Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Plutarch of Chaeronea was a voluminous writer whose experience of the Graeco-Roman world of his own day was quite as comprehensive as his knowledge of earlier ages. The ancient historian is often daunted by the sheer bulk of Plutarch's work and prefers customarily to concentrate his attention upon the Lives, which, if not history, at least contain much historical matter.
1 Cf. Vita Alex. Mag. I: . I am glad to acknowledge here my gratitude to Dr. Joan Bigwood and Mr. C. P. Jones for their helpful participation in my Plutarch seminar at Harvard in the autumn of 1963.
2 De Iside 364 E.
3 The first inscription was published in Klio xvii (1921), 154,Google Scholar corrected in the same journal, xviii (1922), 306,Google Scholar whence S.E.G. i 159.Google Scholar The second inscription was published in B.C.H. lxx (1946), 254,Google Scholar but there are intimations of it in Bourguet, E., De Rebus Delphicis Imperatoriae Aetatis (1905), p. 18.Google Scholar
4 Ziegler, K., R.-E. xxi. 677.Google Scholar
5 This is the first inscription cited above in n. 3.
6 See n. 3 above.
7 Cf. n. 3 above. Against Bourguet's emendation see Jannoray, , B.C.H. lxx (1946), 258–9.Google Scholar
8 Cf. Jannoray, , art. cit. 256–7.Google Scholar
1 P.I.R 2, F 339. Chronology forbids identification with T. Flavius Pollianus, Delphic archon ca. 90 (CIG 1710).
2 Praec. Coniug. 145 E.
3 P.I.R.2, F 369 and R.E.A. xlvii (1945), 80–81.Google Scholar Cf. West, , C.P. xxiii (1928), 263 ff., on Soclarus' epimelesia.Google Scholar
4 Amat. 749 B; cf. I.G. ix. 1. 200.Google Scholar
5 S.I.G.3 868 G; cf. P.I.R.2, F 369.
6 Other Delphic Memmii are registered in Bourguet, , op. cit., pp. 13–14:Google Scholar e.g. P. Memmius Soterus, Memmius Euthydamus, Memmia Lupa . The nomen must derive from P. Memmius Regulus, suffect consul in A.D. 31 and governor of the joint province of Achaea and Macedonia from 35–44 (cf. Groag, , Die römischen Reichsbeamten von Achaia [1939], pp. 25–30).Google Scholar
7 For this uncle of Flavia Clea, see I.G. ix. 1. 200.Google Scholar
1 De Defect. Orac. 419 B–E.
2 He seems to have come from Prusias: Quaest. Conv. 710 B. It is worth noticing that Epitherses came from Nicaea (Steph. Byz. s.v. ) and that epigrams by an Aemilianus of Nicaea are preserved in the Palatine Anthology.
3 This was the date proposed by Pomtow, H. in Philol. lv (1895), 596,Google Scholar on the basis of De Defect. Orac. 410 A. The date is far from secure: cf. Jannoray, , R.E.A. xlvii (1945), 74–77;Google ScholarFlacelière, R., Sur la Disparition des oracles (1947), p. 221, n. 4;Google ScholarZiegler, in R.-E. 41. 712.Google Scholar
4 De Defect. Orac. 419 D: Thamus was summoned
s Cf. P.I.R.2, A 318: fortasse idem.
6 For names of this form, see now Veyne, P. on ‘Trimalchio Maecenatianus’, Hommages à Albert Grenier (Coll. Latomus, 1962), 1617 ff.Google Scholar
1 De cap. ex inim. util. 86 c.
2 Mittelhaus, K., De Plutarchi Praeceptis gerendae rei publicae (Diss. Berlin, 1911), p. 29Google Scholar (between A.D. 115 and 120), approved by Ziegler, , R.-E. xxi. 714.Google Scholar Sister Renoirte, however, proposed an earlier dating in her generally unfortunate book on the Praecepta, Les ‘Conseils Politiques’ de Plutarque (1951), p. 112.Google Scholar
3 I.G. iv. 795Google Scholar (Troezen) and 1600 (Corinth). Both are reproduced in Pflaum, H.-G., Les Carrières procuratoriennes équestres (1960), i. 178, no. 81.Google Scholar
4 Note the definite identification in P.I.R.2, C 1424. Pflaum, loc. cit., has omitted the connexion with Plutarch.
5 Cf. Pflaum, ibid.
6 This new date for the establishment of the province of Epirus was suggested independently by Groag, E., Die römischen Reichsbeamlen von Achaia (1939), p. 40,Google Scholar and by Horovitz, Ph., Rev. de Philol. xiii [65] (1939), 228 ff.Google Scholar The date has been accepted: cf. Kahrstedt, , Historia i (1950), 558;Google Scholar Kirsten in Philippson-Kirsten's, Die griechischen Landschaften (1956), 224;Google ScholarPflaum, , op. cit., i. 123;Google Scholar and the present writer's ‘Zur Geschichte des römischen Thessaliens’ forthcoming in Rheinisches Museum.
7 See Lepper, F. A., Trajan's Parthian War (1948), pp. 34–39.Google Scholar
8 So Mittelhaus, , op. cit., pp. 1–8,Google Scholar and Ziegler, in R.-E. 41. 714.Google Scholar
9 Suet, ., Vesp. 12.Google Scholar
10 An seni 792 F.