ABSTRACT

Gallus Reborn is the first comprehensive study of the publication history and reception of the works that have been attributed to Gaius Cornelius Gallus, first canonical Roman elegist, friend of Virgil, and ‘missing link’ in Roman literary history.

Gallus was a widely read and frequently imitated author from the Renaissance onwards, when he overcame the disadvantage of having no surviving works by putting his name to a substantial body of pseudepigrapha: misattributed, faked or forged poems. This monograph asks what Gallus was like, during that phase of his existence; how was he read, and by whom; and what impact did he have on literary history?

Combining close readings of the texts with a comparative overview of their wider reception, Gallus Reborn will interest scholars and advanced students of classical reception, Neo-Latin, comparative literature and early modern studies.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

‘Neget quis carmina Gallo?’

chapter 1|15 pages

Six elegies ascribed to Cornelius Gallus

Maximianus

chapter 2|6 pages

The reception of Gallus-Maximianus

chapter 4|7 pages

From senectus to amor

chapter 6|10 pages

The forger of the 1588 elegiacs

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion