Flavius Philostratus

Greek author
born ad 170
died c. 245
Main
Greek writer of Roman imperial times who studied at Athens
and some time after ad 202 entered the circle of the
philosophical Syrian empress of Rome, Julia Domna. On her
death he settled in Tyre.
Philostratus’s works include Gymnastikos, a treatise
dealing with athletic training; Ērōïkos (“Hero”), a dialogue
on the significance of various heroes of the Trojan War;
Epistolai erōtikai (“Erotic Epistles”), one of which was the
inspiration for the English poet Ben Jonson’s To Celia
(“Drink to me only with thine eyes”); and two sets of
descriptions (ekphraseis) of paintings of mythological
scenes, attributed to two men named Philostratus, possibly
the well-known figure and his grandson. Flavius
Philostratus’s Bioi sophistōn (Lives of the Sophists) treats
both the Sophists of the 5th century bc and the later
philosophers and rhetoricians of the Second Sophistic, a
name coined by Philostratus to describe the art of
declamation in Greek as practiced in the Roman Empire from
the time of Nero (ad 54–68) to Philostratus’s own day.
Philostratus’s work on the life of the Pythagorean
philosopher Apollonius of Tyana (1st century ad), which was
commissioned by Julia Domna, is revealing of religious
attitudes in a transitional period. His idealized portrait
of Apollonius as an ascetic miracle worker was taken up with
enthusiasm by the pagan elites of the next centuries—when
Christianity had become of political significance—as a
counter figure to the Christian Jesus. In Philostratus’s
moderately Atticizing prose (i.e., aspiring to the Classical
style of 5th-century-bc Athens and opposed to the florid and
bombastic style of Greek associated especially with Asia
Minor), formal elegance was a way to give new significance
and validity to the traditional cultural heritage of the
pagan Greek world.