Nonnus
Sinónimos: Ophionocryptus
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A mosaic of Dionysus from Antioch.
Nonnus of Panopolis (Greek: Νόννος ὁ Πανοπολίτης, Nónnos ho Panopolítēs) was a Hellenized Egyptian
epic poet. He was a native of Panopolis (Akhmim) in the Egyptian Thebaid and probably lived at the end of the
4th or in the 5th century. He is known as the composer of the Dionysiaca, an epic tale of the god Dionysus,
and the Metabole, a paraphrase of the Gospel of John.
Contents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Life
The Dionysiaca
The Paraphrase of John
Works
See also
Notes
References
7.1 Citations
8 Notes
8.1 Bibliography
9 Further reading
10 External links
Life[edit]
There is almost no evidence for the life of Nonnus. It is known that he was a native of Panopolis (Akhmim) in
Upper Egypt from his naming in manuscripts and the reference in epigram 9.198 of the Palatine Anthology.[n 1]
Scholars have generally dated him from the end of the 4th to the central years of the 5th century. He must
have lived after the composition of Claudian's Greek Gigantomachy (i.e., after AD 394–397) as he appears to
be familiar with that work. Agathias Scholasticus seems to have followed him, with a mid-6th-century reference
to him as a "recent author".[2][3]
He is sometimes conflated with St Nonnus from the hagiographies of St Pelagia and with Nonnus, the bishop
of Edessa who attended the Council of Chalcedon, both of whom seem to have been roughly contemporary,
but these associations are probably mistaken.[4]
The Dionysiaca[edit]
Main article: Dionysiaca
Nonnus' principal work is the 48-book epic Dionysiaca, the longest surviving poem from antiquity. It has 20,426
lines composed in Homeric dialect and dactylic hexameters, the main subject of which is the life of Dionysus,
his expedition to India, and his triumphant return to the west. The poem is thought to have been written in the
early 5th century.
The Paraphrase of John[edit]
His Paraphrase of John (Metabolḕ toû katà Iōánnēn Euaggelíou) also survives. Its timing is a debated point:
textual analysis seems to suggest that it preceded the Dionysiaca while some scholars feel it unlikely that a
converted Christian would have gone on to devote so much work to the Dionysiaca’s pagan themes.[5][6] A
team of Italian scholars is currently producing a full commentary of the poem, book by book, of which several
parts have already been published.[citation needed] They have shown that Nonnus was as learned in Christian
theology (in particular he seems to have consulted the Commentary on the Gospel of John that Cyril of
Alexandria had recently penned) as in pagan myth.[citation needed]
Works[edit]
A complete and updated bibliography of Nonnus scholarship may be found at Hellenistic Bibliography's page at
Google Sites.[7]
Editions and translations of the Dionysiaca include:
Bilingual Greek-English edition (initial introduction, some explanatory notes): W. H. D. Rouse (1940),
Nonnos, Dionysiaca, With an English Translation by W. H. D. Rouse, Mythological Introduction and
Notes by H. J. Rose, Notes on Text Criticism by L. R. Lind, 3 vols., Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge
(Ma.)
Bilingual Greek-French edition (with introduction to the individual books and notes): F. Vian (general ed.)
(1976-2006), Nonnos de Panopolis, Les Dionysiaques, 19 volumes, Paris
Bilingual Greek-Italian edition (with introductions and notes): D. Gigli Piccardi (general ed.) (2003-4),
Nonno di Panopoli, Le Dionisiache, BUR, Milano
Nonno di Panopoli, Le Dionisiache, a cura di D. del Corno, traduzione di M. Maletta, note de F. Tissoni,
2 vols, Milano 1997.
F. Tissoni, Nonno di Panopoli, I Canti di Penteo (Dionisiache 44-46). Commento, Firenze 1998
Editions and translations of the Paraphrase include:
The only complete translation into English: Prost, Mark Anthony. Nonnos of Panopolis, The Paraphrase
of the Gospel of John. Translated from the Greek by M.A.P. Ventura, CA: The Writing Shop Press, 2006
The last complete edition of the Greek text: Nonni Panopolitani Paraphrasis S. Evangelii Joannei edidit
Augustinus Scheindler, accedit S. Evangelii textus et index verborum, Lipsiae in aedibus Teubneri 1881
A team of (mainly Italian) scholars are now re-editing the text, book by book, with ample introductions and
notes. Published so far:
C. De Stefani (2002), Nonno di Panopoli: Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, Canto I, Bologna
E. Livrea (2000), Nonno di Panopoli, Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, Canto B, Bologna
M. Caprara (2006), Nonno di Panopoli, Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, Canto IV, Pisa
G. Agosti (2003), Nonno di Panopoli, Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, Canto V, Firenze
R. Franchi (2013), Nonno di Panopoli. Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni: canto sesto, Bologna
K. Spanoudakis (2015), Nonnus of Panopolis. Paraphrase of the Gospel of John XI, Oxford
C. Greco (2004), Nonno di Panopoli, Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, canto XIII, Alessandria
E. Livrea (1989), Nonno di Panopoli, Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, Canto XVIII, Napoli
D. Accorinti (1996), Nonno di Panopoli, Parafrasi del Vangelo di S. Giovanni, Canto XX, Pisa
See also[edit]
Kalamos and Karpos
Notes[edit]
1. ^ On the references to Egypt in the poem, see D. Gigli Piccardi (1998), “Nonno e l’Egitto”, Prometheus
24, 61-82 and 161-81. Enrico Livrea has proposed the identification of the poet with the Syrian bishop of
Edessa of the same name.[1]
References[edit]
Citations[edit]
1. ^ E. Livrea (1987), “Il poeta e il vescovo: la questione nonniana e la storia”, Prometheus 13, 97-123
2. ^ Agathias Scholasticus, Hist. 4.23. (530 x 580)
3. ^ Fornaro, S. s.v. Nonnus in Brill's New Pauly vol. 9 (ed. Canick & Schneider) (Leiden, 2006) col.812–
815
4. ^ Cameron (2016), pp. 85 ff.
