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Gaius Marius Victorinus

Gaius Marius Victorinus (also known as Victorinus Afer; fl. 4th century) was a Roman grammarian, rhetorician and Neoplatonic philosopher. Victorinus was African by birth and experienced the height of his career during the reign of Constantius II. He is also known for translating two of Aristotle's books from ancient Greek into Latin: the Categories and On Interpretation (De Interpretatione).[1] Victorinus had a religious conversion, from being a pagan to a Christian, "at an advanced old age" (c. 355).

Life edit

Birth place and early career edit

Victorinus, at some unknown point, left his home of North Africa to live permanently in Rome (hence some modern scholars have dubbed him Afer), probably for a teaching position, and had great success in his career, eventually being promoted to the lowest level of the senatorial order. That promotion probably came at the time when he received an honorific statue in the Forum of Trajan in 354. Victorinus' religious conversion to Christianity (c. 355), "at an advanced old age" according to Jerome, made a great impression on Augustine of Hippo, as recounted in Book 8[2] of the latter's Confessions. Marius Victorinus developed a theology of predestination and justification that anticipated St. Augustine, as well as themes that we find again in the anti-Pelagian treatises of Augustine.[3] His conversion is historically important in foreshadowing the gradual conversion to Christianity of the traditionally pagan intellectual class.

Jerome, who was his student of rhetoric,[4] dedicated the following words to him:

I am not unaware that Gaius Marius Victorinus, who taught me rhetoric in Rome when I was a young man, has published commentaries on the apostle; but, versed as he was in knowledge of secular literature, he was completely ignorant of the Scriptures; and no one, no matter how eloquent, can correctly discuss something he knows nothing about.[5]

Victorinus' historical milieu edit

Brought up a Christian, Emperor Julian had converted to a philosophical and mystical form of paganism; and once in power upon the providential death of Constantius II, Julian attempted to reorganize the highly decentralized pagan cults, on lines analogous to the Christian Church. The emperor, wanting to purge the schools of Christian teachers, published an edict in June 362 mandating that all state appointed professors receive approval from municipal councils (the emperor's accompanying brief indicated his express disapproval of Christians lecturing on the poems of Homer or Virgil with their religion being incongruous with the religion of Homer and Virgil).

Victorinus resigned his position as official rhetor of the city of Rome, a professor of rhetoric, not an orator. He continued writing treatises on Trinitarianism to defend the adequacy of the Nicene Creed's definition of Christ the Son being "of the same substance" (Gr. homoousios) with the Father. His writings illustrate a crucial fusion of Neo-Platonic philosophy and Christian theology, in which Victorinus effectively weaponized the former to prove and disprove arguments of the various Trinitarian debates raging during the fourth century B.C. Sister Mary Clark has noted that the fourth century was one of deep conflict between pagans and Christians, which she summarized as ‘the renaissance of pagan culture [and] the birth of Christian culture,’ at the crossroads of which stood Victorinus.[6] His importance is also seen in his large-scale use of lexical innovation (e.g. neologisms) to introduce new technical terms into Christian theological debates, especially in his translation of Greek theological and philosophical expressions (e.g. consubstantialis from ὁμοούσιος, consistentia from σύστασις, essentialitas from ὀντότης).[7]

Works edit

After finishing this series of works (begun probably in late 357 A.D.), he turned his hand to writing commentaries on the Pauline Epistles, the first in Latin. Although it seems from internal references that he wrote commentaries on Romans and the Corinthians letters as well, all that remains are works, with some lacunae, on Galatians, Ephesians, and Philippians (the comments from the first 16 verses of this latter are missing).

We are fairly well informed on his previous works, mostly texts for his teaching areas of grammar and rhetoric. His most important works from the standpoint of the history of philosophy were translations of Platonist authors (Plotinus and Porphyry at least), which are unfortunately lost. They greatly moved Augustine and set him on a road of creating a careful synthesis of Christianity and Neoplatonism that was very influential. Victorinus wrote a brief treatise De Definitionibus (On Definitions), which lists and discusses various types of definitions used by rhetoricians and philosophers; he recommends the substantial definitions preferred by the latter (prior to the late 19th century, this work was ascribed to Boethius).[8] Victorinus' manual of prosody, in four books, taken almost literally from the work of Aelius Aphthonius, still exists. His commentary on Cicero's De Inventione is very diffuse.[4] It incorporates many paraphrases to enable students to understand Cicero's text, along with philosophical explanations and digressions that reflect its Neoplatonist character.[9]

He retained his Neoplatonic philosophy after becoming Christian, and in Liber de generatione divini Verbi, he argues that God is above Being, and thus it can be said that He is not. Victorinus noted, "Since God is the cause of Being, it can be said in a certain sense, that God truly is (vere ων), but this expression merely means that Being is in God as an effect is in an eminent cause, which contains it though being superior to it."[10] As well, Victorinus' Adversus Arium books would prove influential in blending Neo-Platonism and Christianity in the Latin West.

