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Rhetorica ad Herennium

 
Classical Literature Companion: Rhētorica ad Herennium

Rhētorica ad Herennium, Latin treatise on oratory in four books, written between 86 and 82 BC and addressed to C. Herennius by an unknown author; some attribute it to a certain Cornificius, on slight evidence in Quintilian. It is ascribed in the manuscripts to Cicero, and it seems connected in some way with Cicero's early De inventione. Rhetoric is treated under its five headings; the section on style is the oldest surviving treatment in Latin. The work is modelled on Greek writers, and is interesting as a relatively early example of Latin prose.

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The Rhetorica ad Herennium, formerly attributed to Cicero but of unknown authorship, is the oldest surviving Latin book on rhetoric, dating from the 90s BC, and is still used today as a textbook on the structure and uses of rhetoric and persuasion.

It was the most popular book on rhetoric during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. It was commonly used, along with Cicero's '"De Inventione", to teach rhetoric, and its popularity is evidenced by the large number of surviving manuscripts — over one hundred are extant. It was also copied extensively into European vernacular languages, and served as the standard schoolbook text on rhetoric during the Renaissance.

The work focuses on the practical applications and examples of rhetoric. It is also the first book to teach rhetoric in a very highly structured and disciplined form.

Its discussion of elocutio (style) is the oldest surviving systematic treatment of Latin style, and many of the examples are of contemporary Roman events. This new style, which flowered in the century following this work's writing, promoted revolutionary advances in Roman literature and oratory. It contains the first known description of the method of loci, a mnemonic technique.

The Ad Herennium also provides the first complete treatment of memoria (memorization of speeches).

Notes

References

  • Rhetorica ad Herennium (with an online English translation by Harry Caplan). Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA 1954.
  • Rhetorica ad Herennium (Friedrich Marx, ed. Prolegomena in editio maior .), Tuebner, Leipzig, 1923.
  • Golla, Georg. Sprachliche Beobachtungen zum auctor ad Herennium, Breslau, 1935.
  • Kroll, Wilhelm. Die Entwicklung der lateinischen Sprache, Glotta 22 (1934). 24-27.
  • Kroll, Wilhelm. Der Text des Cornificius, Philologus 89 (1934). 63-84
  • Tolkiehn, Johannes. Jahresbuch des philologischen Vereins zu Berlin 45 (1919)

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Classical Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Classical Literature. Copyright © 1993, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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