Quintus Caecilius Epirota (1st Century BC) was a freeman of Atticus, a grammarian, and the first person to initiate the public teaching of Virgil’s poetry.
Life edit
Atticus had employed Epirota to teach his daughter, but he became suspicious about the tutor’s attitude towards her, and dismissed him.[1] Epirota then found a patron in Gaius Cornelius Gallus, and after the latter’s fall set up his own independent teaching school.[2]
Works edit
Epirota is best known as the first person to discuss his contemporary, Virgil, in public and in Latin.[3] As Suetonius Tranquillus records, he was “the first to hold extempore discussions in Latin, and the first to begin the practice of reading Vergil and other recent poets”.[4]
See also edit
References edit
Further reading edit
- S F Bonner, Education in Ancient Rome (Berkeley 1977)
External links edit
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