Rigsby, 'Three books on Greek/Roman names/prosopography', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9505
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9505-rigsby-three
@@@@95.5.1, Three books on Greek/Roman names/prosopography
M. J. Osborne and S. G. Byrne, A Lexicon of Greek Personal
Names, Volume II, Attica. Oxford: Clarendon Press,
1994. Pp. xxi + 510. $75. ISBN 0-19-814990-5.
(and)
John S. Traill, Persons of Ancient Athens, Volume 1, A-
to Alexandros. Toronto: Athenians, 1994. Victoria College,
Toronto, ON, M5S lK7, Canada. Pp. xxv + 339. $125 + $10 postage
& handling. ISBN 0-9692686-2-9.
(and)
Heiki Solin and Olli Salomies, Repertorium nominum gentilium
et cognominum Latinorum, Editio nova. Hildesheim-Zurich-New
York: Olms-Weidmann, 1994. Pp. x + 508. DM 148. ISBN
3-487-07986-0.
Reviewed by Kent J. Rigsby -- Duke University
krigsby@acpub.duke.edu
1994 witnessed the appearance of two lists of persons in
Attica. While Kirchner's Prosopographia Attica (1901-03,
two volumes, ca. 16,000 entries) included only Athenian citizens
and only the period down to Augustus, the Oxford and the Toronto
projects are substantially more ambitious: all of antiquity, and
far more generous definitions of "Athenian" (which itself had
been a political football in classical Athens). A simple
statistical comparison of the two is not possible; the Oxford
entries are not numbered (the authors offer the total 62,360)
while the Toronto entries are not numbered consecutively but
leave gaps for future entries.
Lexicon II continues the project, headed by Peter
Fraser, to tabulate persons named in Greek lands. The first
volume, encompassing the Aegean islands and the Cyrenaica,
appeared in 1987. This dense matter has been given a clarity of
presentation for which all users will be grateful: well-chosen
fonts and styles distinguish the categories of information.
Despite the inevitable discomforts that the volume of data
imposed (large pages, small type in three columns), the entries
are easily readable and even elegant. The price is a bargain.
The oddities of the overall plan (described in the first
volume) persist here in modified form. This project is called a
lexicon but its content is a prosopography; its target is not the
possible names in the language of a place, but the persons
attested in that place (a "lexicon" would enter DHMH/TRIOS once,
not 782 times). The authors have therefore quite properly
labored to distinguish persons, preferring to err in the
direction of fission rather than fusion. The present volume
differs from the first in adding a reverse index (of names,
naturally, not of persons).
The oddities of scope and goal are unproblematic for this
coherent material from one city, material moreover which has been
worked on across a century by excellent scholars. We know why we
want a list of persons in Athens. It will be recalled too that
neither IG II2 nor I3 has an index. This volume will be
unique in the series because of the significant role played by
literary sources and the complexity of attestation of so many
individuals; elsewhere most Greeks are attested only once, and by
a document. This Attic volume will also have far more users,
with more diverse agendas, than any of the others in the Oxford
Lexicon.
The entries are highly compact: deme or tribe when known,
date, bibliographical citations, immediate kin; quotation of the
Greek text (name only) when there is restoration or a spelling
variant. Because function is so rarely indicated ("archon
epon.," "epeng.," "het."), a searcher can find the right homonym
only if forearmed with knowledge of one or more of these items.
Thucydides the historian does not leap to the eye from among the
18 homonyms (no. 11); many users of this book will know his
father's name as a guide, but fewer his deme, which is the first
piece of information in these entries. Spelling variants are
normalized tacitly (there is no cross-referencing) but not
pronunciation variants; XRUSA/RIN is separate from XRUSA/RION,
E(STIAI=OS from I(STIAI=OS. Persons with Roman tria nomina are
listed under the cognomen, without cross reference for the other
names (so the student of Vibius will readily find Julius Vibius,
but not Co. Vibius Crispus, who keeps company with Crispi).
In keeping with policy the volume excludes metics whose
origin is known (and who will therefore be included in the
relevant non-Attic volumes), even while perforce including those
whose origin is not known (and who thus cannot be placed
elsewhere). The authors are sufficiently uncomfortable with this
decision that they promise soon a separate volume that lists the
foreigners in Athens, which will be welcome. Slaves are reserved
for a common grave in the sixth volume. Fragmentary names are
excluded except where the restoration seems to be regarded as
certain (an extreme case is DIE/M`[POROS]); in this particular
this is a lexicon rather than a propospography.
