The Center for Hellenic Studies research blog has posted an interview with Homer Multitext editor Mary Ebbott, in which she discusses the need to reinvent the critical edition for Homeric poetry, as well as the need for a new appreciation for the editorial role of the scribe in the creation of our Homeric manuscripts. She also speaks about the role that undergraduate researchers have played in the project. You can read the interview here.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Friday, June 22, 2012
Identifying Aristarchean Commentary in the Venetus A Scholia
A guest post by Thomas Arralde, Class of 2013, College
of the Holy Cross
The overarching philosophy behind our
work in the Homer Multitext is to be as exact and as comprehensive as
possible. Last summer we digitally inventoried every scholion in the
entirety of Book 1 of the Venetus A manuscript, and created a
diplomatic edition of all the scholia dating to the 10th century. We
also make our findings accessible and searchable to facilitate our
own research as well as that of others. All people and places
referenced in the scholia were tagged with a unique identifier that
corresponded to person and place inventories.
In our work on editing the scholia of
Book 1 of the Venetus A, we noticed that the word “ὅτι”
(because) often began a scholion, and that these scholia often
continued “Ζηνόδοτος γράφει” (Zenodotus writes).
Our consistent documentation of when Zenodotus, the first publisher
an Alexandrian edition of Homer, appeared in the scholia allowed us
to observe how frequently his name appeared in the context of these
ὅτι scholia. Our comprehensive work on the scholia gave us
results that were authoritative for the whole of Book 1, notable for
being the book of the Iliad with the greatest number of
scholia in the Venetus A, as well as Books 3, 4, and 5. From the
statistics we compiled, we were able to form hypotheses about the
significance of these scholia, and why they appear so formulaically,
which leads us now to the great Homeric scholar Aristarchus.
Aristarchus of Samothrace took over the
directorship of the Library of Alexandria in the middle of the 2nd
century BC, after the death of his predecessor Aristophanes of
Byzantium. The work of Aristarchus is seen as an important turning
point in the history of the Homeric tradition, in which the works of
Homer become relatively rigid and texts were studied outside the
context of performance (Nagy 1996: 110). Because of his pivotal role
in the textual history of the Homeric epics, identifying the comments
of Aristarchus from what does survive is an important task for
Homeric scholars. But doing so is not always a straightforward task,
since the scholiast does not always write the name of the scholar
whose work he is referring to (Nagy 1997: 117).
One way of identifying scholia
attributable to Aristarchus in the Venetus A, we discovered, could be
the use of the word ὅτι at the beginning of scholia. As our team
was editing the scholia of Book 1, every time a name appeared we
placed it in TEI markup, and provided a unique identifier for each
name. In our markup, Zenodotus was given the identifier “pers15,”
so that his every appearance looked as follows:
[persName n=“pers15”]Ζηνόδοτος[/persName] (with pointy brackets for the square—the blogging software keeps reading the pointy brackets as actual code, so we had to replace them here). Because of this markup, only a simple search was required to find every reference to Zenodotus in our transcriptions. With this information it was an easy task to see in what scholia Zenodotus appeared, and how many of them were ὅτι scholia. We applied the same search to Aristarchus, who appeared in our marked-up scholia as
[persName n=“pers16”]Ἀρίσταρχος[/persName], which led to an exciting discovery. Aristarchus’ name almost never appears in these scholia, but Zenodotus’ does quite frequently. This and other observations lead to the possibility that these scholia are more or less direct quotations from Aristarchus’ lost works.
[persName n=“pers15”]Ζηνόδοτος[/persName] (with pointy brackets for the square—the blogging software keeps reading the pointy brackets as actual code, so we had to replace them here). Because of this markup, only a simple search was required to find every reference to Zenodotus in our transcriptions. With this information it was an easy task to see in what scholia Zenodotus appeared, and how many of them were ὅτι scholia. We applied the same search to Aristarchus, who appeared in our marked-up scholia as
[persName n=“pers16”]Ἀρίσταρχος[/persName], which led to an exciting discovery. Aristarchus’ name almost never appears in these scholia, but Zenodotus’ does quite frequently. This and other observations lead to the possibility that these scholia are more or less direct quotations from Aristarchus’ lost works.
Critical signs next to lines of the Iliad on 15V of the Ven. A |
Our current understanding of critical
signs is that Aristarchus used them both in the scroll of the Iliad
text he worked from and in the scroll of his comments to the text so
that the two could be easily matched (Bird 2009). With the advent of
the codex, the use of critical signs next to both became superfluous
and were mostly removed from the scholia but mostly retained next to
the text of the Iliad. Evidence of Aristarchus’ usage is the
presence of the word “ὅτι” at the beginning of scholia, on
its own meaning something like “the sign is here because”. The
structure of the scholia in Aristarchus’ notes is supposed to have
been sign, lemma, and then the scholion itself.
