Pamprepius

Pamprepius (‹See Tfd›Greek: Παμπρέπιος, Pamprépios; Latin: Pamprepius; 29 September 440 – November 484) was a philosopher and a pagan poet who rebelled against the Eastern Roman Emperor Zeno.

Damascius described him as a brilliant poet, Malchus as an acute politician, but ugly, arrogant, unscrupulous and treacherous. Rhetorius, an Egyptian astrologer, called him a charlatan and a libertine. He has been compared to Claudian, as both these poets enjoyed eight years of political power at the side of usurpers. He is considered the last Roman pagan poet.[1]

His life is known with unusual precision, as his horoscope calculated by Rhetorius in the early sixth century has been found.[2]

  1. ^ Nagy, pp. 499-500, 508.
  2. ^ The horoscope is translated and commented in O. Neugebauer, H. B. Van Hoesen, Greek Horoscopes, Diane Publishing, 1987, ISBN 0-87169-048-9, pp. 140-141.