See also: Roman See also: history, was See also: born about 2S4 B.C
.
He was the See also: grandson of See also: Gaius See also: Fabius, who received the surname Pictor for his See also: painting of the See also: temple of See also: Salus (302)
.
He took an active See also: part in the subjugation of the Gauls in the See also: north of See also: Italy (225), and after the See also: battle of See also: Cannae (216) was employed by the See also: Romans to proceed to See also: Delphi in See also: order to consult the See also: oracle of See also: Apollo
.
He was the earliest See also: prose writer of Roman history
.
His materials consisted of the Annales Maximi, See also: Commentarii Consulares, and similar records; the See also: chronicles of the See also: great Roman families; and his own experiences in the Second Punic War
.
He is also said to have made much use of the See also: Greek historian Diocles of Peparethus
.
His See also: work, which was written in Greek, began with the arrival of See also: Aeneas in Italy, and ended with the Hannibalic war
.
Although See also: Polybius and See also: Dionysius of See also: Halicarnassus frequently find fault with him, the first uses him as his chief authority for the Second Punic War
.
A Latin version of the work was in existence in the See also: time of See also: Cicero, but it is doubtful whether it was by Fabius Pictor or by a later writer with whom he was confused—Q
.
Fabius See also: Maximus Servilianus (See also: consul 142) ; or there may have been two annalists of the name of Fabius Pictor
.
Fragments in H
.
See also: Peter, Historicorum Romanorum Fragmenta (1883) ; see also ANNALISTS and See also: Livy, and Teuffel-See also: Schwabe, History of Roman Literature, § 116
.
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