Quintus Gargilius Martialis

Quintus Gargilius Martialis was a third-century Roman writer on horticulture, botany and medicine. He has been identified by some with the military commander of the same name, mentioned in a Latin inscription of 260 as having lost his life in the colony of Auzia in Mauretania Caesariensis.[1] Considerable fragments of his work (probably called De hortis), which treated of the cultivation of trees and vegetables, and also of their medicinal properties, have survived, chiefly in the body of and as an appendix to the Medicina Plinii (an anonymous 4th century handbook of medical recipes based upon Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historiae, xxxxxii).[2] Extant sections treat of apples, peaches, quinces, citrons, almonds, chestnuts, parsnips, and various other edibles, with an emphasis on the medical effects they have on the body (quoting Dioscorides sometimes). Gargilius also wrote a treatise on the tending of cattle (De curis boum). A biography of the emperor Alexander Severus is also attributed to him in the Augustan History.[2] This attribution has been read as a joke by some critics.

Published Edition

gollark: The only ways to make money are to post memes and get investment commissions, or to get someone else to throw away their money, and it happens that subsidies make it so that that other person can happily just throw away money forever and not be an actual person.
gollark: Make the system actually sane? This is the "problem" season 1 had with bots - it was broken so they could do a lot.
gollark: Evil idea: make a bot which reposts random memes off some niche subreddit (so nobody will notice) with the picture fuzzed a bit so repost detectors won't notice it.
gollark: Oops.
gollark: The irony...

References

  1. Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, viii, 9047.
  2.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Martialis, Quintus Gargilius". Encyclopædia Britannica. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 790.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.