For medieval authors, Victorinus' works became important to students of the Scholastic movement.[11] Later, they were widely exploited by Claudius of Turin at the beginning of the 9th century,[12] by Haimo of Auxerre[13] around 850 and by Atto of Vercelli around 920.[14]

Sister Mary T. Clark has identified the following works attributed to Victorinus:[15]

Theological works edit

  • Candidi Arriani ad Marium Victorinum rhetorem de generatione divina (in Latin)
  • De Generatione Divini Verbi. ad Candidum Arianum (in Latin)
  • Marii Victorini rhetoris urbis Romae ad Candidum Arrianum
  • Candidi Arriani epistola ad Marium Victorinum rhetorem (in Latin)
  • Adversus Arium (in Latin)
    • I. Liber Primus
      • IA. pars prior
      • IB. pars posterior
    • II. Liber Secundus
    • III. Liber Tertius
    • IV. Liber Quartus
  • De homoousio recipiendo
  • Hymnus Primus
  • Hymnus Secundus
  • Hymnus Tertius

Exegetical works edit

  • In epistolam Pauli ad Ephesios libri duo (in Latin)
  • In epistolam Pauli ad Galatas libri duo (in Latin)
  • In epistolam Pauli ad Philippenses liber unicus (in Latin)

Secular works edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Medieval Philosophy" (section 3), Plato.stanford.edu, Stanford University, December 2009, webpage: PS.
  2. ^ Augustine of Hippo, Confessions, VIII,II, 3-6.
  3. ^ Nello Cipriani, "Agostino lettore dei commentari paolini di Mario Vittorino", Augustinianum 38, no. 2 (1998): 413-428
  4. ^ a b Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ Jer., Ad Gal., praefatio (p. 6, lines 26-31 Raspanti): Non quo ignorem Gaium Marium Victorinum, qui Romae me puero rhetoricam docuit, edidisse commentarios in Apostolum, sed quod occupatus ille eruditione saecularium litterarum Scripturas omnino ignorauerit et nemo possit, quamuis eloquens, de eo bene disputare, quod nesciat.
  6. ^ Clark (1978, 6)
  7. ^ See further discussion in Dowson (2022).
  8. ^ Usener (1877)
  9. ^ Cf. Copeland and Sluiter (2015, 104f).
  10. ^ Gilson (1952) 32; cf. Victorinus, "Liber de generatione Verbi divini", in Jacques Paul Migne, Patrologia Latina, VIII, col. 1022.
  11. ^ Cf. Bruce (1946, 140).
  12. ^ Pascal Boulhol, Claude de Turin: Un évêque iconoclaste dans l'Occident carolingien (Paris: Institut d'e?tudes augustiniennes, 2002), 250.
  13. ^ Raymond Étaix, "Les Homéliaires carolingiens de l'école d'Auxerre", en L'École carolingienne d'Auxerre, de Muretach à Rémy (830-908), ed. Dominique Iogna-Prat et al. (París: Beauchesne, 1991), 246.
  14. ^ Boucaud, P. (2013). The Corpus Paulinum: Greek and Latin Exegesis of the Epistles in the First Millennium. Revue de l’histoire des religions, 230, 299-332. https://doi.org/10.4000/rhr.8120
  15. ^ Clark, translated by Mary T.; Victorinus, Marius (1981). Theological treatises on the Trinity (The Fathers of the Church, Volume 69). Washington: Catholic University of America Press. p. xiii. ISBN 9780813211695. Retrieved 17 December 2016.

References edit

  • Bruce, F. F. (1946), ‘Marius Victorinus and his works’, The Evangelical Quarterly 18, 132–53.
  • Clark, M.T. (1978). Fathers of the Church: Theological Treatises on the Trinity. Washington, DC.
  • Cooper, Stephen Andrew (2005). "The Life and Times of Marius Victorinus". Marius Victorinus' Commentary on Galatians : introduction, translation, and notes. Oxford early Christian studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 16–40.
  • Copeland, Rita, and Ineke Sluiter (eds) (2015), 'Marius Victorinus, Commentary on the De inventione, Before 355', in Rita Copeland, and Ineke Sluiter (eds), Medieval Grammar and Rhetoric: Language Arts and Literary Theory, AD 300 -1475 (Oxford, 2012; online edn, Oxford Academic, 3 Mar. 2015).
  • Dowson, C.J. (2022). 'The Translation of Greek Philosophical Terminology in Marius Victorinus’ Opera Theologica: A Quantitative and Qualitative Study,' Antichthon 56: 203–225.
  • Gilson, Étienne (1952). Being and some philosophers (2nd ed., corr. and enl. ed.). Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. p. 32.
  • Usener, H. (1877). Anecdoton Holderi: ein beitrag zur Geschichte Roms in ostgotischer Zeit. Leipzig: Teubner.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Victorinus, Gaius Marius". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 46.

