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5 total works indexed
· 2016 · cited 356x
· 2014 · cited 238x
· 2015 · cited 156x
10 objects attributed to Dares Phrygius, held across European museums, libraries & archives · via Europeana
Dictys Cretensis et Daretis Phrygii de bello troiano historia ; Declamationes tres Libanij Sophistae eiusdem ferè argumenti.
De excidio Trojae historia. Ad librorum fidem recensuit et adnotationibus instruxit Andreas Dederich
Dictys Cretensis De Historia Belli Troiani Et Darses Priscvs De Eadem Troiana
~9 min read
Dares Phrygius i.e Dares of Phrygia (Ancient Greek: Δάρης), according to Homer, was a Trojan priest of Hephaestus. He was later thought to have been the author of an account of the destruction of Troy. A work in Latin, purporting to be a translation of this, and entitled Daretis Phrygii de excidio Troiae historia, was much read in the Middle Ages, and was then ascribed to Cornelius Nepos, who is made to dedicate it to Sallust; but the language better fits a period much later than the time of Nepos (probably the 5th century AD).
It is unknown whether the existing work is an abridgment of a larger Latin work or an adaptation of a Greek original. Together with the similar work of Dictys Cretensis (with which it is generally printed), the De excidio forms the chief source for the numerous medieval accounts of the Trojan legend, the so-called Matter of Troy. Dares claimed 866,000 Greeks and 676,000 Trojans were killed in this war, but archaeology has uncovered nothing that suggests a war this large was ever fought on that site.
· 2015 · cited 140x
· 2021 · cited 138x
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Daretis Phrygii... de Bello Troiano libri sex
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).