Parthenius of Nicaea


Parthenius of Nicaea or Myrlea in Bithynia was a Greek grammarian and poet. According to the Suda, he was the son of Heraclides and Eudora, or according to Hermippus of Berytus, his mother's name was Tetha. He was taken prisoner by Helvius Cinna in the Mithridatic Wars and carried to Rome in 72 BC. He subsequently visited Neapolis, where he taught Greek to Virgil, according to Macrobius. Parthenius is said to have lived until the accession of Tiberius in 14 AD.
Parthenius was a writer of elegies, especially dirges, and of short epic poems.
He is sometimes called "the last of the Alexandrians".

''Erotica Pathemata''

His only surviving work, the Erotica Pathemata, was set out, the poet says in his preface, "in the shortest possible form" and dedicated to the poet Cornelius Gallus, as "a storehouse from which to draw material". Erotica Pathemata is a collection of thirty-six epitomes of love-stories, all of which have tragic or sentimental endings, taken from histories and historicised fictions as well as poetry.
As Parthenius generally quotes his authorities, these stories are valuable as affording information on the Alexandrian poets and grammarians.

Contents

The mythical or legendary characters whose stories are presented in Erotica Pathemata are as follows.
  1. Lyrcus
  2. Polymela
  3. Evippe
  4. Oenone
  5. Leucippus, son of Xanthius
  6. Pallene
  7. Hipparinus of Heraclea
  8. Herippe
  9. Polycrite
  10. Leucone, wife of Cyanippus
  11. Byblis
  12. Calchus
  13. Harpalyce
  14. Antheus, loved and killed by Cleoboea
  15. Daphne
  16. Laodice
  17. Cratea, mother of Periander
  18. Neaera
  19. Pancrato, daughter of Iphimedeia
  20. Aëro, daughter of Oenopion
  21. Pisidice of Methymna
  22. Nanis
  23. Chilonis
  24. Hipparinus of Syracuse
  25. Phayllus
  26. Apriate
  27. Alcinoe
  28. Clite
  29. Daphnis
  30. Celtine
  31. Dimoetes
  32. Anthippe
  33. Assaon
  34. Corythus
  35. Eulimene
  36. Arganthone

    Other works

In Parthenius' own time, he was not famous for his prose but his poems. These are listed below:
Parthenius is one of the few ancient writers whose work survives in only one manuscript. The only surviving manuscript of Parthenius was called Palatinus Heidelbergensis graecus 398, probably written in the mid-9th century AD. It contains a diverse mixture of geography, excerpts from Hesychius of Alexandria, paradoxography, epistolography and mythology.

Editions of Parthenius