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Discourses 12-30 - Dio Chrysostom, and Cohoon, J. W. (Translated by)
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The man with the golden mouth. Dio Cocceianus Chrysostomus (AD ca. 40-ca. 120), of Prusa in Bithynia, Asia Minor, inherited with his brothers large properties and debts from his generous father Pasicrates. He became a skilled rhetorician hostile to philosophers. But in the course of his travels he went to Rome in Vespasian's reign (69-79) and was converted to Stoicism. Strongly critical of the emperor Domitian (81-96) he was about 82 banned by him from Italy and Bithynia and wandered in poverty, especially in lands ...

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Discourses 12-30 1939, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass

ISBN-13: 9780674993747

Hardcover