The most problematic elements of their criteria for
admission are their headings "Athens?" and "Athens*": the first
signals "some likelihood of being Athenians," the second "the
residents of Attica who do not appear to be Athenian, whose place
of origin is not known, but who are not slaves or merely visitors
to the city" (p. x). The reasoning behind these two judgments
cannot be spelled out for each case, given the compact format,
and often remains obscure (e.g. Marathon the father of an ephebe
of Roman date is "Athens*"; claimed as a heroic name at Philostr.
553). "Mere visitors" evidently include the sophists (whose
origin if of course usually known and who will be listed in the
relevant volume); but the many brief mentions of persons in
Attica by literary sources make this a difficult distinction to
draw. I note for instance the absence of Nicostratus alias
Clytaemnestra at Diog.Laert. 4.18: overlooked, or taken to be a
mere visitor?
Fictitious characters are included ("fict."), which has its
uses for reconstructing an Athens of the mind; but only access to
the computerized data would produce a list of them, short of
reading continuously for this (or any other) detail. Here as
elsewhere the addition of a question mark ("fict.?") is an
inadequate guide to the editors' thinking: EU)RU/TH: Lang labeled
this name "mythological," however that was intended; PRACNH
on the same vase draws no question mark. O)RSIMH=S: this labels
a warrior at Troy not known from literature: surely fictional,
despite the question mark, but in what sense Athenian?
O)RSI/LOXOS: the scholiasts to Ar. Lys. 725 assume this
was a real person but offer only speculation about his character;
it is the great virtue of a book of this sort to reveal a second
instance of the name, on a fourth-century grave stele.
New discoveries and original contributions are scattered
throughout (e.g. EI)DA=S, EU)TUXI/S 12). The authors have
included the names in a set of unpublished squeezes from Attica
kept at the Institute for Advanced Study (see p. ix). The
treasures of the volume are endless. While Athenaios and
Athenais are popular, Atthis is quite rare and late, apparently
not felt primarily as a name (Athenaia is of course entirely
avoided). Again, Arsinoe is rare, despite the extraordinary
popularity of Philadelphus' wife. A number of names in the
defixiones remain attested only there (e.g. Apistia, Memphades).
Kopreus, the herald in Eur. Heracleidae named in the
dramatis personae but not in the text, has often been taken as an
Alexandrian scholar's deduction from the Kopres at Iliad
15.639; so it is interesting to find a Kopreus once in Athens, on
a pot of the fifth century B.C. (for the type see Robert, Noms
indigenes 53). The lone Strophe undermines an old classroom
joke.
John Traill's project had its origin in the work of Benjamin
Meritt to maintain current data on Athenian prosopography.
Meritt (whose account of this enterprise, written in 1984, is
given as a Foreward) early on saw the potential of the computer
to make his paper resources at the Institute for Advanced Study
dynamic and expandable, and by 1972 Traill was at work entering
data.
Twenty volumes are projected, the first fourteen of which
are described in this first as "in press" (the second has now
appeared). The total cost will exceed $2000; the publisher,
"Athenians," seems to be an office in Victoria College,
University of Toronto, apparently with no other publications and
little means of distribution; the book is not listed in the
1994/5 Books in Print. It seems clear that, in practice,
libraries and individuals will acquire the Oxford U.P.
Lexicon and not the Toronto volumes.
Persons goes beyond the scope of Lexicon II in
listing all foreigners: metics, slaves, and indeed "foreigners
who have been honored by Athens," which proves to include some
who never set foot in Attica (e.g. several Macedonian kings in
the present volume). In fact, all persons named in Athenian
documents are intended--so the Athenais merely mentioned as
mother of an honorand, Ariobarzanes of Cappadocia. Thus the
difficult and to a degree arbitrary decisions about inclusion
made by Lexicon II are not a problem here. Persons
also includes fragmentary names, on which, at Athens, it will be
possible to build, given the rich context that the volume
constructs around them. Spelling has been normalized, and
variants are in the alphabetized list only to supply a
cross-reference (phrased illogically as "see also") to the
normalized name; in the quoted Greek, variants, however familiar,
are marked with !, which quickly becomes tiresome
(A)GRIPPEI=NA!); this includes normal dialectic variants like the
genitive FILOKRA/TEUS! on Lesbos (102715).
