De vita et moribus philosophorum
De vita et moribus philosophorum is an anonymous Latin biographical dictionary of 132 ancient Greek and Roman philosophers and other luminaries from Thales of Miletus in the 6th century BC to Priscian in the 6th century AD. It was written in about 1317–1320 and draws heavily on Henricus Aristippus's Latin translation of the [Ancient Ancient Greek language|Greek language|Greek] Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers of Diogenes Laertius. It was formerly attributed to Walter Burley, but is now recognized as anonymous. Its author may be known as "Pseudo-Walter Burley".
There are over 150 manuscript copies of De vita et moribus philosophorum, mostly from France and Italy. It was a popular early printed book, going through 30 editions by 1530. A Spanish translation was made in the early 15th century, an Italian translation by 1475 and three in Polish by the early 16th century. Two German translations, one by and another by Anton Sorg, had appeared by 1490.
De vita et moribus philosophorum was used as a source by Giovanni Colonna in his De viris illustribus begun in 1329.
Authorship
The work was formerly attributed to the English philosopher Walter Burley and dated to the 1340s, after he had spent time in southern Europe. Burley's name is associated with the text in manuscript ascriptions from the fifteenth century, although how the attribution arose is unclear. Knust and Stigall hypothesised that Burley produced the work to instruct Edward, Prince of Wales, while other scholars hypothesised that it was intended for his students as a convenient introductory text to philosophers.This attribution was rebutted in 1990 by Mario Grignsachi who showed that the work was composed in Northern Italy and that it was in circulation by the 1320s, prior to Burley's arrival in the region. The anonymous Italian compiler is now often referred to as "Pseudo-Burley".
Contents
The work is a compilation of biographies written in Latin. It covers ancient Greek and Roman figures and extends into later antiquity, with lives of philosophers alongside poets, historians, orators, statesmen, physicians, and grammarians. In its usual form it contains accounts of 132 subjects, from Thales of Miletus in the 6th century BC to Priscian in the 6th century AD.Entries vary sharply in length, from a few words to several pages. Aristarchus received an eight-word biography, "Aristarchus, a grammarian, flourished in the time of the Maccabees", while Socrates received five and a half folios, Diogenes four and a half, and Plato four.
Where possible the compiler supplies dates. Greek figures are commonly dated by reference to Hebrew kings or prophets, and Roman figures by reference to other Romans. Many entries identify the subject's writings, and the work uses anecdotes to illustrate the character of the subject, often presented in the form of questions to and answers from them. Entries typically combine biographical detail with material presenting the subject's moral qualities or personal traits.
The compilation draws on earlier works. It relies on Diogenes Laertius' Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, translated from Greek into Latin by Henricus Aristippus, and also draws on Bocados de oro, an Arabic-Spanish-Latin text. It is also likely that the compiler used Speculum Maius by Vincent of Beauvais and Compendiloquium by John of Wales.
Subjects
Listed below are the subjects of Pseudo-Walter Burley's biographies.- 1. Thales of Miletus
- 2. Solon
- 3. Chilo
- 4. Pittacus
- 5. Bias
- 6. Cleobolus
- 7. Periander
- 8. Zoroaster
- 9. Anaximander
- 10. Anacharsis
- 11. Misosternon
- 12. Epimenides
- 13. Ferecides
- 14. Homer
- 15. Lygurgus
- 16. Anaximenes of Miletus
- 17. Pythagoras
- 18. Anaxagoras
- 19. Crates
- 20. Stilbon
- 21. Archilogus
- 22. Simonides
- 23. Archita
- 24. Aesop
- 25. Zenon
- 26. Gorgias
- 27. Isocrates
- 28. Protagoras
- 29. Crisippus
- 30. Socrates
- 31. Aristippus
- 32. Xenophon
- 33. Antistenes
- 34. Alchibiades
- 35. Eschines
- 36. Euripides
- 37. Demosthenes
- 38. Sophocles
- 39. Pericles