A rare scholion (from 28R of the Venetus A) that follows the sign-lemma-ὅτι comment sequence that we think Aristarchus’ commentary had |
Although the signs that we believe to
have been written in Aristarchus’ commentary scroll do not appear
in most cases in front of the Venetus A scholia, the word that
started the explanation of that sign, ὅτι, often survives as the
beginning of the comment. One would expect, then, that when a ὅτι
appears there was a critical sign in the scholion that is no longer
there, but is retained next to the text. In Book 1 of the Venetus A,
however, this does not happen as often as such a rule supposes. In
this Book ὅτι begins a scholion which does not have a
corresponding critical sign in the main text ~43% of the time. If the
critical sign has disappeared in both locations, ought the ὅτι
really be translated as “the sign is here because” when no sign
exists?
Iliad 1.216, on 16R in the Venetus A, has no Critical sign placed next to it. |
Yet the scholion on this line begins with ὅτι |
The absence of critical signs does not
continue throughout the Venetus A, however. In Book 3 more than 95%
of the scholia that begin with ὅτι are accompanied by a critical
sign. What is it about the scholia in Book 1 that causes the scribe
to include critical signs with ὅτι scholia 50% less of the time
than in Book 3? Is it the great density of scholia that continues
through the first book but subsides somewhat in later books that
causes the disparity? All of these questions require further
investigation, and as we continue to edit more scholia we expect to
find further evidence to assist us in our inquiries.
Furthermore, Aristarchus is rarely
cited in scholia which begin with ὅτι; his name appears in such
scholia only twice in Book 1. This is astounding considering in Book
1 there are 136 ὅτι scholia and 61 occurrences of Aristarchus’
name and little overlap between the two. More frequently citations of
Aristarchus appear “thus Aristarchus” or simply “Aristarchus”
followed by the comment. What we find instead is that Zenodotus’
name more often follows after ὅτι (30% of the time in Book 1, 28%
in Book 3). When Zenodotus appears in the scholia of Book 1, ~85% of
the time it is in a ὅτι scholion. If the ὅτι follows
Aristarchus’ method of writing his commentary, why is Zenodotus so
often cited in these scholia? It could be that the scribe of the
Venetus A is quoting directly from Aristarchus (or someone else
quoting directly from Aristarchus) in the ὅτι scholia since
Aristarchus would not refer to himself in the 3rd person, and would
be commenting on the edition of his predecessor, Zenodotus. In fact,
there is scarcely ever a mention of any scholar later in date than
Aristarchus found in these scholia.
We know that the system of Critical
signs used in the Venetus A comes from Aristarchus’ edition of the
Iliad. The fact that the ὅτι scholia virtually never name
Aristarchus or scholars later than him, and name Zenodotus with an
unusual frequency, leads us to believe that they are authentic
Aristarchean commentary. Work is ongoing and findings in Book 2 have
already yielded tantalizing results. As further evidence comes to
light we hope to come closer to answering the critical question of
where the information in our scholia comes from.
Bird G. 2009. “Critical Signs -
Drawing Attention to ‘Special’ Lines of Homer’s Iliad in
the Manuscript Venetus A,” 89–155 in Recapturing a Homeric
Legacy, ed. C. Dué, Washington DC.
Nagy G. 1996. Poetry as Performance.
Cambridge.
Nagy G. 1997. “Homeric Scholia,”
101–122 in A New Companion to Homer, ed. Morris and Powell.
Leiden & New York.
New technical documentation system
While the Homer Multitext project continues to experiment with new methods and new technologies, essential parts of our digital infrastructure (such as the CITE architecture for canonical reference to scholarly resources) have now matured to the point that we are beginning to organize our scattered technical documentation in a single system. The documentation is written in markdown; an automated build system generates a web site from the markdown source. One stable URL where the web pages are available is http://www.homermultitext.org/hmt-doc/.
In addition to automatically generated API documentation for our source code, we are interested in expanding our collection of guides, tips, and how-to documents. If you have ideas or would like to contribute, please don't hesitate to get in touch with us.
In addition to automatically generated API documentation for our source code, we are interested in expanding our collection of guides, tips, and how-to documents. If you have ideas or would like to contribute, please don't hesitate to get in touch with us.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Summer 2012 Homer Multitext Seminar to Begin Next Week
Next week four teams of undergraduate researchers and faculty mentors will convene at the Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington, DC for the 2012 Homer Multitext summer seminar. The seminar will provide an introduction to fundamental ideas about the oral composition and transmission of the epics, and basic training in editing digital texts. The seminar will focus on manuscripts of the Iliad with scholia that have been photographed as part of the Homer Multitext project.
During the two weeks of the seminar, student-faculty teams will work on manuscript material not fully published previously, and will be expected to continue to work as a team after returning to their home institution. Successfully completed work will be reviewed and published as part of the Homer Multitext project's digital publication program.
Each student-faculty team will take responsibility for leading the work on one section of a manuscript. Teams will be trained in the full cycle of editing a digital facsimile edition:
- indexing a collection of digital photographs to a citable folio of a code
- creating a visual inventory cataloging where passages of texts appear on images
- creating a visual inventory cataloging where non-textual features of interest appear on images (critical signs, and other graphic features)
- editing a diplomatic edition of the Iliadic text
- learning to read and edit a diplomatic edition of the scholia
Each phase of the work is collaborative. At least two members of each team will review material prior to jointly submitting work for review and publication. All contributors will be credited in publication.
Stay tuned over the summer to hear more about what the students discover!