John Tzetzes


John Tzetzes was a Byzantine poet and grammarian who is known to have lived at Constantinople in the 12th century.
He was able to preserve much valuable information from ancient Greek literature and scholarship.

Biography

Tzetzes was Greek on his father's side and part Iberian on his mother's side. In his works, Tzetzes states that his grandmother was a relative of the Georgian Bagratid princess Maria of Alania who came to Constantinople with her and later became the second wife of the sebastos Constantine Keroularios, megas droungarios and nephew of the patriarch Michael Keroularios.
He worked as a secretary to a provincial governor for a time and later began to earn a living by teaching and writing. He was described as vain, seems to have resented any attempt at rivalry, and violently attacked his fellow grammarians. Owing to a lack of written material, he was obliged to trust to his memory; therefore caution has to be exercised in reading his work. However, he was learned, and made a great contribution to the furtherance of the study of ancient Greek literature.
's Theogony with commentaries by John Tzetze
The most important of his many works is considered to be the Book of Histories, usually called Chiliades from the arbitrary division by its first editor into books each containing 1000 lines. It is a collection of literary, historical, theological, and antiquarian miscellanies, whose chief value consists in the fact that it, to some extent, makes up for the loss of works which were then accessible to Tzetzes. The whole production suffers from an unnecessary display of learning, with the total number of authors quoted being more than 200. The author subsequently brought out a revised edition with marginal notes in prose and verse.
His collection of 107 Letters addressed partly to fictitious personages, and partly to the great men and women of the writer's time, contain a considerable amount of biographical details.
Tzetzes supplemented Homer's Iliad by a work that begins with the birth of Paris and continues the tale to the Achaeans' return home.
The Homeric Allegories, in "political" verse and dedicated initially to the German-born empress Irene and then to Constantine Cotertzes, are two didactic poems, the first based on the Iliad and the second based on the Odyssey, in which Homer and the Homeric theology are set forth and then explained by means of three kinds of allegory: euhemeristic, anagogic and physic. The first of these works was translated into English in 2015 by Adam J. Goldwyn and Dimitra Kokkini.
In the Antehomerica, Tzetzes recalls the events taking place before Homer's Iliad. This work was followed by the Homerica, covering the events of the Iliad, and the Posthomerica, reporting the events taking place between the Iliad and the Odyssey. All three are currently available in English translations.
Tzetzes also wrote commentaries on a number of Greek authors, the most important of which is that elucidating the obscure Cassandra or Alexandra of the Hellenistic poet Lycophron, usually called "On Lycophron", in the production of which his brother Isaac is generally associated with him. Mention may also be made of a dramatic sketch in iambic verse, in which the caprices of fortune and the wretched lot of the learned are described; and of an iambic poem on the death of the emperor Manuel I Komnenos, noticeable for introducing at the beginning of each line the last word of the line preceding it.
For the other works of Tzetzes see J. A. Fabricius, Bibliotheca graeca, xi.228, and Karl Krumbacher, Geschichte der byz. Litt. ; monograph by G. Hart, "De Tzetzarum nomine, vitis, scriptis," in Jahn's Jahrbucher für classische Philologie. Supplementband xii.