Page:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) - Volume 1.djvu/266

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248 APPULEIUS. the latter at Basel, 1.554. The Greek text of the 'lSr}piK7} Kal 'Avvi€aiK-/i was published for the first time by H. Stephanus, Geneva, 1557. Ursinus published some fragments at Antwerp, 1582. The second edition of the Greek text was edited, with the Latin version of Gelenius, by H. Stephanus, Geneva, 1592. The twenty-third book of Appian, containing the wars with Illyria, was first publish- ed by Hoeschelius, Augsburg, 1599, and some ad- ditional fragments were added by Valesius, Paris, 1634. The third edition of Appian's work was published at Amsterdam in 1670, and is a mere reprint of the edition of H. Stephanus. The work bears on the title-page the name of Alexander Tollius, but he did absolutely nothing for the work, and allowed the typographical errors of the old edition to remain. The fourth edition, and infi- nitely the best, is that of Schweighauser, Leipzig, 1785, 3 vols. 8vo. A few new fragments of Appian were published by Mai in the second volume of his Nova Collectio vet. Scrip. : they are reprinted, toge~ ther with the new fragments of Polybius, in "Po- lybii et Appiani Historiarum Excerpta Vaticana, &c.," edited by Lucht, Altona, 1830. ^Lii also discovered a letter of Appian to Fronto (p. 229 in Niebuhr's edition of Fronto). A'PPIAS, a nymph of the Appian well, which ■was situated not far from the temple of Venus Genitrix in the forum of Julius Caesar. It was surrounded by statues of n}'mphs, who were called Appiades. (Ov. Rem. Am. 659, Ars Am. i. 81, iii. 451.) Cicero (ad Fam. iii. 1) flatters Appius Pulcher by applying the name Appias to a statue of Minerva. In modem times, statues of nymphs have been found on the spot where the Appian well existed in ancient times, and they are considered to be statues of the Appiades. (Visconti, in Mus. Pio-Clem. i. p. 216, ed. Mediohn.) [L. S.] APPION. [Apion.] APPION, a jurist, contemporary with Justinian, by whom he is named in terms of high commenda- tion in the 82nd Novell, on account of the excel- lent discharge of his legal duties as the assessor of Marcellus. On his appointment, A. D. 539, as communis omnium^ or major judear, with jurisdiction next to the emperor's praefects (apxovres)^ he is said by Justinian to have acquired a high character, not only legal, but general. He was previously advocatus fsci^ an office to which was attached the title spedahilis. His name appears as consid a. d. 539. [J. T. G.] A'PPIUS CLAU'DIUS. [Claudius.] A'PPIUS SILA'NUS. [SiLANUs.] APPULEIA or APULEIA GENS, plebeian. The cognomens of this gens are Dkcianus, Pansa, and Saturninus: those who bear no cognomen are given under Appulkius. The first of the Appu- leii, who obtained the consulship, was Q. Appuleius Pansa, b. c. 300. APPULEIA VARI'LIA. [Appuleius,No.9.] APPULEIUS or APULEIUS. 1. L. Ap- pulkius, tribune of the plebs, b. c. 39 1 , impeached Camillus for ha'ing secreted part of the spoils of Veii. (Liv. v. 32; Pint. Cam. 12.) 2. L. Appuleius, one of the Roman ambassadors Bent in B.C. 156 to examine into the state of affairs between Attains and Prusias. (Polyb. xxxii. 26.) 3. Appuleius, proquaestor, to whom Cicero addresses two letters {ad Fam. xiii. 45, 46), was perhaps the proquaestor of Q, Philippus, the pro- consul, in Asia D. c. 55, APPULEIUS. 4. Appuleius, a praediator^ mentioned by Cicero in two of his letters (ad Ait. xii. 14, 17), must be distinguished from No. 3. 5. M. Appuleius, was elected augur in b.c. 45, and Cicero pleaded illness as a reason for his ab- sence from the inaugural festival, which seems to have lasted several days. (Cic. ad Att. xii. 13 — 15.) At the time of Caesar's death, B. c. 44. Appuleius seems to have been quaestor in Asia ; and when Brutus crossed over into Greece and Asia, he assisted him with money and troops. (Cic. Phil. X. 11, xiii. 16; Appian, B. C. iii. 63, iv, 75.) He was proscribed by the triumvirs, b. c. 43, and fled to Brutus, who placed him over Bithynia. After the death of Brutus, b. c. 42, he surrendered the province to Antony, and was restored by hira to his native country. (Appian, B. C. iv. 46.) 6. Appuleius, proscribed by the triumvirs in B. c. 43, escaped with his wife to Sicily. (Ap- pi.in, B. C. iv. 40.) He must be distinguished from No. 5, who was proscribed at the same time. This Appuleius is probably the same as the tribune of the plebs spoken of by Appian. (B. C. iii. 93.) 7. Sex. Appuleius Sex. f. Sex. n., consul in B. c. 29. He afterwards went to Spain as procon- sul, and obtained a triumph in B. c. 26, for the victories he had gained in that country. (Dion Cass. li. 20 ; Fast. Capitol.) 8. M. Appuleius Sex. f. Sex. n., consul in B. c. 20, may possibly be the same person as No. 5. (Dion Cass. liv. 7.) 9. Sex. Appuleius Sex. f. Sex. n., probably a son of No. 7, consul in a. d. 14, the year in " which Augustus died. (Dion Cass. Ivi. 29; Suet. Atig. 100; Tac. Ann. i. 7; Veil. Pat. ii. 123.) He is called in two passages of Dion Cassius (/. c. and liv. 30) a relation of Augustus. Tacitus (Anil. ii. 50) speaks of Appuleia Varilia, who was accused of adultery and treiison in A. D. 17, as a granddaughter of a sister of Augustus. It is, therefore, not impossible that Sex. Appuleius may have married one of the Marcellae, the two daughters of Octavia, by her first husband Marcellus ; but there is no authority for this marriage. APPULEIUS or APULEIUS (inscriptions and the oldest MSS. generally exhibit the double consonant, see Cren. Animad.Phil. P. xi. sub. init.; Oudendorp, ad Apul. Atdn. not. p. 1 ), chiefly cele- brated as the author of the Golden Ass, was born in the early part of the second century in Africa, at Mudam-a, which was originally attached to the kingdom of Syphax, was transferred to Masinissa at the close of the second Punic war, and having been eventually colonized by a detachment of Ro- man veterans, attained to considerable splendour. This town was situated far inland on the border line between Numidia and Gaetulia, and hence Appuleius styles himself Seminumida et Semigae- bdusn, declaring at the same time, that he had no more reason to feel ashamed of his hybrid origin than the elder Cyrus, who in like manner might be termed Samimx-dus ac Semipersa. (Apolog. pp. 443, 444, ed. Florid.) His father was a man of high respectability, who having filled the office of duumvir and enjoyed all the other dignities of his native town, bequeathed at his death the sum of nearly two millions of sesterces to his two sons. (Apolog. p. 442.) Appuleius received tlie first rudiments of education at Carthage, renowned at that period as a school of literature (Florida, iv. p. 20), and afterwards proceeded to Athens, where