Paola Bassino The Certamen Homeri et Hesiodi TEXTE UND KOMMENTARE Eine altertumswissenschaftliche Reihe Herausgegeben von Michael Dewar, Karla Pollmann, Ruth Scodel Band 59 De Gruyter The Certamen Homeri et Hesiodi A Commentary by Paola Bassino De Gruyter ISBN 978-3-11-058284-0 e-ISBN (PDF) 978-3-11-058477-6 e-ISBN (EPUB) 978-3-11-058348-9 ISSN 0563-3087 Library of Congress Control Number 2018957798 Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.dnb.de abrufbar. © 2019 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston Satz: Michael Peschke, Berlin Druck und Bindung: CPI books GmbH, Leck www.degruyter.com For my family Acknowledgements This book is a revised version of my Doctoral dissertation. I would like to thank the Department of Classics and Ancient History, the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, and Ustinov College at Durham University for providing me with financial support during my Ph.D. The final stages of research were carried out under the aegis of a large interdisciplinary project, directed by Prof. Barbara Graziosi at Durham University, generously funded by the Eu- ropean Research Council, and entitled Living Poets: A New Approach to Ancient Poetry: www.livingpoets.dur.ac.uk. Prof. Barbara Graziosi has supervised my work with great competence, patience, and care, for which I will always be grateful to her. My second supervisor Prof. Johannes Haubold and Prof. Paola Ceccarelli read over my work and gave immensely useful advice during my Ph.D. Prof. Richard Hunter and Dr Ivana Petrovic examined my dissertation and offered several suggestions for improvement, which greatly helped me during the revision of my work. I have benefitted from discussing my work with Giovanna Menci, who also shared with me the drafts of her editio princeps of P.Duk. inv. 665 while her work was in progress, and with the scholars who took part in the Kyklos teleconference (Harvard 2012) and the conference Conflict and Consensus in Early Hexameter Poetry (Durham 2012). I would also like to thank David Speranzi and Filippomaria Pontani, who kindly offered comments on drafts of my section on Marcus Musurus, and with their expertise helped me improve it. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110584776 -201 Table of Contents Acknowledgements ............................................................................... vii Abbreviations of editions and works of reference ................................ xi Introduction ........................................................................................... 1 Part 1: The tradition of the contest between Homer and Hesiod .......... 5 1. The origins ................................................................................. 5 Hesiod, Works and Days 648–62 .............................................. 5 [Hesiod], fr. 357 MW ................................................................ 7 2. Ancient scholarship on the Works and Days: Plutarch and Proclus .................................................................. 10 The scholium to Hesiod’s Works and Days 650–62 .................. 11 Plutarch, Table Talk 674f–675a and Dinner of the Seven Sages 153f–154a .................................................................................. 13 Proclus, Life of Homer 6 ........................................................... 20 3. Second Sophistic: Dio Chrysostom, Philostratus, and Lucian .. 23 Dio Chrysostom, Oration on Kingship 2.7–12 ......................... 24 Philostratus, Heroicus 43.7–10 ................................................. 27 Lucian, True Story 2.20–22 ....................................................... 30 4. Late antique rhetoric: Themistius and Libanius ........................ 34 Themistius, Oration 30.348c–349a ........................................... 34 Libanius, Defence of Socrates 65–6 .......................................... 37 5. The Byzantine age: John Tzetzes and Eustathius ...................... 40 John Tzetzes .............................................................................. 40 Eustathius, Commentary on Homer’s Iliad (I 6, 28–7, 1 van der Valk) ............................................................................. 45 Part 2: Textual tradition ......................................................................... 47 1. Manuscripts ............................................................................... 48 Florence, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Plut. 56.1 ............. 48 Vienna, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek, Phil. gr. 187 ........ 52 2. Papyri ......................................................................................... 60 P.Petr. I 25 (1) (P.Lond.Lit. 191) ............................................... 60 P.Mich. inv. 2754 ....................................................................... 67 P.Ath.Soc.Pap. inv. M2 ............................................................. 75 P.Freib. 1.1 b (inv. 12) ............................................................... 77 P.Duk. inv. 665 (olim P.Duk. inv. MF75 6) ............................... 80 x Table of Contents Part 3: Text and translation ................................................................... 83 Part 4: Commentary .............................................................................. 115 Introductory remarks ...................................................................... 115 1. Introduction (1–2); Hesiod’s birthplace (2–6) ........................... 117 2. Homer’s birthplace (7–17) ........................................................ 118 3. Homer’s parents (18–27); Homer’s name (27–32); Hadrian (32–43) ........................................................................ 123 4. Homer’s and Hesiod’s chronology and genealogy (44–53) ...... 131 5. Homer’s oracle (54–62) ............................................................. 136 6. Introduction to the contest (62–74) ........................................... 139 7. The ‘riddles of the superlative’ (74–89) .................................... 141 8. The reaction to Homer’s performance (90–4); the ‘insoluble challenge’ (94–101) ............................................. 144 9. The ‘ambiguous propositions’ (102–37) .................................... 147 10. The ‘numerical problem’ (138–48) .......................................... 156 11. The ‘philosophical questions’ (148–75) .................................. 158 12. The ‘finest passages’ (176–204) .............................................. 164 13. The verdict (205–14); Hesiod’s oracle (215–23) ..................... 167 14. Hesiod’s death (224–53) .......................................................... 170 15. Homer’s Thebaid and Epigoni (254–60); the Midas epigram and the silver cup (260–74) ....................................................... 176 16. Iliad and Odyssey (275–6); Homer in Athens (276–85) .......... 181 17. Homer in Corinth (286–7); Homer in Argos (287–314) ......... 183 18. Homer in Delos (315–21); Homer’s death (321–38) .............. 188 Figures ................................................................................................... 195 Bibliography ......................................................................................... 199 General index ........................................................................................ 215 Index of Greek words ............................................................................ 220 Index of passages .................................................................................. 221