CHARITON
'Chariton' of Aphrodisias (), a small city in Caria, was the author of an ancient Greek novel entitled ''Chaereas and Callirhoe''. Recent evidence of fragments of the text on papyri suggests that the novel may have been written in the mid 1st century AD, making it the oldest surviving complete ancient prose romance and the only one to make use of apparent historiographical features for background verisimilitude and structure, in conjunction with elements of Greek mythology, as Callirhoë is frequently compared to Ariadne and Chaereas to numerous heroes, both implicitly and explicitly; Plutarch's Ariadne in Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe, Edmund P. Cueva, , , American Journal of Philology, 1996 As the fiction takes place in the past, and historical figures interact with the plot, ''Chaereas and Callirhoe'' may be understood as the first historical novel; it was later imitated by Xenophon of Ephesus and Heliodorus of Emesa, among others.
Nothing is securely known of Chariton beyond what he states in his novel, which introduces him as "Chariton of Aphrodisias, secretary of the ''rhetor'' Athenagoras". The name "Chariton", which means "man of graces", has been considered a pseudonym chosen to suit the romantic content of his writing, but both "Chariton" and "Athenagoras" occur as names on inscriptions from Aphrodisias. The Novel in the Ancient World, B. P. Reardon, , , Brill Academic Publishers, 2003,
The latest possible date at which Chariton could have written is attested in papyri that contain fragments of his work, which can be dated by palaeography to about AD 200. Analysis of Chariton's language has produced a range of proposals for dating. In the nineteenth century, before the discovery of the papyri, a date as late as the 6th century AD was proposed on stylistic grounds, while A. D. Papanikolaou argued in 1979 for the second half of the 1st century BC. One recent study of Chariton's vocabulary favours a date in the late 1st century or early 2nd century AD.[1]
Edmund Cueva has shown that Chariton also depended on Plutarch's ''vita'' of Theseus for thematic material, or perhaps directly on one of Plutarch's sources, an obscure mythographer, Paion of Amathus. If the source is Plutarch, then a date after the first quarter of the second century is indicated. There is a dismissive reference, however, to a work called ''Callirhoe'' in the ''Satires'' of Persius, who died in AD 62; if this is Chariton's novel, then a relatively early date would be indicated. Regardless, Chariton is generally believed to have written before the other Greek novelists whose works survive,[2] making either his work or Petronius' ''Satyrica'' the earliest extant European novel.
Chariton's novel exists in only one (unreliable) manuscript, from the thirteenth century. It was not published until the eighteenth century, and remained dismissed until the twentieth. It nevertheless gives insight into the development of ancient prose fiction.
The story, which is set against a historical background of ''ca'' 400 BC. In Syracuse, Chaereas falls madly in love with the supernally beautiful Callirhoe,[3] and they are married, but when he suspects her faithlessness, he kicks her so hard that she falls over as if dead.[4] There is a funeral, and she is shut up in a tomb, but then it turns out she was only in a coma, and wakes up in time to scare the pirates who have opened the tomb to rob it; they recover quickly and take her[5] to sell as a slave in Miletus, where her new master, Dionysius, falls in love with her and marries her, she being afraid to mention that she is already married (and pregnant by Chaereas). As a result, Dionysius believes Callirhoe's son to be his own.
Meanwhile Chaereas has heard she is alive, and has gone looking for her, but is himself captured and enslaved, and yet they both come to the attention of Artaxerxes, the Great King of Persia, who must decide who is her rightful husband, but is thinking about acquiring her for himself. When war erupts, Chaereas successfully storms the Persian stronghold of Tyre on behalf of the Egyptian rebels, and then wins a naval victory against the Persians, after which the lovers are finally reunited. Callirhoe writes to Dionysius, telling him to bring up her son and send him to Syracuse when he grows up. Chaereas and Callirhoe return in triumph to Syracuse, where Callirhoe offers prayers to Aphrodite, who has guided the events of the narrative.
