Philitas of Cos, Cynicism, botany and ancient medicine in the Yale epigrammatic codex (P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000)
Luca Benelli
Докладчик
ассистент
Кёльнский университет, Институт археологии, классической филологии, греческой филологии, папирологии
Кёльнский университет, Институт археологии, классической филологии, греческой филологии, папирологии
176
2023-03-15
16:50 -
17:15
Ключевые слова, аннотация
Keywords:
P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000; Cynicism; medicine.
Abastract: P. CT. YBR inv. 4000 was published in 2012 and attributed Palladas. This attribution is wrong. I will try to propose a contextualization in the second century CE (Lucian, Galen). My paper will show how it is possible to reconstruct many of the ca. 60 epigrams, uncovering the names of plants and diseases and also references e. g. to Philitas and to a Cynic philosopher quoted by Lucian (Toxaris 27–34), Demetrius of Sunium.
Ключевые слова: П. Кт. YBR инв. 4000; цинизм; медицина.
Аннотация: P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000 был опубликован в 2012 г. и приписан Палладе. Эта атрибуция неверна. Я попытаюсь предложить контекстуализацию во втором веке нашей эры (Лукиан, Гален). Моя статья покажет, как можно реконструировать многие из ок. 60 эпиграмм, раскрывающих названия растений и болезней, а также ссылки e. грамм. Филиту и философу-кинику, цитируемому Лукианом (Токсарис 27–34), Деметрию Сунийскому.
Abastract: P. CT. YBR inv. 4000 was published in 2012 and attributed Palladas. This attribution is wrong. I will try to propose a contextualization in the second century CE (Lucian, Galen). My paper will show how it is possible to reconstruct many of the ca. 60 epigrams, uncovering the names of plants and diseases and also references e. g. to Philitas and to a Cynic philosopher quoted by Lucian (Toxaris 27–34), Demetrius of Sunium.
Ключевые слова: П. Кт. YBR инв. 4000; цинизм; медицина.
Аннотация: P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000 был опубликован в 2012 г. и приписан Палладе. Эта атрибуция неверна. Я попытаюсь предложить контекстуализацию во втором веке нашей эры (Лукиан, Гален). Моя статья покажет, как можно реконструировать многие из ок. 60 эпиграмм, раскрывающих названия растений и болезней, а также ссылки e. грамм. Филиту и философу-кинику, цитируемому Лукианом (Токсарис 27–34), Деметрию Сунийскому.
Тезисы
The P. Ct.
YBR inv. 4000 came to the Beinecke Library at Yale University (New Haven, Ct.)
in 1996, not as a codex, but as a group of unsorted fragments in a box of
scraps including also documentary texts. The editio princeps of the ca.
60 Greek epigrams contained therein was produced by the Canadian scholar of
Late Antiquity, Papyrology and Ancient History K. W. Wilkinson in the year 2012
(ASP nr. 52). As known, Wilkinson has tried in a series of contribution from
the year 2009 onwards to plead for a backdating of the Alexandrian late-antique
Greek poet Palladas, from the turn 4th–5th cent. — ages
of Valens, Theodosius and Arcadius (and perhaps also Theodosius IInd) — to the turn 3rd-4th cent. — to the period of the Roman
Emperors from Galerius to Diocletian and Constantine. In this today
contribution, I will not discuss again the problem of the dating of Palladas: I
think I have been able to confute Wilkinson’s ideas. I refer to my
contributions in Mnemosyne (2016) and ZPE (2015, 2018) and to my forthcoming
article in Cuadernos de Filologia clasica (2023). Focus of my today
presentation is the reconstruction of the content of the P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000-epigrams.
Wilkinson
(2012a) focused his editio princeps of this codex mainly on historical
issues. You will find therein almost nothing in relation to the literary and
philosophical context of the new epigrams.
Purpose of
my today’s presentation is not only to show how it is possible to reconstruct
the text of many epigrams from the Yale codex, but also to offer a new literary
context for many of the Yale epigrams: not the turn 3rd-4th
cent. — as indirectly highlighted and inexplicitly proposed in the editio
princeps — but the Cynic and medicine milieus of the second century Second
Sophistic. Moreover, most of the Yale
epigrams are not anathematic (book 9 of the Greek Anthology) or scoptic (book
11 of the Greek Anthology), as stated by Wilkinson, but sepulchral epigrams
(book 7 of the Greek Anthology). This is my thesis.
