Scribonius Aphrodisius was a grammarian of ancient Rome. He was originally a slave and disciple of the grammarian Lucius Orbilius Pupillus, who was also the teacher of the Roman poet Horace.[1] He was purchased by Scribonia, the second wife of the emperor Augustus, and was by her manumitted.[2] She may have purchased him to educate her children, or possibly herself.[3]
Aphrodisius is known to have written a treatise on orthography, in opposition to a similar work written by the grammarian Verrius Flaccus,[4] also a freedman, but this work is now lost.[5]