Several characters from ''Chaereas and Callirhoe'' can be identified with figures from history, although their portrayal is not always historically accurate.[6]Reardon (1996), pp. 325–327. Hermocrates was a real Syracusan general, and did have a daughter (her name is unknown), who married Dionysius I of Syracuse. This Dionysius was tyrant of Syracuse from 405 to 367 BC and not a resident of Miletus. However, Callirhoe's expectation that her son will return to Syracuse after being brought up as Dionysius' own has been connected to the fact that the historical Dionysius I was succeeded in Syracuse by his son, Dionysius II. The historical daughter of Hermocrates died after a violent attack by soldiers; that Callirhoe merely ''appears'' to be dead after being kicked by Chaereas has been seen as a deliberate change allowing Chariton "to resurrect her for adventures abroad".[7]
Chariton's Artaxerxes represents Artaxerxes II of Persia. Since Hermocrates died in 407 BC and Artaxerxes did not come to the throne until 404 BC, Chariton is anachronistic in having Hermocrates alive during Artaxerxes' reign. The hero Chaereas is not a historical figure, although his name recalls Chabrias, an Athenian general who fought in an Egyptian revolt against Persia in about 360 BC. His capture of Tyre may be based on that by Alexander the Great in 332 BC.
Despite the liberties Chariton took with historical fact, he clearly aimed to place his story in a period well before his own lifetime. Tomas Hägg has argued that this choice of setting makes the work an important forerunner of the modern historical novel.[8]
There are echos of Herodotus and Thucydides and other historical and biographical writers from the ancient world. The novel is told in a linear manner; after a brief first person introduction by Chariton, the narrator uses the third person. Much of the novel is told in direct speech, revealing the importance of oratory and rhetorical display (as in the presentation before the King of Persia) and perhaps as well the influence of New Comedy. Dramatic monologues are also used to reveal the conflicted states of the characters' emotions and fears (what should Callirhoe do, given that she is pregnant and alone?). The novel also has some amusing insights into ancient culture (for instance, the pirates decide to sell Callirhoe in Miletus rather than in the equally wealthy Athens, because they considered Athenians to be litigious busybodies who would ask too many questions).
The discovery of five separate fragments of Chariton's novel at Oxyrhyncus and Karanis in Egypt attest to the popularity of ''Chaereas and Callirhoe''. One fragment, carefully written on expensive parchment, suggests that some, at least, of Chariton's public were members of local elites.[9]
1. Aspects of the Vocabulary of Chariton of Aphrodisias, Consuelo Ruiz-Montero, , , Classical Quarterly, 1991
2. The chronology of the earlier Greek novels since B.E. Perry: revisions and precisions, Ewen Bowie, , , Ancient Narrative, 2002
3. She is the daughter of Hermocrates, a hero of the Peloponnesian War and the most important political figure of Syracuse, thus setting the narrative in time and social milieu. Her beauty (''kallos'') overawes crowds, like an earthly counterpart of Aphrodite's, as noted by Defining the Web of Power in Asia Minor: The Novelist Chariton and His City Aphrodisias, Douglas R. Edwards, , , Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1994
4. The seeming-dead Callirhoë seems like Ariadne asleep on the shore at Naxos, Chariton says (1.6.2), and her second husband will be named for Dionysus.
5. A parallel is in some versions of the myth of abandoned Ariadne.
6. Chariton and His Romance from a Literary-Historical Point of View, B. E. Perry, , , American Journal of Philology, 1930
7. Chariton: Callirhoe, G. P. Goold, , , Harvard University Press, 1995,
8. ''Callirhoe'' and ''Parthenope'': The Beginnings of the Historical Novel, Tomas Hägg, , , Classical Antiquity, 1987 Reprinted in Oxford Readings in the Greek Novel, Simon Swain (ed.), , , Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-872189-7 (hbk.), ISBN 0-19-872188-9 (pbk.)
9. Edwards (1994), p. 700.
Other ancient Greek novelists:
★ Xenophon of Ephesus - The Ephesian Tale
★ Achilles Tatius - Leucippe and Clitophon
★ Heliodorus of Emesa - The Aethiopica
★ Longus - Daphnis and Chloe
★ The first printed edition. With Latin translation by Johann Jacob Reiske.
