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MATERNUS See also: Constantine and his successors
.
About the See also: year 346 he composed a See also: work entitled De erroribus profanarum religionum, which he inscribed to See also: Constantius and Constans, the sons of Constantine, and which is still extant
.
In the first See also: part (chs
.
1-17) he attacks the false See also: objects of worship among the See also: Oriental cults; in the second (chs
.
18-29) he discusses a number of formulae and See also: rites connected with the mysteries
.
The whole See also: tone of the work is fanatical and declamatory rather than argumentative, and is thus in such See also: sharp contrast with the eight books on astronomy (Libri VIII
.
Matheseos) bearing the same author's name, that the two See also: works have usually been attributed to different writers
.
See also: Mommsen (See also: Hermes vol
.
29, pp
.
468-472) has, however, shown that the astronomy—a work interfused with an urbane Neoplatonic spirit—was composed about 336 and not in 354 as was formerly held
.
When we add to this the similarity of See also: style, and the fact that each betrays a connexion with See also: Sicily, there is the strongest reason for claiming the same author for the two books, though it shows that in the 4th century acceptance of See also: Christianity did not always mean an advance in ethical standpoint
.
The Christian work is preserved in a Palatine MS. in the Vatican library
.
It was first printed at Strassburg in 1562, and has been reprinted several times, both separately and along with the writings of Minucius Felix, Cyprian or Arnobius . The most correctSee also: editions are those by Conr
.
See also: Bursian (See also: Leipzig, 1856), and by C
.
See also: Halm, in his Minucius Felix (Corp
.
Scr
.
Eccl
.
See also: Lat. ii.), (Vienna, 1867)
.
The Neoplatonist work was first printed by Aldus See also: Manutius in 1501, and has often been reprinted
.
For full discussions see G
.
See also: Ebert, Gesch. der chrt lat
.
Litt., ed
.
1889, p
.
I29 ff.; O . Bardenhewer, Patrologie, ed. toot, p . |
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