5. ^ Vian, Francis. '"Mârtus" chez Nonnos de Panopolis. Étude de sémantique et de chronologie.' REG
110, 1997, 143-60. Reprinted in: L'Épopée posthomérique. Recueil d'études. Ed. Domenico Accorinti.
Alessandria: Edizioni dell'Orso, 2005 (Hellenica 17), 565-84
6. ^ Cameron (2016).
7. ^ "Nonnus", Hellenistic Bibliography, Google Sites.
Notes[edit]
Bibliography[edit]
Cameron, Alan (2016), "The Poet, the Bishop, and the Harlot", Wandering Poets and Other Essays on
Late Greek Literature and Philosophy, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 81–90, ISBN 978-0-19026894-7.
Further reading[edit]
On Nonnus and his context:
D. Accorinti - P. Chuvin (edd.) (2003), Des Géants à Dionysos. Mélanges de mythologie et de poésie
grecques offerts à Francis Vian. Alessandria
L. Miguélez-Cavero (2008), Poems in Context. Greek Poetry in the Egyptian Thebaid 200-600 AD, Berlin
Robert Shorrock, Myth of Paganism: Nonnus, Dionysus and the World of Late Antiquity (Bristol, Bristol
Classical Press, 2011) (Classical Literature and Society).
Shorrock, Robert. The Challenge of Epic. Allusive Engagement in the Dionysiaca of Nonnus. Leiden:
Brill, 2001
K. Spanoudakis (ed.) (2014), Nonnus of Panopolis in Context. Poetry and Cultural Milieu in Late
Antiquity with a Section on Nonnus and the Modern World, Berlin - NY
F. Vian (2005), L'épopée posthomérique : recueil d'études, ed. D. Accorinti, Alessandria
On the metre:
J. G. Hermann, Orphica (1805), p. 690
Arthur Ludwich, Beiträge zur Kritik des Nonnus (1873), critical, grammatical and metrical
Karl Lehrs, Quaestiones epicae (1837), pp. 255–302, chiefly on metrical questions.
On the Paraphrase:
Konstantinos Spanoudakis, "Icarius Jesus Christ? Dionysiac Passion and Biblical Narrative in Nonnus'
Icarius Episode (Dion. 47, 1–264)," Wiener Studien, 120 (2007), 35–92.
Mary Whitby, "The Bible Hellenized: Nonnus' Paraphrase of St. John's Gospel and 'Eudocia's Homeric
Centos," in J.H.D. Scourfield (ed), Texts and Culture in Late Antiquity: Inheritance, Authority, and
Change (Swansea, The Classical Press of Wales, 2007), 195-232
David Hernández de la Fuente, "Nonnus' Paraphrase of the Gospel of John: Pagan Models for Christian
Literature," in Juan Pedro Monferrer-Sala (ed.), Eastern Crossroads: Essays on Medieval Christian
Legacy (Piscataway: Gorgias Press LLC, 2007) (Gorgias Eastern Christian Studies, 1), 169–190.
External links[edit]
Online text: Nonnus, Dionysiaca bks 1-14 translated by W. H. D. Rouse
R.F. Newbold summarizes his work on Dionysiaca
Greek Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Graeca with analytical indexes
Studia Nonniana Interretica: News from the world of Nonnian scholarship and an up-to-date bibliography
of Polish studies on Nonnus
Nonnus' paraphrase of the Gospel of John - Metaphrasis Evangelii Ioannei
Authority
control
WorldCat
VIAF: 34461071
LCCN: n81094864
ISNI: 0000 0001 1617 5655
GND: 118588540
SELIBR: 195978
SUDOC: 034425004
BNF: cb119178379 (data)
NLA: 35781855
NKC: jn19981001895
ICCU: IT\ICCU\CFIV\087000
BNE: XX1166172
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