★ Erotici Scriptores, , Wilhelm Adrian, Hirschig, Editore Ambrosio Firmin Didot, 1856, With a reprint of Reiske's Latin translation.
★ Erotici Scriptores Graeci, , Rudolf, Hercher, Leipzig, 1858-1859,
★ Charitonis Aphrodisiensis De Chaerea et Callirhoe Amatoriarum Narrationum libri octo, , Warren E., Blake, Clarendon Press, 1938,
★ Chariton: Le Roman de Chairéas et Callirhoé, , Georges, Molinié, Belles Lettres, 1989, With French translation.
★ Chariton: Callirhoe, , G. P., Goold, Harvard University Press, 1995, With English translation.
★ De Callirhoe Narrationes Amatoriae Chariton Aphrodisiensis, , Bryan P., Reardon, K.G. Saur, 2004,
★ The Loves of Chǣreas and Callirrhoe, Anonymous, , , printed for T. Becket and P. A. De Hondt, 1764,
★ Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe, , Warren E., Blake, University of Michigan Press, 1939,
★ Collected Ancient Greek Novels, , Bryan P., Reardon, University of California Press, 1989,
★ Chariton: Callirhoe, , G. P., Goold, Harvard University Press, 1995, With Greek text.
★ ''Callirhoe'' and ''Parthenope'': The Beginnings of the Historical Novel, , Tomas, Hägg, Classical Antiquity, 1987 Reprinted in Oxford Readings in the Greek Novel, Simon Swain (ed.), , , Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-872189-7 (hbk.), ISBN 0-19-872188-9 (pbk.)
★ Helms, J., (1966) ''Character Portrayal in Chariton'' (Paris/The Hague:Mouton)
★ Chariton and His Romance from a Literary-Historical Point of View, , B. E., Perry, American Journal of Philology, 1930
★ Theme, Structure and Narrative in Chariton, , B. P., Reardon, Yale Classical Studies, 1982 Reprinted in Oxford Readings in the Greek Novel, Simon Swain (ed.), , , Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-872189-7 (hbk.), ISBN 0-19-872188-9 (pbk.)
★ Chariton, , Gareth L., Schmeling, Twayne Publishers, 1974,
★ Synopsis of the novel
----
| Contents |
| Chariton's date |
| ''Chaereas and Callirhoe'' |
| Plot outline |
| Historical basis |
| Style and influences |
| Notes |
| See also |
| Further reading |
| Editions |
| English translations |
| Studies |
| External links |
Chariton's date
Nothing is securely known of Chariton beyond what he states in his novel, which introduces him as "Chariton of Aphrodisias, secretary of the ''rhetor'' Athenagoras". The name "Chariton", which means "man of graces", has been considered a pseudonym chosen to suit the romantic content of his writing, but both "Chariton" and "Athenagoras" occur as names on inscriptions from Aphrodisias. The Novel in the Ancient World, B. P. Reardon, , , Brill Academic Publishers, 2003,
The latest possible date at which Chariton could have written is attested in papyri that contain fragments of his work, which can be dated by palaeography to about AD 200. Analysis of Chariton's language has produced a range of proposals for dating. In the nineteenth century, before the discovery of the papyri, a date as late as the 6th century AD was proposed on stylistic grounds, while A. D. Papanikolaou argued in 1979 for the second half of the 1st century BC. One recent study of Chariton's vocabulary favours a date in the late 1st century or early 2nd century AD.[1]
Edmund Cueva has shown that Chariton also depended on Plutarch's ''vita'' of Theseus for thematic material, or perhaps directly on one of Plutarch's sources, an obscure mythographer, Paion of Amathus. If the source is Plutarch, then a date after the first quarter of the second century is indicated. There is a dismissive reference, however, to a work called ''Callirhoe'' in the ''Satires'' of Persius, who died in AD 62; if this is Chariton's novel, then a relatively early date would be indicated. Regardless, Chariton is generally believed to have written before the other Greek novelists whose works survive,[2] making either his work or Petronius' ''Satyrica'' the earliest extant European novel.
