A treatise of religion & learning and of religious and learned men consisting of six books, the two first treating of religion & learning, the four last of religious or learned men in an alphabetical order ... / by Edward Leigh ...
About this Item
Title
A treatise of religion & learning and of religious and learned men consisting of six books, the two first treating of religion & learning, the four last of religious or learned men in an alphabetical order ... / by Edward Leigh ...
Author
Leigh, Edward, 1602-1671.
Publication
London :: Printed by A.M. for Charles Adams ...,
1656.
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Subject terms
Religion -- Early works to 1800.
Learning and scholarship.
Literature -- History and criticism.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A47630.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A treatise of religion & learning and of religious and learned men consisting of six books, the two first treating of religion & learning, the four last of religious or learned men in an alphabetical order ... / by Edward Leigh ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A47630.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.
Pages
CHAP. VIII.
[ Q]
JOhannes Quinquarboreus.
He was Professour of Hebrew and Chaldee to the French King in Paris.
There is his Chaldee Paraphrase with Scholia, upon Ruth, Lamentations, Hosea, Joel, Amos.
Martial hath a whole Epigram of him, it begins thus,
Quintiliane vaga moderator summe juventaeGloria Romanae, Quintiliane, Togae.
Mart. 2. Epig. 90.
Juvenall and Pliny the younger were his Scholers, as Politian shews in his Pre∣face to Quintilian.
Notes
* 1.1
Anno Aerae Christianae 79. Helv. Chron. 88. Matth. Westm. Magnus ille Magister elo∣quentiae Fa∣bius Casaub. ad Pers Sat. 1. Comment. Quamvis in eo sit civilis ad agendas caussas facultatis commonstrata quaedam prudentia, quamvis ex∣empla quaedam utiliter collecta, attamen elocutionis quae summa laus ejus esse possit, infinita est à Cicerone diffe∣rentis. Nec enim in singulis verbis eadem est puritas, vel proprietas, vel elegantia. In conjunctis tanta est diffe∣rentia, ut Cicero aureo quidem seculo, Quintilianus autem ferreo locutus esse videatur. Sed tamen ut temporibus illis diserti homines fuerunt, ita sane numer••tur in disertis, qualis tamen fortasse nec esse possim, si velim, imò verò ne v••lim quidem si possim. Rami praefat. Grammat. 5a. Quanto melius Ludovicus Vives de tradendis discip. l. 5. Ciceroni Quintilianum adjunxit Laurentius Valla, tanquam comitem, aut verius socium, paremque, non omnino in∣juriâ, cum vetborum munditie, tum translationum, & totius dictionis acumine Hispanus fuerit Quintilianus, cujus libri doctissimi duodecim de Oratoria institutione etiam supersunt reperti Pogio Florentino in Monasterio quodam in Synodo Constantiensi, quo tempore etiam repertos fuisse ferunt Silii Italici libros 18. de bellis Punicis. Neand. Geog. parte 1a.