Even more aggressively than Lexicon II,
Persons aims for fission over fusion: "The result has been
a large-scale dismemberment of the traditional identifications in
Attic prosopography" (xvi); but also new equations, and new
dates. Persons is the more skeptical book, inserting far
more question marks about readings, dates, kinship. On the other
hand, Persons is less concerned to canvass the literary
sources for possible Athenians (so omitting e.g. Lexicon
II's Agathion 3, "Athens?," from Philostratus). "Fictitious" is
not a category, yet some literary characters are admitted; some
odd disparities result between the two projects, so a
hetaira-name Habrotonon enters Persons only from Menander,
Lexicon II only from Lucian. But in both projects the
thinking behind the decisions and question-marks is left to the
reader to reconstruct, a task far easier in Persons
because of its extensive quotation of sources.
For purposes of illustration, I quote each volume on Habron
of Boutadai:
Lexicon II, under A(/BRWN:
-- Boutadai (18): s. iv BC Plu., Mor. 843a; 843e-f;
IG II2 463, 36; 1492, 123; Reinmuth, Ephebic Inscr.
12, 72 (PA/APF 15) (s. LUKOU=RGOS IV, KALLIOPW/
(Bate))
[All entries per deme are printed run-on.]
Persons:
101570 ABRWN BOUTADHS (OINE) (PA D)
ephebe, lochagos, ca 330a. Status A. Treated in APF 9251
p352. Possibly the same as 101575.
1.1 H S8 p274, line 8 (cat eph).
BOUTA/DAI / A(/BRWN
= 1.2 ReEI p42 12, line 8
2.1 H S8 p274, line 70 (cat eph).
A(/BRWNA / BOUTA/DHN
= 2.2 ReEI p43 12, line 73
[where D = APF; A = citizen; H = Hesperia; ReEI =
Reinmuth (omitted from the abbreviations, p. xxiv).]
101575 ABRWN BOUTADHS (OINE*) (PA 15 D)
[where * = by deduction. This entry gives a description of
him as litigant, followed by seven literary references each with
substantial quotations from the Greek; as politician (one
passage); as a treasurer twice (one passage each); and as
dedicator of portraits (one passage).]
Every user will be grateful for the generous quotation of sources
in Persons; but the cost is substantial, for the two
entries on Habron occupy three-quarters of a page where
Lexicon II takes four lines of one column. There is some
needless swelling: the double allusion to APF, ", line"
where a period would do; above all, separate lines giving
(selectively) the publishing history of individual inscriptions,
each time repeating the line number. In the end, the entries do
not make clear the basis for distinguishing ("possibly") two men
where others have seen one.
For all its expansiveness, Persons neglects to give
some valuable and easy information; above all of persons honored
by "decr forgn" it would have occupied comparatively little more
space to identify the government; likewise "decr club." (Also,
it often omits dots in quoting Greek.) Neither project remotely
approaches the argued detail of Davies' APF, which readers
will always consult for the wealthy of Athens.
I note the following details: 013040, the status entry after
the husband of this woman from Ancyra appears intrusive; 102575
with inconsistent AGAQ[I / A)GAQI[ repeats a typographical error
from IG (the second is correct); of the one A)GGE/LHS we
have both a question mark and "name doubtful"; this apparently
reflects no more than the question mark printed in IG II2,
where again the intention was unclear; 102710, read "99/8" (both
Lexicon II and Persons rightly accept the lower
dating of the stephanephoric coinage, citing Habicht).
It is distressing that these two volumes should appear
simultaneously and, despite abundant public preview over recent
years, without reference to each other (the Lexicon
editors thank Traill among others on p. viii but do not mention
his project). A great deal of labor has been duplicated to
produce incompatible databases. The authors must understand that
(especially in the current fiscal climate of the academy)
scholars and libraries will be forced to choose.
In 1988 Solin and Salomies gave us their important volume
listing Latin nomina and all cognomina; six years later Olms has
reissued this with an attached supplement of addenda and
corrigenda. The original book is unaltered, except that its one
page of addenda has been subsumed into the new attachment; this
supplement is printed in a different and better typeface which
distinguishes upper- and lower-case letters and can print Greek.
It is continuously paginated with the original; the names listed
in this addition occupy 22 pages (the whole is 34 pages when
reverse-indexes, preface, and empty sheets are counted). Owners
of the original volume can be expected to bridle at the $100
price of this improvement. It is a pity that the supplement was
not issued separately (as was done with the far more substantial
addenda to Broughton's MRR). It is a greater pity that a
project which from the start was computer-based did not use the
power of the computer to integrate this new material with the old
and produce a coherent volume. Because gentilicia and cognomina
are listed separately, the searcher of a name will now look in
four lists, each followed by its own reverse-index.