- 40. Themistocles
- 41. Aristides
- 42. Eudoxus
- 43. Aratus
- 44. Democritus
- 45. Hippocrates
- 46. Euripides
- 47. Heraclitus
- 48. Empedocles
- 49. Parmenides
- 50. Diogenes
- 51. Carneides
- 52. Plato
- 53. Aristotle
- 54. Xenophilus
- 55. Phaedo of Elis
- 56. Aeschylus
- 57. Speusippus
- 58. Apuleius
- 59. Plotinus
- 60. Hermes Trismegistus
- 61. Xenocrates
- 62. Demas
- 63. Anaxiamenes
- 64. Epicurus
- 65. Polystratus the Epicurean and Ipoclides
- 66. Callisthenes
- 67. Anaxarchus
- 68. Theophrastus
- 69. Diodorus
- 70. Polemo
- 71. Antipater
- 72. Archephilas
- 73. Erasistratus
- 74. Archimenides
- 75. Ptolomeus
- 76. Menander
- 77. Philemon
- 78. Senon
- 79. Senon
- 80. Egesias
- 81. Ennius
- 82. Aristarchus
- 83. Pancupius
- 84. Stacius
- 85. Valerius
- 86. Plocius
- 87. Panaetius
- 88. Livy
- 89. Posidonius
- 90. Ecaten
- 91. Marcus
- 92. Diodorus
- 93. Curio
- 94. Scipio
- 95. Cicero
- 96. Cato
- 97. Diogenes
- 98. Antipater
- 99. Sallust
- 100. Plaucius
- 101. Vitus
- 102. Lucius
- 103. Plaucius
- 104. Virgil
- 105. Iulius
- 106. Accius Lucius
- 107. Terence
- 108. Varro
- 109. Gallus
- 110. Horace
- 111. Xistus
- 112. Marcus Nerius
- 113. Athenodorus
- 114. Ovid
- 115. Valerius
- 116. Calciterus
- 117. Seneca
- 118. Quintilian
- 119. Plutarch
- 120. Plinius
- 121. Ptolomeus
- 122. Secundus
- 123. Apolonius
- 124. Basilides
- 125. Taurus
- 126. Galienus
- 127. Trogus
- 128. Porphyry of Tyre
- 129. Claudius
- 130. Simachus
- 131. Priscian
Manuscripts and publication history
Manuscripts
The text circulated widely in manuscript. In 2017, Copeland gave a figure of over 270 extant manuscripts, as well as evidence for additional copies that no longer survive. The surviving manuscripts are mainly continental, with few English copies.The text is not uniform across the manuscript tradition. While the standard form contains biographies of 132 individuals, many manuscripts transmit shorter versions, and abridgement is common. About a quarter of the extant manuscripts fall within a single redaction.
Manuscripts also differ in presentation and apparent use. Marston MS. 80, copied around 1410, appears in a collection of Italian moralising texts and seems to have functioned as a schoolbook. Marston MS. 91, copied in the fifteenth century, contains only 76 biographies and includes a portrait of Burley. London, BL, Add. 24662 includes notes from readers, while London, BL, Arundel 397 has Aristotle's works written as a list, which Copeland argues was intended as a "quick and useful reference". Other copies were produced as luxury manuscripts.
Publication history
The text entered print early and was frequently reissued. By 1530 it had appeared in thirty editions. It was translated into Spanish in the early fifteenth century and into Italian by 1475. Two German translations had been made by 1490, and three in Polish by the early sixteenth century. It was also translated into Catalan, French and Czech.Other editions were published under other titles and attributions, sometimes through misunderstanding and sometimes deliberately. An Italian language edition published in Venice in 1535 titled the work "Moral Philosophers and Their Memorable Sayings Taken from Laertius and Other Ancient Authors", mistaking the compilation for direct ancient biography. In 1603 the Italian lawyer Anastasius a Sala attempted to present it as his own work.
Modern editorial work began with Hermann Knust's 1886 edition, which printed the Latin text alongside a fifteenth-century Spanish translation. An unpublished 1956 doctoral dissertation by John O. H. Stigall collated six fourteenth-century manuscripts, while in 1969 Rainer Wedler produced a German edition.
Editions
- Stigall, John Oliver H., ed. The 'De vita et moribus philosophorum' of Walter Burley: An Edition with Introduction. PhD diss. University of Colorado at Boulder, 1956.
- Crosas López, Francisco, ed. Vida y costumbres de los viejos filósofos : la traducción castellana cuatrocentista del De vita et moribus philosophorum atribuido a Walter Burley. Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert, 2002.