Etymologicum Genuinum

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The Etymologicum Genuinum (standard abbreviation E Gen or EtGen) is the conventional modern title given to a

Saint Methodius, Orion of Thebes, Oros of Alexandria and Theognostus the Grammarian.[1] The Etymologicum Genuinum was possibly a product of the intellectual circle around Photius. It was an important source for the subsequent Byzantine lexicographical tradition, including the Etymologicum Magnum, Etymologicum Gudianum and Etymologicum Symeonis.[2]

Modern scholarship discovered the Etymologicum Genuinum only in the nineteenth century. It is preserved in two tenth-century

Richard Reitzenstein, who was the first to edit a sample section.[3] The Etymologicum Genuinum remains for the most part unpublished except for specimen glosses.[4] Two editions are in long-term preparation, one begun by Ada Adler and continued by Klaus Alpers,[5] the other by François Lasserre and Nikolaos Livadaras.[6] The latter edition is published under the title Etymologicum Magnum Genuinum, but this designation is not widely used and is a potential source of confusion with the twelfth-century lexical compendium conventionally titled the Etymologicum Magnum.[7]

References

  1. ^ Reitzenstein (1897) 1-69; Alpers (1969) 3-24; Alpers (1989)
  2. ^ Berger (1972); Rance (2007) 201-206
  3. ^ Reitzenstein (1897) 11-44
  4. ^ Colonna (1967); Alpers (1969); Berger (1972)
  5. ^ Alpers (1969)
  6. ^ Lasserre and Livadaras (1976- )
  7. The Classical Review
    (N.S.) 28 (1978) 295-297

Bibliography

Partial editions
  • K. Alpers (1969), Bericht über Stand und Methode der Ausgabe des Etymologicum Genuinum (mit einer Ausgabe des Buchstaben Λ) ([Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab Historisk-filosofiske Meddelelser 44.3] Copenhagen).
  • G. Berger (ed.) (1972), Etymologicum genuinum et Etymologicum Symeonis (Β) ([Beiträge zur klassischen Philologie, Hft 45] Meisenheim am Glan).
  • A. Colonna (ed.) (1967), Etymologicum genuinum, littera Λ ([Quaderni Athena 4] Rome).
  • F. Lasserre and N. Livadaras (eds.) (1976- ), Etymologicum Magnum Genuinum, Symeonis Etymologicum una cum Magna Grammatica, Etymologicum Magnum Auctum, vol. 1 (Rome 1976); 2 (Athens 1992).
Studies