''Chaereas and Callirhoe''
Chariton's novel exists in only one (unreliable) manuscript, from the thirteenth century. It was not published until the eighteenth century, and remained dismissed until the twentieth. It nevertheless gives insight into the development of ancient prose fiction.
Plot outline
The story, which is set against a historical background of ''ca'' 400 BC. In Syracuse, Chaereas falls madly in love with the supernally beautiful Callirhoe,[3] and they are married, but when he suspects her faithlessness, he kicks her so hard that she falls over as if dead.[4] There is a funeral, and she is shut up in a tomb, but then it turns out she was only in a coma, and wakes up in time to scare the pirates who have opened the tomb to rob it; they recover quickly and take her[5] to sell as a slave in Miletus, where her new master, Dionysius, falls in love with her and marries her, she being afraid to mention that she is already married (and pregnant by Chaereas). As a result, Dionysius believes Callirhoe's son to be his own.
Meanwhile Chaereas has heard she is alive, and has gone looking for her, but is himself captured and enslaved, and yet they both come to the attention of Artaxerxes, the Great King of Persia, who must decide who is her rightful husband, but is thinking about acquiring her for himself. When war erupts, Chaereas successfully storms the Persian stronghold of Tyre on behalf of the Egyptian rebels, and then wins a naval victory against the Persians, after which the lovers are finally reunited. Callirhoe writes to Dionysius, telling him to bring up her son and send him to Syracuse when he grows up. Chaereas and Callirhoe return in triumph to Syracuse, where Callirhoe offers prayers to Aphrodite, who has guided the events of the narrative.
Historical basis
Several characters from ''Chaereas and Callirhoe'' can be identified with figures from history, although their portrayal is not always historically accurate.[6]Reardon (1996), pp. 325–327. Hermocrates was a real Syracusan general, and did have a daughter (her name is unknown), who married Dionysius I of Syracuse. This Dionysius was tyrant of Syracuse from 405 to 367 BC and not a resident of Miletus. However, Callirhoe's expectation that her son will return to Syracuse after being brought up as Dionysius' own has been connected to the fact that the historical Dionysius I was succeeded in Syracuse by his son, Dionysius II. The historical daughter of Hermocrates died after a violent attack by soldiers; that Callirhoe merely ''appears'' to be dead after being kicked by Chaereas has been seen as a deliberate change allowing Chariton "to resurrect her for adventures abroad".[7]
Chariton's Artaxerxes represents Artaxerxes II of Persia. Since Hermocrates died in 407 BC and Artaxerxes did not come to the throne until 404 BC, Chariton is anachronistic in having Hermocrates alive during Artaxerxes' reign. The hero Chaereas is not a historical figure, although his name recalls Chabrias, an Athenian general who fought in an Egyptian revolt against Persia in about 360 BC. His capture of Tyre may be based on that by Alexander the Great in 332 BC.
Despite the liberties Chariton took with historical fact, he clearly aimed to place his story in a period well before his own lifetime. Tomas Hägg has argued that this choice of setting makes the work an important forerunner of the modern historical novel.[8]
Style and influences
There are echos of Herodotus and Thucydides and other historical and biographical writers from the ancient world. The novel is told in a linear manner; after a brief first person introduction by Chariton, the narrator uses the third person. Much of the novel is told in direct speech, revealing the importance of oratory and rhetorical display (as in the presentation before the King of Persia) and perhaps as well the influence of New Comedy. Dramatic monologues are also used to reveal the conflicted states of the characters' emotions and fears (what should Callirhoe do, given that she is pregnant and alone?). The novel also has some amusing insights into ancient culture (for instance, the pirates decide to sell Callirhoe in Miletus rather than in the equally wealthy Athens, because they considered Athenians to be litigious busybodies who would ask too many questions).
