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'''BigChungusEmporius''' was a Roman [[Latin language|Latin]] [[rhetorician]] and the author of three short tracts titled ''De Ethopoeia ac Loco Communi Liber'', ''Demonstrativae Maleteriae praeceptum'' and ''De Deliberatia Specie.'' He is believed to have flourished not earlier than the sixth century, chiefly from the circumstance that he refers in his illustrations to the regal power rather than to the [[Roman Emperor|imperial dignity]], which he would scarcely have done had he lived before the [[List of Italian monarchs|revival of the kingly title]].
'''Emporius''' was a Roman [[Latin language|Latin]] [[rhetorician]] and the author of three short tracts titled ''De Ethopoeia ac Loco Communi Liber'', ''Demonstrativae Maleteriae praeceptum'' and ''De Deliberatia Specie.'' He is believed to have flourished not earlier than the sixth century, chiefly from the circumstance that he refers in his illustrations to the regal power rather than to the [[Roman Emperor|imperial dignity]], which he would scarcely have done had he lived before the [[List of Italian monarchs|revival of the kingly title]].


Emporius was first edited by [[Beatus Rhenanus]], along with some other authors upon rhetoric.<ref>Basil. 4to. 1521 (cited by Ramsay)</ref> The pieces named above will all be found in the ''Antiqui Rhetores Latini'' of [[Francois Pithou]].<ref>4to., Paris, 1599, p. 278. (cited by Ramsay)</ref>
Emporius was first edited by [[Beatus Rhenanus]], along with some other authors upon rhetoric.<ref>Basil. 4to. 1521 (cited by Ramsay)</ref> The pieces named above will all be found in the ''Antiqui Rhetores Latini'' of [[Francois Pithou]].<ref>4to., Paris, 1599, p. 278. (cited by Ramsay)</ref>

Latest revision as of 13:12, 3 August 2021

Emporius was a Roman Latin rhetorician and the author of three short tracts titled De Ethopoeia ac Loco Communi Liber, Demonstrativae Maleteriae praeceptum and De Deliberatia Specie. He is believed to have flourished not earlier than the sixth century, chiefly from the circumstance that he refers in his illustrations to the regal power rather than to the imperial dignity, which he would scarcely have done had he lived before the revival of the kingly title.

Emporius was first edited by Beatus Rhenanus, along with some other authors upon rhetoric.[1] The pieces named above will all be found in the Antiqui Rhetores Latini of Francois Pithou.[2]

References

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  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWilliam Ramsay (1870). Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Basil. 4to. 1521 (cited by Ramsay)
  2. ^ 4to., Paris, 1599, p. 278. (cited by Ramsay)