Cornelianus

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cornelianus an entity of type: Person

Cornelià (en llatí Cornelianus) va ser un retòric romà que sembla que va viure durant els regnats de Marc Aureli i Luci Ver. Va ser secretari privat de l'emperador Marc Aureli. El gramàtic , que va dedicar a Cornelià les seves Eclogae, l'elogia i diu que era digne d'haver nascut en època de Demòstenes. Marc Corneli Frontó menciona un retòric amb el nom de Sulpicius Cornelianus, però ni se sap si era el mateix. rdf:langString
Sulpicius Cornelianus was a Roman rhetorician. He lived in the reign of the Roman Emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus. This puts him in the late 2nd century AD (Aurelius and Verus reigned from 161 to 180). Cornelianus acted as secretary (ab epistulis Graecis) to Marcus Aurelius. The grammarian Phrynichus Arabius speaks of Cornelianus with high praise; Phrynichus dedicated his Ecloga to him, and describes him as worthy of the age of the great orator Demosthenes. Fronto is our source for the fact that Cornelianus was named Sulpicius. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cornelià
rdf:langString Cornelianus
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rdf:langString Cornelià (en llatí Cornelianus) va ser un retòric romà que sembla que va viure durant els regnats de Marc Aureli i Luci Ver. Va ser secretari privat de l'emperador Marc Aureli. El gramàtic , que va dedicar a Cornelià les seves Eclogae, l'elogia i diu que era digne d'haver nascut en època de Demòstenes. Marc Corneli Frontó menciona un retòric amb el nom de Sulpicius Cornelianus, però ni se sap si era el mateix.
rdf:langString Sulpicius Cornelianus was a Roman rhetorician. He lived in the reign of the Roman Emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus. This puts him in the late 2nd century AD (Aurelius and Verus reigned from 161 to 180). Cornelianus acted as secretary (ab epistulis Graecis) to Marcus Aurelius. The grammarian Phrynichus Arabius speaks of Cornelianus with high praise; Phrynichus dedicated his Ecloga to him, and describes him as worthy of the age of the great orator Demosthenes. Fronto is our source for the fact that Cornelianus was named Sulpicius. It has been argued that Cornelianus is the author of a surviving treatise in Greek entitled Philetaerus (φιλέταιρος), which had previously been attributed to the great 2nd century grammarian Herodian. Herodian, too, was on good terms with Marcus Aurelius.
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