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LXXIII. ANATOLIUS THE BISHOP natolius of alexandria, bishop of Laodicea in Syria,1 lived in the reign of the emperors Probus and Carus.2 He was a man of prodigious learning in arithmetic , geometry, astronomy, grammar, rhetoric, and dialectic.3 2. We can understand the greatness of his talent from a volume which he composed, On the Pasch,4 and from ten books, An Introduction to Arithmetic.5 notes 1. Eus., h.e. 7.32.6–20, and Chron., a.d. 279. 2. h.e. 7.30.22. Probus (276–282) succeeded Aurelian (270–275); next reigned Carus (282–283). 3. “in .l.l. rhetoric”: h.e. 7.32.6; EECh 2, art., “Rhetoric,” 735–36, A. Quacquarelli. 4. h.e. 7.32.13–19; cf. CPG 1620. 5. h.e. 7.32.20; cf. CPG 1621. references CPG 1620 — EECh 1, 37, M. Simonetti — Dihle, Greek and Latin, 402, 405, 486 LXXIV. VICTORINUS THE BISHOP ictorinus, bishop of Poetovio,1 did not know Latin as well as he did Greek;2 as a result, his works, which are excellent in content, seem inferior in composition.3 2. His works are: Commentaries On Genesis,4 On Exodus, On Leviticus, ON ILLUSTRIOUS MEN 105 ...

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