- Albinovanus Pedo
Albinovanus Pedo, Roman
poet , flourished during the Augustan age.Citation | last = Smith | first = William | author-link = William Smith (lexicographer) | contribution = Albinovanus, C. Pedo | editor-last = Smith | editor-first = William | title =Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology | volume = 1 | pages = 90 | publisher =Little, Brown and Company | place = Boston | year = 1867 | contribution-url = http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/0099.html ]He wrote "Theseis", referred to in a letter from his friend
Ovid ,epigram s which are commended byMartial and an epic poem on the exploits ofGermanicus . [Ovid , "Ex Ponto" iv. 10] [Martial , ii. 77, v. 5] He had the reputation of being an excellent "raconteur", andQuintilian awards him qualified praise as a writer of epics. [Quintilian , x. i. 90]All that remains of his works is a fragment preserved in the "Suasoria" of the rhetorician
Seneca the Elder , from a description of the voyage of Germanicus (AD 16) through the river Ems to the Northern Ocean, when he was overtaken by the storm described byTacitus . [Seneca the Elder , "Suaseriae" i. 15] [Tacitus , "Annales" ii. 23] The cavalry commander spoken of by the historian is probably identical with the poet.Three elegies were formerly attributed to Pedo by Scaliger; two on the death of
Maecenas ("In Obitum Maecenatis" and "De Verbis Maecenatis moribundi"), and one addressed toLivia to console her for the death of her son Drusus ("Consolatio ad Liviam de Morte Drusi" or "Epicedion Drusi", usually printed with Ovid's works); but it is now generally agreed that they are not by Pedo.The "Consolatio" has been put down as late as the
15th century as the work of an Italian imitator, there being no manuscripts and no trace of the poem before the publication of the "editio princeps " of Ovid in 1471.References
Other sources
*
E. Bahrens , "Poetae Latini Minores" (1879) and "Fragmenta Poetarum Latinorum" (1886)
*Moritz Haupt , "Opuscula", i. (1875)
*Oskar Haube , "Beitrag zur Kenntnis des Albinovanus Pedo" (1880).
*1911There is an English verse translation of the elegies by
Edward Hayes Plumptre (1907).
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