Parallel Lives
The Parallel Lives (
Motivation
Parallel Lives was Plutarch's second set of biographical works, following the Lives of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Vitellius. Of these, only the Lives of Galba and Otho survive.[2][3]
As he explains in the first paragraph of his Life of Alexander, Plutarch was not concerned with writing histories, but with exploring the influence of character, good or bad, on the lives and destinies of famous men. He wished to prove that the more distant past of Greece could show its men of action and achievement as well as the more recent past of Rome.[4] His interest was primarily ethical, although the Lives has significant historical value as well. The Lives was published by Plutarch late in his life after his return to Chaeronea and, if one may judge from the long lists of authorities given, it must have taken many years to compile.[5]
Contents
The chief manuscripts of the Lives date from the 10th and 11th centuries, and the first printed edition appeared in
Two of the lives, those of Epaminondas and Scipio Africanus or Scipio Aemilianus, are lost,[7] and many of the remaining lives are truncated, contain obvious lacunae and/or have been tampered with by later writers.[citation needed]
Plutarch's Life of Alexander is one of the few surviving
Biographies
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Plutarch structured his Lives by pairing lives of famous Greeks with those of famous Romans. After each pair of lives he generally writes out a comparison of the preceding biographies.[a] The table below gives the list of the biographies. Its order follows the one found in the Lamprias Catalogue, the list of Plutarch's works made by his hypothetical son Lamprias.[8] The table also features links to several English translations of Plutarch's Lives available online. In addition to these 48 Parallel Lives, Plutarch wrote an additional four unpaired biographies that although not considered part of Parallel Lives, can be included in the term Plutarch's Lives. The subjects of these four biographies are Artaxerxes, Aratus, Galba, and Otho.[i]
All dates are BC.
№ | Greek | Roman | Comparison | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Life | Years | Translations | Life | Years | Translations | ||
1 | Theseus | mythic | D G L P LV | Romulus | fl. 771–717 | D G L | D G L |
2 | Lycurgus | fl. c. 820 BC | (D) G L | Numa Pompilius | 715–673 | D G L | D G L |
3 | Themistocles | c. 524–459 | D G L P | Camillus | 446–365 | (D) G L | n/a |
4 | Solon | 638–558 | D G L P | Poplicola | d. 503 | D G L | D G L |
5 | Pericles | c. 495–429 | (D) G L P | Fabius Maximus | 275–203 | D G L | D G L |
6 | Alcibiades | 450–404 | (D) G L P | Coriolanus
|
fl. 475 | (D) G L P | D G L |
7 | Epaminondas | d. 362 | Lost | Scipio Africanus or Aemilianus[9] | 236–183 or 185–129 | Lost | |
8 | Phocion | c. 402 – c. 318 | D G L P | Cato the Younger | 95–46 | (D) G L | n/a |
9–10 | Agis | fl. 245 | D L | Tiberius Gracchus | c. 164–133 | D L | D L |
Cleomenes | d. 219 | D L | Gaius Gracchus | 154–121 | D L | ||
11 | Timoleon | c. 411–337 | (D) G L | Aemilius Paullus | c. 229–160 | (D) G L | D G L |
12 | Eumenes | c. 362–316 | D G L | Sertorius | c. 123–72 | D G L | D G L |
13 | Aristides | 530–468 | D G L P | Cato the Elder | 234–149 | D G L | G L |
14 | Pelopidas | d. 364 | D G L | Marcellus | 268–208 | D G L | D G L |
15 | Lysander | d. 395 | D G L P | Sulla | 138–78 | (D) G L | D G L |
16 | Pyrrhus | 319/318–272 | (D) G L | Marius | 157–86 | (D) G L | n/a |
17 | Philopoemen | 253–183 | D G L | Titus Flamininus | c. 229–174 | D G L | D G L |
18 | Nicias | 470–413 | D G L P | Crassus | c. 115–53 | (D) G L | D G L |
19 | Cimon | 510–450 | D G L P | Lucullus | 118–57/56 | (D) G L | D G L |
20 | Dion | 408–354 | (D) L | Brutus | 85–42 | (D) L P | D L |
21 | Agesilaus | c. 444 – c. 360 | (D) G L | Pompey | 106–48 | (D) G L | D G L |
22 | Alexander | 356–323 | (D) G L P | Julius Caesar (detailed article) | 100–44 | (D) G L P1 P2[1] | n/a |
23 | Demosthenes | 384–322 | D L | Cicero | 106–43 | (D) L | D L |
25[10] | Demetrius | d. 283 | (D) L | Mark Antony | 83–30 | (D) L P | D L |
- Notes
The two-volume edition of Dryden's translation contains the following biographies: Volume 1. Theseus, Romulus, Lycurgus, Numa, Solon, Publicola, Themistocles, Camillus, Pericles, Fabius, Alcibiades, Coriolanus, Timoleon, Aemilius Paulus, Pelopidas, Marcellus, Aristides, Cato the Elder, Philopoemen, Flamininus, Pyrrhus, Marius, Lysander, Sulla, Cimon, Lucullus, Nicias, Crassus. Volume 2. Sertorius, Eumenes, Agesilaus, Pompey, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Phocion, Cato the Younger, Agis, Cleomenes, Tiberius Gracchus and Gaius Gracchus, Demosthenes, Cicero, Demetrius, Mark Antony, Dion, Marcus Brutus, Aratus, Artaxerxes II, Galba, Otho.