The discovery of five separate fragments of Chariton's novel at Oxyrhyncus and Karanis in Egypt attest to the popularity of ''Chaereas and Callirhoe''. One fragment, carefully written on expensive parchment, suggests that some, at least, of Chariton's public were members of local elites.[9]
Notes
1. Aspects of the Vocabulary of Chariton of Aphrodisias, Consuelo Ruiz-Montero, , , Classical Quarterly, 1991
2. The chronology of the earlier Greek novels since B.E. Perry: revisions and precisions, Ewen Bowie, , , Ancient Narrative, 2002
3. She is the daughter of Hermocrates, a hero of the Peloponnesian War and the most important political figure of Syracuse, thus setting the narrative in time and social milieu. Her beauty (''kallos'') overawes crowds, like an earthly counterpart of Aphrodite's, as noted by Defining the Web of Power in Asia Minor: The Novelist Chariton and His City Aphrodisias, Douglas R. Edwards, , , Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1994
4. The seeming-dead Callirhoë seems like Ariadne asleep on the shore at Naxos, Chariton says (1.6.2), and her second husband will be named for Dionysus.
5. A parallel is in some versions of the myth of abandoned Ariadne.
6. Chariton and His Romance from a Literary-Historical Point of View, B. E. Perry, , , American Journal of Philology, 1930
7. Chariton: Callirhoe, G. P. Goold, , , Harvard University Press, 1995,
8. ''Callirhoe'' and ''Parthenope'': The Beginnings of the Historical Novel, Tomas Hägg, , , Classical Antiquity, 1987 Reprinted in Oxford Readings in the Greek Novel, Simon Swain (ed.), , , Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-872189-7 (hbk.), ISBN 0-19-872188-9 (pbk.)
9. Edwards (1994), p. 700.
See also
Other ancient Greek novelists:
★ Xenophon of Ephesus - The Ephesian Tale
★ Achilles Tatius - Leucippe and Clitophon
★ Heliodorus of Emesa - The Aethiopica
★ Longus - Daphnis and Chloe
Further reading
Editions
★ The first printed edition. With Latin translation by Johann Jacob Reiske.
★ Erotici Scriptores, , Wilhelm Adrian, Hirschig, Editore Ambrosio Firmin Didot, 1856, With a reprint of Reiske's Latin translation.
★ Erotici Scriptores Graeci, , Rudolf, Hercher, Leipzig, 1858-1859,
★ Charitonis Aphrodisiensis De Chaerea et Callirhoe Amatoriarum Narrationum libri octo, , Warren E., Blake, Clarendon Press, 1938,
★ Chariton: Le Roman de Chairéas et Callirhoé, , Georges, Molinié, Belles Lettres, 1989, With French translation.
★ Chariton: Callirhoe, , G. P., Goold, Harvard University Press, 1995, With English translation.
★ De Callirhoe Narrationes Amatoriae Chariton Aphrodisiensis, , Bryan P., Reardon, K.G. Saur, 2004,
English translations
★ The Loves of Chǣreas and Callirrhoe, Anonymous, , , printed for T. Becket and P. A. De Hondt, 1764,
★ Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe, , Warren E., Blake, University of Michigan Press, 1939,
★ Collected Ancient Greek Novels, , Bryan P., Reardon, University of California Press, 1989,
★ Chariton: Callirhoe, , G. P., Goold, Harvard University Press, 1995, With Greek text.
Studies
★ ''Callirhoe'' and ''Parthenope'': The Beginnings of the Historical Novel, , Tomas, Hägg, Classical Antiquity, 1987 Reprinted in Oxford Readings in the Greek Novel, Simon Swain (ed.), , , Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-872189-7 (hbk.), ISBN 0-19-872188-9 (pbk.)
★ Helms, J., (1966) ''Character Portrayal in Chariton'' (Paris/The Hague:Mouton)
★ Chariton and His Romance from a Literary-Historical Point of View, , B. E., Perry, American Journal of Philology, 1930
★ Theme, Structure and Narrative in Chariton, , B. P., Reardon, Yale Classical Studies, 1982 Reprinted in Oxford Readings in the Greek Novel, Simon Swain (ed.), , , Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-872189-7 (hbk.), ISBN 0-19-872188-9 (pbk.)
★ Chariton, , Gareth L., Schmeling, Twayne Publishers, 1974,
External links
★ Synopsis of the novel
----
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