The following remarks are confined to the supplement. As in
the original, the authors admit as gentilicia all names that are
found so used, but as cognomina only those that are
linguistically Latin (quite rightly eliminating thereby the many
Greek names that become cognomina with the gaining of Roman
citizenship). The authors' knowledge of the Latin material is
formidable and current, and sometimes based upon unpublished
texts; their control of the Greek evidence is somewhat bookish
and haphazard. The entries offer more information than those in
the original lists, which is much to the good; but there is much
randomness in what is included: usually place, sometimes date,
rarely character ("soldat," "Gladiator"); bibliography is usually
the source but sometimes an encyclopedia article.
Because of their generous definition of novelty, there is
less new in these lists than meets the eye. One criterion for
inclusion is names (marked by an asterisk) that have proved
erroneous and are to be deleted from the original book. It would
have been far better for the computer to eliminate these from the
original and generate a new text, a task of minutes rather than
months. The same criticism can be made of names for which some
particular testimony must be deleted (marked with a minus sign);
names about which the authors now conceive some doubt (marked ?);
and those for which testimony as been added (+) or corrected (!).
The user must now check the supplement, watching for these signs,
regarding every name consulted in the original. The brevity of
exposition, moreover, often means that the user must resort to
the original publications of the relevant texts to understand the
basis of the addendum.
There remain names not found in the original volume; here
the authors distinguish new entries (marked by bold-face type)
from feminine cognomina where only the masculine had been known
(not marked at all, e.g. Allina when the original had Allinus);
the original was inconsistent on the gender question, normally
giving only masculines, citing the feminine alone when that is
all that is on record, but sometimes listing a masculine as a
deduction from the feminine (e.g. Emerentianus).
As to genuinely new entries, which will represent the
progress of the past six years, rather more are corrigenda (from
texts overlooked) than addenda (from texts newly published).
Many are merely spelling variants, a necessary feature given the
conventions of the project, but of limited interest because the
ways of variation are familiar--thus geminations (Appulleius,
BiFssiow) are listed as new entries. Rarely, the normalized
spelling of an already attested name is referred to with =, thus
"Autillus (= Auct-)," sometimes (oddly) with "Vgl.," thus
"Aceronius Vgl. Acheron-." More often there is no such reference
and the user is left to deduce equations, in the first instance
by reverting to the authors' original lists (whose great value
cannot be overpraised). Thus KAILH/RIOS (?) is simply Celerius
(the question mark is not explained); similarly Biturianus is
Veturianus, KESSIANO/S (?) is Caesianus; I)OUBINIANO/S (=
Iuvenianus?) is rather the attested Iovinianus; Pacideianus and
PAKIDIANO/S are given as separate entries; I)STIME/NIOS at
Aizanoi, listed separately from Istimenius at Rome and without
comment (the original volume had already Istimennius and
Istiminius): the editors of the Aizanoi inscription rightly
remarked that this is merely the prothetic iota, for Steminius.
Many additions are of quite late date, into the seventh century,
when one begins to wonder about the proper definition of Latin
nomenclature.
I note the following. A)KLA/N[I]OS is given without comment
from an inscription from Bulgaria; IGBulg cites
suggestions of Etruscan Aclani and Latin Aclenius; but is it not
simply Aeclanius? FLABOULH/IOS in an inscription at Claros: this
is FLABOULH/IOS BA=SSOS, a Neocaesarean from Pontus; as the same
text shows abbreviated Claudius and Ulpius, it seems possible
that this is Flav. Uleius Bassus. SEPI/LIOS at Cnidus: the
editor W. Bluemel reasonably suggested emending to SEPI/LIOS;
the whole grave-stone reads SEPILI/OU NIKI/A MNI/AS XA/RIN:
SECTILI/OU A)NIKH/TOU; as the two deceased seem related, it is
tempting to emend even further, SEILI/OU. O(RDEA=NOS at
Ephesus: correct reference is SEG 39.1223. Albucio is
listed as a cognomen in a Christian inscription and then called
"falsch"; inspection of the original explains neither the
classifiication (the name is isolated) nor the judgment.
Tutilla: the entry has then fallen out; one wants to be sure that
this is not the familiar Tutilia.
