Strategemata

The 19th-century scholar Gotthold Gundermann edited the Latin text for the Bibliotheca Teubneriana series

Strategemata, or Stratagems, is a Latin work by the Roman author Frontinus (c. 40 – 103 AD). It is a collection of examples of military stratagems from Greek and Roman history, ostensibly for the use of generals. Frontinus is assumed to have written Strategemata towards the end of the first century AD, possibly in connection with a lost work on military theory.

Frontinus is best known as a writer on water engineering, but he had a distinguished military career. In Stratagems he draws partly on his own experience as a general in Germany under Domitian. However, most of the (more than five hundred) examples which he gives are less recent, for example he mentions the Siege of Uxellodunum in 51 BC. Similarities to versions in other Roman authors like Valerius Maximus and Livy suggest that he drew mainly on literary sources.

The work consists of four books, of which three are undoubtedly by Frontinus. The authenticity of the fourth book has been challenged.[1]

In the 15th century, Jean de Rovroy translated the Strategemata into French.[2]

In the 20th century, Charles E. Bennett translated the Strategemata into English. His version was published with De aquaeductu (translated as Aqueducts of Rome) in the Loeb Classical Library.[3]

  1. ^ Paper by Rogier van der Wal (Amsterdam) to the 2010 Classical Association Conference, Cardiff
  2. ^ Pierre Santoni (1979), "Jean de Rouvroy, traducteur de Frontin et théologien de l'Immaculée Conception", Bibliothèque de l'École des chartes 137(1): 19–58.
  3. ^ "Frontinus, Stratagems. Aqueducts of Rome". Loeb Classical Library.

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