:''For the Byzantine officer, see also
Eutropius (Byzantine official) (396-397). For the Saint, see
Saint Eutropius.''
'Eutropius' was an
Ancient Roman Pagan historian who flourished in the latter half of the 4th century. He held the office of secretary (''magister memoriae'') at
Constantinople, accompanied the Emperor
Julian (
361 -
363) on his expedition against the
Persians (363), and was alive during the reign of
Valens (364-378), to whom he dedicates his ''Breviarium historiae Romanae'' and where his history ends. Another historian,
Georgius Codinus, in ''De Originibus Constantinopolitanis'' notes that Eutropius had been a secretary to
Constantine I, but it is not clear if he is referring of the same Eutropius.
The ''Breviarium historiae Romanae'' is a complete compendium, in ten books, of Roman history from the foundation of the city to the accession of Valens. It was compiled with considerable care from the best accessible authorities, and is written generally with impartiality, and in a clear and simple style. Although the Latin in some instances differs from that of the purest models, the work was for a long time a favorite elementary school-book. Its independent value is small, but it sometimes fills a gap left by the more authoritative records. The ''Breviarium'' was enlarged and continued down to the time of
Justinian by
Paulus Diaconus; the work of the latter was in turn enlarged by
Landolfus Sagax (c. 1000), and taken down to the time of the emperor
Leo the Armenian (813-820) in the ''Historia Miscella''.
Of the Greek translations by
Capito Lycius and
Paeanius, the version of the latter is extant in an almost complete state. The best edition of Eutropius is by H. Droysen (1879), containing the Greek version and the enlarged editions of Paulus Diaconus and Landolfus. There are numerous English editions and translations.
External links
★ Eutropius, ''
Abridgement of Roman History'', John Selby Watson (translator), (1853) (from
Forum Romanum; both Latin text and English translation)
★ Eutropius, ''
Abridgement of Roman History'', John Selby Watson (translator), (1886) (from
The Tertullian Project; only English translation)
★ Eutropius, ''
Eutropii Breviarium'' (from
The Latin Library; only Latin text)
★ Eutropius, ''
Eutropi Breviarium ab urbe condita cum versionibus graecis et Pauli Landolfique additamentis'', Ed. Droysen, Hans. (from
Monumenta Germaniae Historica Digital; Image files include the preface, Greek and Latin text, critical apparatus, appendices and indices
References
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