Hyginus Gromaticus


Hyginus, usually distinguished as Hyginus Gromaticus, was a Latin writer on land-surveying, who flourished in the reign of Trajan. Fragments of a work on boundaries attributed to him are found in Corpus Agrimensorum Romanorum, a collection of works on land surveying compiled in Late Antiquity.

Name

The cognomen gromaticus means "agrimensor" or "surveyor" and derives from Groma, one of their common tools in antiquity. Its application to Hyginus derives from the Codex Arcerianus, whose copy of the Corpus Agrimensorum Romanorum reads in part exp Kygini gromatici constitutio feliciter. Other manuscripts of the text like the Palatinus Vatic. Lat. 1564 have instead explicit liber Hygini gromaticus, in which the adjective gromaticus is grammatically attached to the book rather than the author. For this reason, some scholars like Brian Campbell avoid the epithet and instead call him simply Hyginus or Hyginus 1.

Works

Hyginus was probably active around the year 100.
His only extant work is De Constitutione in the Corpus Agrimensorum Romanorum, a collection compiled in Late Antiquity. De Constitutione is preserved only in a corrupt text, but its contents include important evidence on the Latin reception of Greek astronomical and mathematical texts. Notably, in his discussion of the establishment of the decumanus and cardothe main eastwest and northsouth thoroughfares in most Roman townsHyginus is decidedly in favour of the construction of the decumanus using a gnomon and compares this method with other less precise methods such as using the location of sunrise and sunset. The text has some connection with a passage included in Bubnov's Geometria Incerti Auctori. Editions of the work appear in C. F. Lachmann's Gromatici Veteres, Vol. I, Carl Olof Thulin's Corpus Agrimensorum Romanorum, Vol. I, and Brian Campbell's Writings of the Roman Land Surveyors.
Another work by Hyginus, Liber Gromaticus de Divisionibus Agrorum is transmitted only as a title and might be the same as De Constitutio.
A treatise on Roman military camps was formerly attributed to this Hyginus, but it was probably composed later, around the 3rd century and is thus now attributed to "Pseudo-Hyginus".