Helenius Acron
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- For the other meanings of acron, see Acron (disambiguation).
Helenius Acron (or Acro) was a Roman commentator and grammarian, probably of the 5th century, but whose precise date is not known.
He is known to have written on Terence (Adelphi and Eunuchus at least) and Horace. These commentaries on Horace are now lost but are referred to by the grammarian Charisius.[1] There is some evidence for a commentary on Persius.
Scholia attributed to Acron appear in manuscripts of Horace; there are three recensions known, the earliest dating to the 5th century. The fragments which remain of the work on Horace, though much mutilated, are valuable, as containing the remarks of the older commentators, Quintus Terentius Scaurus and others. The attribution to Acron, however, is not found before the 15th century, and is doubtful.
Fragments of Acron's writing may also appear in Pomponius Porphyrion.
[edit] References
- ^ Allen, Alexander (1867), “Acron, Helenius”, in Smith, William, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston, MA, pp. 15
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1870).