A tradition of prose satire dates back …

Years: 297BCE - 286BCE

A tradition of prose satire dates back to the (lost) works of Menippus, who flourishes after 300 in Thebes.

Little is known about his life.

He was a native of Gadara in Coele-Syria.

The ancient sources agree that he was at one time enslaved.

He was in the service of a citizen of Pontus, but in some way obtained his freedom and lived at Thebes.

Diogenes Laërtius relates a dubious story that he amassed a fortune as a money-lender, lost it, and committed suicide through grief.

Lucian ranks Menippus with Antisthenes, Diogenes, and Crates as the most notable of the Cynics.

His works (written in a mixture of prose and verse) are all lost.

He discussed serious subjects in a spirit of ridicule, and especially delighted in attacking the Epicureans and Stoics.

Strabo and Stephanus call him the "earnest-jester".

His writings exercised considerable influence upon later literature, and the Menippean satire genre is named after him.

Although the writings of Menippus no longer survive, there are some fragments of Varro's Saturae Menippeae, which were written in imitation of Menippus.

One of the dialogues attributed to Lucian, his avowed imitator, who frequently mentions him, is called Menippus, but since the sub-title (The Oracle of the Dead) resembles that of a work ascribed to Menippus by Diogenes Laërtius, it has been suggested that it is imitated from his Necromancy.

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