Hermogenes

This entry is not about the Hellenistic Ionian architect Hermogenes of Priene
Hermogenes of Tarsus, was a Greek rhetorician, surnamed the polisher. He lived in the reign of Marcus Aurelius (AD 161-180). His precocious ability secured him a public appointment as teacher of his art while he was only a boy; but at the age of twenty-five his faculties gave way, and he spent the remainder of his long life in a state of intellectual impotence. During his early years, however, he had composed a series of rhetorical treatises, which became popular text-books, and the subject of subsequent commentaries. We still possess some sections:
  • on legal issues
  • on the invention of arguments
  • on various kinds of style
  • on the method of speaking effectively
  • on rhetorical exercises.
There seems to have been yet another Hermogenes of Tarsus, who we remember for being put to death by Emperor Domitian because of some allusions in his History. (Suetonius, The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Loeb Classical Library 1914, 10)

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
giorgio cavazzano
caesarea philippi
new classical economics
lisnaskea
heather nova
pan (moon)
pan (crater)
pan (mythology)
chimpanzee
guns n' roses
toad of toad hall
boraginaceae
strophe
epode
antistrophe
samuel barber
white ash
oleaceae
aon
apate
phalaris
aphaea
britomartis
fruit tree forms
euboulos
britomarpeia
gento
north platte, nebraska
hemoglobinopathy
james
paul ehrenfest
ilithyia
quintin hogg
clazomenae
indo aryan languages
lacedaemon
niobe
pixar
itylus
fritjof capra
marsyas
cyparissus
the hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy: the original radio scripts
telephus