Greek inscriptions are often cited from out-dated editions
(despite the claim on p. viii). Usually this will not affect
readings; but it puts the onus on the user to check the best
edition. I have noticed that A)GUL-, cited from CIG and
Le Bas-Waddington, in fact disappeared in 1883 (the proper
citation is I.Tralles 140). In short, the reader is often
obliged to go to the sources to obtain a clear accounting of the
situation, and on the Greek side to do the homework of bringing
the citations up to date.
The simultaneous appearance of these admirable books invites
uncertain thoughts about the computer and publishing. The
control that the computer allows upon printing meant, for
example, that Lexicon II and Persons could take
into account the second fascicule of IG I3 and Clairmont's
Tombstones (both 1993), and the Repertorium is
similarly current. Lexicon II by its complex exclusions
has sought to avoid redundancy in a project that will eventually
take in all Greek lands (and so the redundancy of two "Athenians"
projects is all the more baffling). But redundancy in that sense
is a meaningful concept only when deciding in which printed
volume to give an entry: the electronic searcher of the whole
will not care whether Protagoras should be "printed" with Athens
or with Thrace.
The convenience of in-house typesetting has in the Athenian
case produced a David and Goliath situation. We must wonder how
many readers will locate an obscure press and spend $125 in order
to own 5% of the Athenians available from Oxford UP for $75. But
which will be David and which Goliath?
The personal computer broke the publishing industry in half.
The complex traditional tasks of setting and inking type,
producing pages, and assessing the result can now be done by
authors or editors rather than professional craftsmen, using
small, cheap, versatile equipment in private space. The other
half of publication, what is done with those pages--multiple
copying, book manufacture, binding, marketing, distribution--
depends in its various stages upon large, expensive, specialized
machinery and upon established commercial contacts and legal
structures, and these remain in the hands of trained specialists
of diverse sorts with little connection either with authors or
with one another. This second half of the industry is now in the
process of being rendered superfluous by electronic publishing.
When the Internet comes to replace the stop-gap technology of the
CD-ROM, academics in humanities will need to face squarely what
it means to publish scholarship, who will guard the gates, and
how the results are to be judged by those responsible for hiring,
promotion, and grants.
Some assessment of these three books on their use of the
computer is therefore in order. The least can be said for the
Repertorium nominum. Here the computer was used as a
flexible typewriter; it is inexcusable that in 1994 the pertinent
service that the computer could have rendered, resorting the new
material into the old, was not done. Moreover, the fuller
information offered by the supplement is added so randomly that
access to the electronic data to search would rarely ferret out
interesting comparisons. The selfless labor that Solin and
Salomies have put at our disposal has not been given the rich
format that their unrivaled knowledge of Latin nomenclature
deserves.
Lexicon II speaks cautiously of its names as "being
subject to the type of analysis which a database makes possible"
(p. vi). The scope of the project, all names in Greek lands, and
the meager information appended for each (chronology, geography,
immediate kin, "fict.,"very occasionally other items such as
"het.," "Jew," or gender) mean that the database will support
only limited analyses, e.g. probability studies on the
distribution of names in time and space. The recognition of
epichoric names will be facilitated; but in the end such studies
are valid only when all Greek lands have been covered, and that
seems a distant prospect (the "Middle East," according to
Lexicon I, will form a "second project"). Peter Fraser,
speaking on the intended Lexicon at an APA meeting some
years ago, indicated that the data would not be released to the
public in electronic form; plans no doubt change, but
Lexicon II contains no hint how or whether the database
might be made accessible.
Persons from the start was designed with the computer
search in view. "It is the goal to disseminate this material
in both electronic and conventional formats" (xi); of electronic
dissemination nothing more specific is said here, doubtless
because basic decisions wait upon the state of technology when
the project is completed. In the database a name is endowed with
information in as many as fifteen categories (function, tribe,
kin, etc.), and sources characterized with as many as seven
(decree, metrical, etc.); this rich detail will be priceless to
future research. Traill has worked on computer generation of
stemmata, but the gain from this database will not be confined to
family prosopography. We will eventually be able to generate
lists of ephebes of the mid-third century B.C., metrical epitaphs
of women, origins of spouses of foreigners, pottery owners from
coastal demes, etc. Few scholars will or should buy the paper
copy of Persons, because of its high price and the rivalry
of the completed Lexicon II--but mainly because it has
doomed its own commercial viability by its intended electronic
format. But no one will doubt that the future of these studies
belongs to John Traill's project.