External links edit

  • Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Latina
  • F. F. Bruce (1946). "Marius Victorinus and His Works" (PDF). The Evangelical Quarterly. 18: 132–153. Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  • Corpus Grammaticorum Latinorum: complete texts and full bibliography

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Gaius Marius Victorinus also known as Victorinus Afer fl 4th century was a Roman grammarian rhetorician and Neoplatonic philosopher Victorinus was African by birth and experienced the height of his career during the reign of Constantius II He is also known for translating two of Aristotle s books from ancient Greek into Latin the Categories and On Interpretation De Interpretatione 1 Victorinus had a religious conversion from being a pagan to a Christian at an advanced old age c 355 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Birth place and early career 1 2 Victorinus historical milieu 2 Works 2 1 Theological works 2 2 Exegetical works 2 3 Secular works 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksLife editBirth place and early career edit Victorinus at some unknown point left his home of North Africa to live permanently in Rome hence some modern scholars have dubbed him Afer probably for a teaching position and had great success in his career eventually being promoted to the lowest level of the senatorial order That promotion probably came at the time when he received an honorific statue in the Forum of Trajan in 354 Victorinus religious conversion to Christianity c 355 at an advanced old age according to Jerome made a great impression on Augustine of Hippo as recounted in Book 8 2 of the latter s Confessions Marius Victorinus developed a theology of predestination and justification that anticipated St Augustine as well as themes that we find again in the anti Pelagian treatises of Augustine 3 His conversion is historically important in foreshadowing the gradual conversion to Christianity of the traditionally pagan intellectual class Jerome who was his student of rhetoric 4 dedicated the following words to him I am not unaware that Gaius Marius Victorinus who taught me rhetoric in Rome when I was a young man has published commentaries on the apostle but versed as he was in knowledge of secular literature he was completely ignorant of the Scriptures and no one no matter how eloquent can correctly discuss something he knows nothing about 5 Victorinus historical milieu edit Brought up a Christian Emperor Julian had converted to a philosophical and mystical form of paganism and once in power upon the providential death of Constantius II Julian attempted to reorganize the highly decentralized pagan cults on lines analogous to the Christian Church The emperor wanting to purge the schools of Christian teachers published an edict in June 362 mandating that all state appointed professors receive approval from municipal councils the emperor s accompanying brief indicated his express disapproval of Christians lecturing on the poems of Homer or Virgil with their religion being incongruous with the religion of Homer and Virgil Victorinus resigned his position as official rhetor of the city of Rome a professor of rhetoric not an orator He continued writing treatises on Trinitarianism to defend the adequacy of the Nicene Creed s definition of Christ the Son being of the same substance Gr homoousios with the Father His writings illustrate a crucial fusion of Neo Platonic philosophy and Christian theology in which Victorinus effectively weaponized the former to prove and disprove arguments of the various Trinitarian debates raging during the fourth century B C Sister Mary Clark has noted that the fourth century was one of deep conflict between pagans and Christians which she summarized as the renaissance of pagan culture and the birth of Christian culture at the crossroads of which stood Victorinus 6 His importance is also seen in his large scale use of lexical innovation e g neologisms to introduce new technical terms into Christian theological debates especially in his translation of Greek theological and philosophical expressions e g consubstantialis from ὁmooysios consistentia from systasis essentialitas from ὀntoths 7 Works editAfter finishing this series of works begun probably in late 357 A D he turned his hand to writing commentaries on the Pauline Epistles the first in Latin Although it seems from internal references that he wrote commentaries on Romans and the Corinthians letters as well all that remains are works with some lacunae on Galatians Ephesians and Philippians the comments from the first 16 verses of this latter are missing We are fairly well informed on his previous works mostly texts for his teaching areas of grammar and rhetoric His most important works from the standpoint of the history of philosophy were translations of Platonist authors Plotinus and Porphyry at least which are unfortunately lost They greatly moved Augustine and set him on a road of creating a careful synthesis of Christianity and Neoplatonism that was very influential Victorinus wrote a brief treatise De Definitionibus On Definitions which lists and discusses various types of definitions used by rhetoricians and philosophers he recommends the substantial definitions preferred by the latter prior to the late 19th century this work was