- Caesar Augustus, in North's translation, but not from Plutarch's Parallel Lives: P
- ^ Though the majority of the Parallel Lives were written with the Greek hero (or heroes) placed in the first position followed by the Roman hero, there are three sets of Lives where this order is reversed: Aemilius Paulus/Timoleon, Coriolanus/Alcibiades and Sertorius/Eumenes.
- ^ At the time of composing this table there appears some confusion in the internal linking of the Perseus project webpages, responsible for this split in two references.
Reception
Of the biographies in Parallel Lives, that of Antonius has been cited by multiple scholars as one of the masterpieces of the series.[11][12][13] In 1895, George Wyndham wrote that the first rank consists of the biographies of Themistocles, Alcibiades, Marius, Cato the Elder, Alexander, Demetrius, Antonius, and Pompey.[14] Peter D'Epiro praised Plutarch's depiction of Alcibiades as "a masterpiece of characterization."[15] Academic Philip A. Stadter singled out Pompey and Caesar as the greatest figures in the Roman biographies.[16] In a review of the 1859 A. H. Clough translation, Plutarch’s depictions of Antony, Coriolanus, Alcibiades, and the Cato the Elder were praised as deeply drawn. The reviewer found the sayings of Themistocles to be “snowy and splendid”, those of Phocion to be “curt and sharp”, and those of Cato “grave and shrewdly humorous”.[17] Carl Rollyson lauded the biography of Caesar as proof Plutarch is “loaded with perception” and stated that no biographer “has surpassed him in summing up the essence of a life – perhaps because no modern biographer has believed so intensely as Plutarch did in ‘the soul of men’.[18]
John Langhorne, D.D. and William Langhorne, A.M.'s English translation, noted that Amiot, Abbe of Bellozane, published a French translation of the work during the reign of Henry II in the year 1558; and from that work it was translated into English, in the time of Elizabeth I. No other translation appeared until that of John Dryden.[19]
Footnotes
- ^ Except for Agis IV and Cleomenes III of Sparta, and Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus, who a grouped together as a set of four.
- ^ Key to abbreviations:
D: Dryden is famous for having lent his name as editor-in-chief to the first complete English translation of Plutarch's Lives. This 17th-century translation is available at The MIT Internet Classics Archive. These translations are linked with D in the table below; those marked (D) in parentheses are incomplete in the HTML version.
G: Project Gutenberg contains several versions of 19th-century translations of these Lives, see here and here. The full text version (TXT) of the revision of Dryden's translation by the English poet Arthur Hugh Clough is available (via download) Gutenberg here. These translations are linked with G in the table below.
L: LacusCurtius has the translation by Bernadotte Perrin of part of the Moralia and all the Lives, published in the Loeb Classical Library 1914–1926; see here. These translations are linked with L in the table below.
LV: LibriVox has many free public-domain audiobooks of the Parallel Lives, Volumes I, II, and III. These translations are linked with LV in the table below.
P: The
Shakespeare based plays on: North's translations of most of the Lives, based on the French version by Jacques Amyot, preceded Dryden's translation mentioned above. These translations are linked with P in the table.
References
- ^ James Romm (ed.), Plutarch: Lives that Made Greek History, Hackett Publishing, 2012, p. vi.
- ^ Kimball, Roger. "Plutarch & the issue of character". The New Criterion Online. Archived from the original on 2006-11-16. Retrieved 2006-12-11.
- ^ McCutchen, Wilmot H. "Plutarch - His Life and Legacy". Archived from the original on 2006-12-05. Retrieved 2006-12-10.
- ^ Life of Alexander 1.2
- ^ a b c Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). Encyclopedia Americana. .
- ^ Pade, Marianne. The Reception of Plutarch's Lives in Fifteenth-Century Italy Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2007. http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/R/bo14317199.html Archived 2017-12-01 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Translator's Introduction". The Parallel Lives (Vol. I ed.). Loeb Classical Library Edition. 1914.
- ^ Plutarch's Moralia, XV, edited and translated by F. H. Sandbach, Loeb Classical Library, 1987, pp. 3–11.
- ^ Kevin Herbert, "The Identity of Plutarch's Lost Scipio Archived 2019-07-13 at the Wayback Machine", in The American Journal of Philology, Vol. 78, No. 1 (1957), pp. 83–88. Plutarch only gives the name "Scipio". Herbert favours Scipio Aemilianus as the topic of the lost Life; he notes that Scipio Africanus was the subject of another (lost) biography by Plutarch.
- ^ Eran Almagor, "The Aratus and the Artaxerxes", in Mark Beck (editor), A Companion to Plutarch, pp. 278, 279. The n°24 in the Lamprias catalogue was a pair of biographies of Aratus and Artaxerxes, but they did not belong to the Parallel Lives.
- ^ Shakespeare's Principal Plays. Century Company. 1922.
- ISBN 1134913192.
- ^ Plutarch (1906). Plutarch's Lives of Coriolanus, Caesar, Brutus, and Antonius: In North's Translation. Translated by North, Thomas. Clarendon Press.
- ^ Plutarch (1895). Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, Volume 1. Translated by North, Thomas. D. Nutt.
- ISBN 978-0307388438.
- ISBN 978-9004283725.
- ^ Quarterly Review. J. Murray. 1861. pp. 246–250. Note that this 1861 review mistakenly identifies the author as "A.W. Clough" (p.239) but this is a typo; the author is A.H. Clough
- ISBN 9780595341818.
- ^ Plutarch's Lives. Edward and Charles Dilly. 1770.