Loci Communes (Antonius Melissa)

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Antonius Melissa (c. 11th century), is the name given to a Greek monk who wrote a compilation of moral sentences called Loci Communes.

Nothing is known about Antonius. The surname traditionally applied to him, Melissa ("the Bee"), seems to have been, in fact, the original title of his compilation.[1] The compilation is usually referred to as the Loci Communes, and is a collection of sermones or sentences on virtues and vices. It is similar to another work called Loci Communes,[2] which is attributed to Maximus Confessor but which is in reality by an anonymous author. Both works contain extracts from the early Christian fathers, and also contain quotations from earlier Jewish and pagan authors. The two works have often been printed together, and have often been printed at the end of the editions of Stobaeus.

Notes

  1. ^ Ezra Abbot, (2008), The Authorship of the Fourth Gospel: And Other Critical Essays, page 300
  2. ^ Luke Timothy Johnson, William S. Kurz, (2002), The future of Catholic biblical scholarship: a constructive conversation, page 42