- Source: Valgius Rufus
Gaius Valgius Rufus was a Roman senator, and a contemporary of Horace and Maecenas. He succeeded Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus as suffect consul upon the latter's death in 12 BC. Rufus is best known as a writer of elegies and epigrams, and his contemporaries believed him capable of great things in epic writing. The author of the panegyric on Messalla Corvinus compared Rufus as the equal of Homer.
Rufus did not confine himself to poetry. He discussed grammatical questions by correspondence, translated the rhetorical manual of his teacher Apollodorus of Pergamon, and began a treatise on medicinal plants, dedicated to Augustus. Horace addressed to him the ninth ode of the second book of his poems.
References
Further reading
Jonathan August Weichert, Poetarum Latinorum...Vitae et Carminum Reliquiae (1830)
Robert Unger, De Valgii Rufi poematis (1848)
Kronenberg, L. (2018). "Valgius Rufus and the Poet Macer in Tibullus and Ovid". Illinois Classical Studies, Vol. 43, No. 1 (Spring 2018), pp. 179–206.
Kronenberg, L. (2019). "Gallus and Valgius Rufus in Horace Odes 2.9." Classical World, 112(2), 57–69.
Wilhelm Siegmund Teuffel, History of Roman Literature (Eng. trans., 1900), 241
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Gaius Cilnius Maecenas
- Valgius Rufus
- Valgia gens
- Rufus (Roman cognomen)
- Classical Latin
- Odes (Horace)
- Augustan literature (ancient Rome)
- List of ancient Romans
- Gaius Maecenas
- Tibullus book 1
- Gaius Caninius Rebilus (consul 12 BC)