Hellenica Oxyrhynchia after 100 Years

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Jul 21, 2018 - Association of Canada meeting at the Université de Montréal, in May. 2008. This event had two purposes: to mark the one-‐hundredth.
Hellenica Oxyrhynchia after 100 Years ( In Memoriam I.A.F.Bruce: 1937–2007) Catherine Rubincam Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada, Volume 9, Number 3, 2009, LIII—Series III, pp. 215-217 (Article) Published by University of Toronto Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/mou.2009.0024

For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/469968

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Mouseion,  Series  III,  Vol.  9  (2009)  215-­‐217   @2009  Mouseion  

     

HELLENICA  OXYRHYNCHIA  AFTER  100  YEARS   (IN  MEMORIAM  I.A.F.BRUCE:  1937-­‐2007)  

  CATHERINE  RUBINCAM  

  2008  was  the  100th  birthday  of  the  Hellenica  Oxyrhynchia:    the  first  set  of   papyrus  fragments—the  part  now  known  as  “The  London  Fragments”—of   this   important   text,   obviously   a   major   historical   work   composed   in   the   first  half  of  the  fourth  century   BC,  was  published  in  1908,  in  Volume  5  of   the   Oxyrhynchus   Papyri.   Since   that   time   two   other   sets   of   papyrus   fragments  have  come  to  light,  the  first  in  Florence  (editio   princeps   1949),   the  second  in  Cairo  (editio  princeps  1976).    The  result  is  a  substantial,  but   nevertheless  tantalizingly  incomplete,  remainder  of  a  second  “continuator   of  Thucydides”  besides  Xenophon.   The  papers  in  this  issue  originated  in  a  special  session  of  the  Classical   Association   of   Canada   meeting   at   the   Université   de   Montréal,   in   May   2008.   This   event   had   two   purposes:   to   mark   the   one-­‐hundredth   anniversary   of   the   first   publication   of   the   London   fragments   of   the   Hellenica   Oxyrhynchia,   the   most   substantial   addition   to   the   corpus   of   Greek   historiography   to   emerge   from   the   sands   of   Egypt,   and   to   pay   tribute  to  the  enduring  value  of  the  scholarship  of  Iain  Bruce,  the  author   of  the  1967  commentary  on  the  papyrus  historian,  who  died  late  in  2007.   We   take   great   satisfaction   in   being   able   to   publish   these   papers   in   a   journal  that  from  1994  to  2002  had  its  editorial  home  in  the  Department  of   Classics   at   Memorial   University   of   Newfoundland,   where   Iain   Bruce   taught  from  1963  to  2003.    It  seems  particularly  serendipitous  that,  as  this   issue   is   going   to   press,   three   of   the   Editors   of   Mouseion   (Brad   Levett,   Kathryn   Simonsen   and   Craig   Maynes)   are   now   from   that   same   department.     There   are   only   eleven   Greek   historical   authors   from   pagan   antiquity   of   whose   works   a   substantial   portion   survives   complete:   Herodotus,   Thucydides,   Xenophon,   Polybius,   Diodorus   Siculus,   Dionysius   of   Halicarnassus,   Josephus,   Arrian,   Appian,   Dio,   and   Herodian.   Thus   the   recovery  of  a  significant  piece  of  historical  narrative  written  in  the  fourth   century   BC   represented   a   major   addition   to   this   corpus.   The   two   major   fragments   of   the   H.O.   (one   in   London,   published   1908,   the   other   in   Florence,  published  1949)  ran  to  something  over  6,000  words,  i.e.,  86%  of   the   length   of   Xenophon   Anabasis   2   (the   shortest   bookroll   among   the  

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works  of  the  five  earliest  historians  listed  above).  The  content  of  the  new   text   aroused   particular   excitement,   since   it   clearly   belonged   to   the   non-­‐ Xenophontic   tradition   concerning   early   fourth-­‐century   BC   history,   hitherto  known  only  through  Diodorus  and  therefore  depreciated.   Much   of   the   scholarship   since   1908   has   concentrated   on   two   major   questions  (neither  finally  resolved):  who  is  the  author?  and  is  his  version   of   events   to   be   given   more   credence   than   that   in   Xenophon’s   Hellenica?   On  the  issue  of  authorship  a  century  of  work  has  narrowed  the  choice  to   one  of  the  two  other  men  besides  Xenophon  attested  in  antiquity  to  have   been  “continuators  of  Thucydides”:    the  Athenian  Cratippus  and  the  Chian   Theopompus,   who   became   famous   later   as   the   historian   of   Philip   II   of   Macedon.   Richard   Billows’   paper,   “The   Authorship   of   the   “Hellenica   Oxyrhynchia”,”   reminds   us   that   the   claims   of   Theopompus   need   to   be   taken   seriously,   as   some   of   the   principal   arguments   made   against   his   authorship  can  be  shown  to  be  not  well  founded.     The  papers  by  Cinzia  Bearzot,  George  Pesely,  and  Kathryn  Simonsen  all   contribute,   indirectly,   to   the   second   of   the   thorny   questions   mentioned   above,   the   relative   credibility   of   the   narratives   of   late   fifth-­‐/early   fourth-­‐ century   BC   Greek   history   composed   by   the   papyrus   historian   and   Xenophon.   The   particular   details   discussed   here   (the   internal   politics   of   Athens   [Pesely   and   Simonsen]   and   of   Thebes   and   the   Boeotian   Federation   [Bearzot])  are  not  found  in  Xenophon’s  Hellenica,  so  that  there  is  not  the   same   imperative   here   to   choose   between   two   incompatible   historio-­‐ graphic   traditions   as   arises   in   the   case   of   the   same   event   being   narrated   very   differently   in   each.   The   arguments   made   here,   however,   generally   contribute   to   the   picture   of   the   papyrus   historian   as   someone   with   excellent,  if  not  always  unbiassed,  sources  of  information  on  this  period  of   Greek  history.     Catherine  Rubincam’s  paper  does  not  engage  directly  with  the  question   of  the  authorship  or  the  credibility  of  the  Hellenica  Oxyrhynchia,  but  sets   out   to   compare   the   papyrus   historian   with   six   other   much   better   preserved   works   of   Greek   history   (Herodotus,   Thucydides,   Xenophon’s   Anabasis   and   Hellenica,   Polybius,   and   Diodorus)   in   respect   of   one   particular   aspect   of   historiographic   technique—his   practice   in   using   numbers.   The   results   of   this   exercise   add   to   the   evidence   that   the   Hellenica  Oxyrhynchia  stands  closer  to  Thucydides  than  to  Xenophon  as  a   writer  of  history.     These   five   papers   attest   to   the   continuing   scholarly   interest   in   the   Hellenica  Oxyrhynchia.    It  seems  safe  to  say  that  this  tantalizing  fragment   of   fourth-­‐century   BC   Greek   historiography   will   continue   in   its   second   century  of  existence  to  be  a  focus  for  no  less  vigorous  debate,  on  some  old   and  some  new  issues.  

HELLENICA  OXYRHYNCHIA  AFTER  100  YEARS       I.A.F.  BRUCE:  PUBLICATIONS  

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