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GUILIELMUS XYLANDER (WILHELM HOLTZMAN...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 889 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GUILIELMUS

XYLANDER (WILHELM HOLTZMAN, according to his own spelling) (1532-1576)  , German classical scholar,was born at Augsburg on the 26th of December 1532 . He studied at
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Tubingen, and in 1558, when in a state of abject poverty (caused, according to some, by his intemperate habits), he was appointed to succeed Micyllus (Molshem, Molseym or Molsheym) in the professorship of Greek at
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Heidelberg, which he exchanged for that of logic (publicus organi Aristotelii interpres) in 1562 . He died at Heidelberg on the loth of
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February 1576 . Xylander was the author of a number of important
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works, among which his Latin
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translations of Dio Cassius (1558), Plutarch (1560-1570) and Strabo (1571) deserve
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special mention . He also edited (1568) the
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geographical
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lexicon of Stephanus of
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Byzantium; the travels of
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Pausanias (completed after his
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death by F . Sylburg, 1583); the Meditations of
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Marcus Aurelius (1558, the editio princeps based upon a Heidelberg MS. now lost; a second edition in 1568 with the addition of Antoninus Liberalis,
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Phlegon of Tralles, an unknown
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Apollonius, and Antigonus of Carystus—all paradoxographers); and the chronicle of George Cedrenus (1566) . He translated the first six books of Euclid into German with notes, the Arithmetica of
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Diophantus, and the De quattuor mathemalicis scientiis of Michael Psellus into Latin .

End of Article: GUILIELMUS XYLANDER (WILHELM HOLTZMAN, according to his own spelling) (1532-1576)
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