Arrian (Flavius Arrianus) (
âr'ēən), fl. 2d cent. A.D., Greek historian, philosopher, and general, b. Nicomedia in Bithynia. He was governor of Cappadocia under Emperor Hadrian and in A.D. 134 repulsed an invasion of the Alans. His chief work is the
Anabasis, the prime extant source on
Alexander the Great. Modeled on
Xenophon's famous book, the
Anabasis relies chiefly on the writings of two of Alexander's generals (
Ptolemy I and Aristobulus) for source material. Other extant works include the
Indica (an account of a voyage of Alexander's general
Nearchus to India) and parts of his edition of and commentaries on the
Discourses of Epictetus.Bibliography
See The Landmark Arrian, The Campaigns of Alexander: Anabasis Alexandrou, ed. by J. Romm (2010).