ascribed to Boethius 8 Victorinus manual of prosody in four books taken almost literally from the work of Aelius Aphthonius still exists His commentary on Cicero s De Inventione is very diffuse 4 It incorporates many paraphrases to enable students to understand Cicero s text along with philosophical explanations and digressions that reflect its Neoplatonist character 9 He retained his Neoplatonic philosophy after becoming Christian and in Liber de generatione divini Verbi he argues that God is above Being and thus it can be said that He is not Victorinus noted Since God is the cause of Being it can be said in a certain sense that God truly is vere wn but this expression merely means that Being is in God as an effect is in an eminent cause which contains it though being superior to it 10 As well Victorinus Adversus Arium books would prove influential in blending Neo Platonism and Christianity in the Latin West For medieval authors Victorinus works became important to students of the Scholastic movement 11 Later they were widely exploited by Claudius of Turin at the beginning of the 9th century 12 by Haimo of Auxerre 13 around 850 and by Atto of Vercelli around 920 14 Sister Mary T Clark has identified the following works attributed to Victorinus 15 Theological works edit Candidi Arriani ad Marium Victorinum rhetorem de generatione divina in Latin De Generatione Divini Verbi ad Candidum Arianum in Latin Marii Victorini rhetoris urbis Romae ad Candidum Arrianum Candidi Arriani epistola ad Marium Victorinum rhetorem in Latin Adversus Arium in Latin I Liber Primus IA pars prior IB pars posterior II Liber Secundus III Liber Tertius IV Liber Quartus De homoousio recipiendo Hymnus Primus Hymnus Secundus Hymnus TertiusExegetical works edit In epistolam Pauli ad Ephesios libri duo in Latin In epistolam Pauli ad Galatas libri duo in Latin In epistolam Pauli ad Philippenses liber unicus in Latin Secular works edit Ars grammatica Explanationes in Ciceronis Rhetorica In Ciceronis Topica commenta lost De syllogismis hypotheticis lost See also editArianism Book of the 24 Philosophers Maria gens Neo Platonism TrinitarianismNotes editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Medieval Philosophy section 3 Plato stanford edu Stanford University December 2009 webpage PS Augustine of Hippo Confessions VIII II 3 6 Nello Cipriani Agostino lettore dei commentari paolini di Mario Vittorino Augustinianum 38 no 2 1998 413 428 a b Chisholm 1911 Jer Ad Gal praefatio p 6 lines 26 31 Raspanti Non quo ignorem Gaium Marium Victorinum qui Romae me puero rhetoricam docuit edidisse commentarios in Apostolum sed quod occupatus ille eruditione saecularium litterarum Scripturas omnino ignorauerit et nemo possit quamuis eloquens de eo bene disputare quod nesciat Clark 1978 6 See further discussion in Dowson 2022 Usener 1877 Cf Copeland and Sluiter 2015 104f Gilson 1952 32 cf Victorinus Liber de generatione Verbi divini in Jacques Paul Migne Patrologia Latina VIII col 1022 Cf Bruce 1946 140 Pascal Boulhol Claude de Turin Un eveque iconoclaste dans l Occident carolingien Paris Institut d e tudes augustiniennes 2002 250 Raymond Etaix Les Homeliaires carolingiens de l ecole d Auxerre en L Ecole carolingienne d Auxerre de Muretach a Remy 830 908 ed Dominique Iogna Prat et al Paris Beauchesne 1991 246 Boucaud P 2013 The Corpus Paulinum Greek and Latin Exegesis of the Epistles in the First Millennium Revue de l histoire des religions 230 299 332 https doi org 10 4000 rhr 8120 Clark translated by Mary T Victorinus Marius 1981 Theological treatises on the Trinity The Fathers of the Church Volume 69 Washington Catholic University of America Press p xiii ISBN 9780813211695 Retrieved 17 December 2016 References editBruce F F 1946 Marius Victorinus and his works The Evangelical Quarterly 18 132 53 Clark M T 1978 Fathers of the Church Theological Treatises on the Trinity Washington DC Cooper Stephen Andrew 2005 The Life and Times of Marius Victorinus Marius Victorinus Commentary on Galatians introduction translation and notes Oxford early Christian studies Oxford Oxford University Press pp 16 40 Copeland Rita and Ineke Sluiter eds 2015 Marius Victorinus Commentary on the De inventione Before 355 in Rita Copeland and Ineke Sluiter eds Medieval Grammar and Rhetoric Language Arts and Literary Theory AD 300 1475 Oxford 2012 online edn Oxford Academic 3 Mar 2015 Dowson C J 2022 The Translation of Greek Philosophical Terminology in Marius Victorinus Opera Theologica A Quantitative and Qualitative Study Antichthon 56 203 225 Gilson Etienne 1952 Being and some philosophers 2nd ed corr and enl ed Toronto Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies p 32 Usener H 1877 Anecdoton Holderi ein beitrag zur Geschichte Roms in ostgotischer Zeit Leipzig Teubner nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Victorinus Gaius Marius Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 46 External links editOpera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Latina F F Bruce 1946 Marius Victorinus and His Works PDF The Evangelical Quarterly 18 132 153 Retrieved 2008 06 01 Corpus Grammaticorum Latinorum complete texts and full bibliography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaius Marius Victorinus amp oldid 1216310699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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