- Asconius Pedianus
Quintus Asconius Pedianus (c. 9 BC - c. AD 76), Roman
grammar ian andhistorian , was probably a native of Patavium (Padua ).In his later years he resided in
Rome , and there he died, after having been blind for twelve years, at the age of eighty-five. During the reigns ofClaudius andNero he compiled for his sons, from various sources -- e.g. the Gazette ("Aetablica"), shorthand reports or skeletons ("commentarii") ofCicero 's unpublished speeches, Tiro's life of Cicero, speeches and letters of Cicero's contemporaries, various historical writers, e.g. Varro, Atticus, Antias,Tuditanus andFenestella (a contemporary ofLivy whom he often criticizes) -- historical commentaries on Cicero's speeches, of which only five, viz, "in Pisonem", "pro Scauro", "pro Milone ", "pro Cornelio" and "in toga candida", in a very mutilated edition, are preserved, under the modern title "Q. Asconii Pediani Orationvm Ciceronis qvinqve enarratio"In a note upon the speech "pro Scauro", he speaks of
Longus Caecina (d. AD 57) as still living, while his words imply that Claudius (d. AD 54) was not alive. This statement, therefore, must have been written between AD 54 and 57. These valuable notes, written in good Latin, relate chiefly to historical and antiquarian matters. A commentary, of superior Latinity and mainly of a grammatical character, on Nero's Verrine orations, is universally regarded as spurious.Both works were found by Poggio in a manuscript at
St Gallen in 1416. This manuscript is lost, but three transcripts were made by Poggio, Zomini (Sozomenus) of Pistoia and Bartolommeo da Montelciano. That of Poggio is now atMadrid ("Matritensis" X. 81), and that of Zomini is in the Forteguerri library at Pistoia (No. 37). A copy of Bartolommeo's transcript exists in Florence (Laur. 5). The later manuscripts are derived from Poggio's copy.Other works attributed to Asconius were:
*a life ofSallust
*a defence of Virgil against his detractors
*a treatise (perhaps a symposium in imitation ofPlato ) on health and long life.References
Editions by
*Kiessling and Scholl (1875)
*Albert Curtis Clark (Oxford, 1907), contains a previously unpublished collation of Poggio's manuscript.
* [http://www.attalus.org/latin/index.html Asconius online on Attalus.org]See also
*Madvig , "De Asconio Pediano" (1828).
*1911
*"Asconius: Commentaries on Five Speeches of Cicero", Simon Squires (1990)
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