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FABIUS PLANCIADES FULGENTIUS

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 293 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FABIUS PLANCIADES FULGENTIUS  , Latin grammarian, a native of Africa, flourished in the first
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half of the 6th (or the last
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part of the 5th) century A.D . He is to be distinguished from Fulgentius, bishop of Ruspe (468-533), to whom he was probably related, and also from the bishop's pupil and biographer, Fulgentius Ferrandus . Four extant
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works are attributed to him . (I) Mythologiarum libri iii., dedicated to a certain Catus, a presbyter of Carthage, containing 75 myths briefly told, and then explained in the mystical and allegorical manner of the
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Stoics and Neoplatonists . For this purpose the author generally invokes the aid of etymologies which, borrowed from the philosophers, are highly absurd . As a Christian, Fulgentius sometimes (but less frequently than might have been expected) quotes the Bible by the side of the philosophers, to give a Christian colouring to the moral lesson . (2) Expositio Vergilianae continentiae ( continentia =contents), a sort of appendix to (1), dedicated to Catus . The poet himself appears to the author and explains the twelve books of the Aeneid as a picture of human
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life . The three words arma (= virtus), vir (= sapientia),; Primus (=princeps) in the first
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line represent respectively substantia corporalis, sensualis, ornans .
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Book i. symbolizes the birth and early childhood of man (the shipwreck of
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Aeneas denotes the peril of birth), book vi. the plunge into the depths of wisdom . (3) Expositio sermonum antiquorum, explanations of 63 rare and obsolete words, supported by quotations (sometimes from authors and works that never existed) . Tt is much inferior to the similar
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work of Nonius, with which it is often edited .

(4)

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Liber absque litteris de aetatibus mundi et hominis . In the MS. heading of this work, the name of the author is given as
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Fabius Claudius Gordianus Fulgentius (Claudius is the name of the
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father, and Gordianus that of the grandfather of the bishop, to whom some attribute the work) . The title Absque litteris indicates that one letter of the alphabet is wholly omitted in each successive book (A in bk. i., B in bk. ii.) . Only 14 books are preserved . The
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matter is chiefly taken from sacred
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history . In addition to these, Fulgentius speaks of early poetical attempts after the manner of
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Anacreon, and of a work called
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Physiologus, dealing with medical questions, and including a discussion of the mystical signification of the numbers 7 and 9 . Fulgentius is a representative of the so-called
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late
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African style, taking for his
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models Apuleius, Tertullian and Martianus Capella . His language is bombastic, affected and incorrect, while the lengthy and elaborate periods make it difficult to understand his meaning . See the edition of the four works by R . Helm (1898, Teubner series); also M . Zink, Der Mytholog Fulgentius (1867); E . Jungmann, " De Fulgentii aetate et scriptis," in Acta Societatis Philologae Lipsiensis, i .

(1871); A:

Ebert, Aligemeine Geschichte der Litt.
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des Mittelalters, i.; article " Fulgentius " by C . F . Bohr in Ersch and Gruber's Aligemeine Encyklopadie; Teuffel-Schwabe, History of
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Roman Literature (Eng. trans.) .

End of Article: FABIUS PLANCIADES FULGENTIUS
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