Online Encyclopedia

GAIUS JULIUS HYGINUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 175 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GAIUS
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JULIUS HYGINUS
  , Latin author, a native of Spain (or Alexandria), was a pupil of the famous Cornelius Alexander Polyhistor and a freedman of Augustus, by whom he was made superintendent of the Palatine library (Suetonius, De Grammaticis, 20) . He is said to have fallen into
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great poverty in his old age, and to have been supported by the historian
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Clodius Licinus . He was a voluminous author, and his
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works included topographical and
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biographical
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treatises, commentaries on Helvius Cinna and the poems of Virgil, and disquisitions on agriculture and bee-keeping . All these are lost . Under the name of Hyginus two school treatises on
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mythology are extant: (I) Pabularum
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Liber, some 30o mythological legends and celestial genealogies, valuable for the use made by the author of the works of Greek tragedians now lost; (2) De Astronomia, usually called Poetica Astronomica, containing an elementary
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treatise on astronomy and the myths connected with the stars, chiefly based on the Karaer€pioµot of Eratosthenes . Both are *abridgments and both are by the same hand ; but the style and Latinity and the elementary mistakes (especially in the rendering of the Greek originals) are held to prove that they cannot have been the
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work of so distinguished a scholar as C .
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Julius Hyginus . It is suggested that these treatises are an abridgment (made in the latter
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half of the 2nd century) of the Genealogiae of Hyginus by an unknown grammarian, who added a
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complete treatise on mythology . EDITIOxs.—Fabulae, by M . Schmidt (1872); De Astronomia, by B . Bunte (1875) ; see also Bunte, De C . Julii Hygini, Augusti Liberti, Vita et Scriptis (1846) .

End of Article: GAIUS JULIUS HYGINUS
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