Tomeki

Greek and Latin Letters in Late Antiquity

Greek and Latin Letters in Late Antiquity

The Christianisation of a Literary Form

By Pauline Allen,Bronwen Neil

0 (0 Ratings)
0 Want to read0 Currently reading0 Have read

Publish Date

2020

Publisher

University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations

Language

eng

Pages

224

Description:

"Late Antiquity - by which we mean the period from 300 to 600 CE - has rightly been called the golden age of epistolography, one which has few equivalents, even taking Cicero, Pliny the Younger, Fronto or Cyprian into account. Mullett notes that fourth- and fifth-century Greek letters make up the majority of Byzantine letters. O'Brien points out that in the third century 177 letters survive from eleven writers in Latin, while from the fourth century the works of twenty-one epistolographers have come down to us in 395 letters, and 933 from forty-one writers from the fifth century, while after the sixth century the number of letters falls off sharply.3 This exponential increase in epistolary activity is all the more surprising given that in the Classical period only eminent and politically active people could afford a private postal service, and the relatively high mortality rate of ancient letters"--