Libanius (AD 314–c.393), of Antioch (in Syria), Greek rhetorician. He studied at Athens (336–40), and afterwards taught rhetoric at Constantinople (until 346) and at Nicomedia (in Bithynia, on the shores of the Propontis). Having declined a chair of rhetoric at Athens, in 354 he accepted instead a chair at Antioch, and remained there for the rest of his life. Although he remained a pagan, deeply attached to old ways, he had many distinguished Christian pupils, including John Chrysostom, and perhaps Basil the Great and Gregory of Nazianzus. Among his voluminous writings, his sixty-four speeches, which include his autobiography (Oration 1) and his funeral oration on the emperor Julian, and some sixteen hundred letters, are of considerable historical importance.