The Yale
epigrams are written in a language very similar — both syntactically and
lexically – to that used by Lucian in his dialogues from the second half of the
second century CE and in the works by the coeval medicine Galen. And it is with
Lucian and Galen that the Yale epigrams have very much in common: not only on
the lexical or linguistic point of view, but also as for the content itself it
concerns.
Cynic themes
occur both on p. 6 of our papyrus codex (epigr. 14–17 = P. Ct.
YBR inv. 4000, p. 6 in my new forthcoming edition), but also in other epigrams:
cf. e. g. epigr. 4 (P. Ct. YBR
inv. 4000, p. 3.9–17) — this epigram is comparable and to
be compared with a sepulchral epigram (AP 7.67 [Leonidas of
Tarentum]) from the Greek
Anthology on Diogenes the Cynic in front of the boat of Charon in the
Underworld, — epigr. 7–8 in P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000 p. 4 — these two epigrams seem to be, both of them, examples of Cynic “begging song” (also Phoenix Colophon fr. 2 Diehl3 [1949–1953]
was interpreted already by Gerhard [1909, 180–181] as a “cynic begging
song”: the cynic beggar was a
traditional figure; and
Crates Thebanus [ca. 365 — ca. 285 BCE] himself, who used to go begging from
house to house, was even nicknamed θυρεπανοίκτης, “door
opener”) —, epigr. 11 (= P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000, p. 5,
ll. 10-14), which shows a theme in common — that of the lawful marriage (γάμος ἔννομος, iustum coniugium) — with an epigram of Agathias (AP 5.302) on Diogenes
the Cynic and his act of masturbation, etc.
A Cynic
philosopher mentioned only by Lucian in one of his dialogues (Toxaris
27–34), a certain Demetrius of Sunium, not to be confused with the more famous
first century CE Demetrius the Cynic mentioned by Seneca (Epist. 20.9, 62.3, 67.14, 91.19; de beneficiis 7.1–2, 8–11; etc.), Tacitus (Ann. 16.34) and dated by
Philostratus (Vita Ap. 4.25) and by Lucian himself (De saltatione
63) to the age of Nero (54–68 CE), is clearly referred to in the very
fragmentary epigr. nr.15 (= p. 6, ll. 5–9) from my new forthcoming
edition. The Oenomaus in the
same epigram is surely the famous Cynic philosopher of the second century CE Oenomaus
of Gadara.
The epigr. nr. 26 (= P. Ct. YBR inv. 4000, p. 9, ll. 25–29), by Wilkinson
referred to the demise/destruction of the Alexandrian Museum, is instead, in my
view, a new sepulchral epigram on the allegedly “Cyrenaic” poet Philitas of
Cos: this epigram confirms an old, eighteenth-century view on Philitas’ poems,
namely that one of his most renowned poem (the Telephus) was somehow
connected with Philitas’ own father (and maybe not only as for the mere title).
Another aspect not sufficiently highlighted in the edition princeps
published by Wilkinson in the year 2012 is the connection of the Yale epigrams
with ancient medicine and pharmacological botany. This is another point which
connects the Yale epigrams with the literary, scientific and philosophical
milieu in the second century; and, thus, again with Cynicism. I will, in fact,
show how it is possible to reconstruct the text of another epigram (nr. 16)
from the same Yale codex (p. 6, ll. 1–20): this epigram, which is to be
connected with the representation proposed by Plato himself of Diogenes the
Cynic as a mad philosopher as transmitted by Aelian (VH 14.33) and by the codices
recentiores of Diogenes Laertius (6.54), demonstrates for the first time
that a series of therapeutic properties attributed to the jasminum
officinale L. (the flower named φιλάδελφον in the epigram at line 6) by the Indian and
Chinese medicine was already known in the Graeco-Roman imperial age.
To sum up: many of the Yale epigrams are surely not by Palladas and
instead to be dated, in their original facies, to the second century CE:
they refer to the same philosophical and medicine environment of Lucian and
Galen.
References:
Wilkinson (2012) = K. W. Wilkinson, New Epigrams of Palladas. A fragmentary Papyrus Codex (P. CtYBR inv. 4000), ASP Nr. 52 (Durham, NC 2012).
References:
Wilkinson (2012) = K. W. Wilkinson, New Epigrams of Palladas. A fragmentary Papyrus Codex (P. CtYBR inv. 4000), ASP Nr. 52 (Durham, NC 2012).