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Oppian (Ancient Greek: Ὀππιανός, Oppianós; Latin: Oppianus), also known as Oppian of Anazarbus, of Corycus, or of Cilicia, was a 2nd-century Greco-Roman poet during the reign of the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Commodus, who composed the Halieutica, a five-book didactic epic on fishing.


Biography


Oppian states that he is from 'the city of Hermes' and the 'city at the promontory of Sarpedon'.[1] This has been supplemented by information from the biographies attached to medieval manuscripts, which state that his birthplace was Caesarea (now known as Anazarbus) or Corycus in Cilicia,[2] or Corycus according to the Suda. All these cities were in the Roman province of Cilicia.

He composed a didactic poem in Greek hexameter on fishing (Ἁλιευτικά, Halieutiká). It is about 3500 lines and bears a dedication to Marcus Aurelius and his son Commodus, placing it to the time of their joint rule (176-180 AD).

A later didactic poem on hunting, the Cynegetica (Κυνηγετικά, Kynēgetiká), was also attributed to Oppian. For that reason, its anonymous poet is generally referred to as Pseudo-Oppian or Oppian of Apamea.[3] Furthermore, a didactic poem on bird catching, Ixeutica (Ἰξευτικά, Ixeutiká), which now only survives in a prose paraphrase, was also attributed to Oppian in the manuscript tradition. The Ixeutica is now thought to describe a work composed by the Dionysus whom the Suda mention as the author of a treatise on rocks (Λιθιακά, Lithiaká). A likely explanation for the attribution of all these works to Oppian is that the three didactic poems on hunting, fishing, and fowling were at some point circulated as a complementary trio.[4]

According to the anonymous biographies attached to the Byzantine manuscripts of the Halieutica, Oppian's father, having incurred the displeasure of a colleague of Marcus Aurelius named Lucius Verus by neglecting to pay his respects to him when he visited Rome, was banished to Malta. Oppian, who had accompanied his father into exile, returned after the death of Verus (AD 169) and presented his poems to Marcus Aurelius, who was so pleased with them that he gave the author a piece of gold for each line, took him into favor, and pardoned his father. Oppian subsequently returned to his native country but died of the plague shortly afterwards at the early age of thirty. His contemporaries erected a statue in his honor, with an inscription which is still extant, containing a lament for his premature death and a eulogy of his precocious genius.


The Halieutica


The Halieutica consists of five books, which can be divided into two parts: books 1-2 describe the behaviour of fish and other marine animals, books 3-5 contain various fishing techniques. The content of the Halieutica is not sufficient to serve as a practical guide for fishing. Instead, the humans and animals described in the work often seem to provide examples of good and bad behaviour. The fish in the Halieutica are depicted in an anthropomorphic fashion, as their behaviour is generally motivated by emotions such as hate, love, greed, jealousy and friendship. The fish are also very frequently the subject of Homeric similes. In many cases, Oppian reverses the Homeric technique: where Homer compares epic heroes with animals, the actions of animals in the Halieutica are often compared to all types of human behaviour.[5]

The content of the Halieutica is as follows:


Editions



Translations



References


  1. Halieutica 3.9, 3.205-209
  2. Mair, A.W. 1928. Oppian, Colluthus, Tryphiodorus., Loeb Classical Liberary, Cambridge (MA), xiii-xv.
  3. The most comprehensive study that proves that the Cynegetica is not by Oppian is Martínez, S. and Silva, T. 2003. 'Opiano, ¿un poeta o dos?', L'Antiquité Classique 72, 219-230
  4. Keydell, R. 1937. Oppianos (2), in: von Pauly, A.F. et al. (eds), Paulys Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft. Stuttgart, vol. 18, 703-708, p.703-704; James, A.W. 1970. Studies in the Language of Oppian of Cilicia, Amsterdam, p. 2
  5. See for instance Kneebone, E. 2008. "'ΤΟΣΣ' ΕΔΑΗΝ: The Poetics of Knowledge in Oppian's Halieutica", Ramus 37.1-2, 32-59; Bartley, A.N. 2003. Stories from the Mountains, Stories from the Sea. The Digressions and Similes of Oppian’s Halieutica and the Cynegetica. Göttingen; Effe, B. 1977. Dichtung und Lehre. Untersuchungen zur Typologie des antiken Lehrgedichts. München, p. 137-153


Scholia

На других языках


[de] Oppian

Oppian (altgriechisch Ὀππιανός .mw-parser-output .Latn{font-family:"Akzidenz Grotesk","Arial","Avant Garde Gothic","Calibri","Futura","Geneva","Gill Sans","Helvetica","Lucida Grande","Lucida Sans Unicode","Lucida Grande","Stone Sans","Tahoma","Trebuchet","Univers","Verdana"}Oppianos, lateinisch Oppianus) war ein im 2. Jahrhundert lebender griechischer Grammatiker und Verfasser eines Lehrgedichts. Aufgrund seiner nicht ganz gesicherten Herkunft wird er auch Oppian aus Korykos, Oppian aus Anarzabos oder Oppian aus Kilikien genannt. Nicht zu verwechseln ist er mit einem um 200 n. Chr. schreibenden Dichter gleichen Namens, Oppian von Apamea.
- [en] Oppian

[fr] Oppien de Corycos

Oppien, dit Oppien de Cilicie ou Oppien de Corycos ou Oppien d'Anazarbe, est un auteur de langue grecque né en Cilicie, à Corycos/Anazarbe (aujourd'hui Korghos), qui vivait au IIe siècle. Il est principalement connu en tant qu'auteur d'un poème scientifique consacré à la pêche, les Halieutiques (Halieutika).

[ru] Оппиан

Оппиа́н (др.-греч. Ὀππιανός) — греческий поэт, автор дидактических поэм, написанных гекзаметром. Авторство поэм «О рыбной ловле» (или «Галиевтика», Ἁλιευτικά) и «О псовой охоте» (или «Кинегетика», Κυνηγετικά) ранее приписывалось одному поэту. В настоящее время считается, что они написаны двумя разными людьми, однако оба произведения обычно издаются вместе и исследуются в сравнении друг с другом. Поэма «О ловле птиц» (или «Иксевтика», Ἰξευτικά), ранее приписывавшаяся Оппиану, не сохранилась.



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