Antoninus Liberalis

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Antoninus Liberalis, Greek grammarian, probably flourished about AD 150.

His only surviving work is the Μεταμορφωσεων Συναγωγη (Metamorphoseon Sunagoge), a collection of forty-one prose tales about mythical metamorphoses. The literary genre of myths of transformations of men and women, heroes and nymphs, into stars (see Catasterismi), plants and animals, or rocks and mountains, were widespread and popular in the classical world. This work has more polished parallels in the better-known Metamorphoses of Ovid and in the Metamorphoses of Lucius Apuleius.

Many of the transformations in this compilation of forty-one are found nowhere else, and some may simply be inventions of this author; the manner of the narrative is a laconic and conversational prose; "this completely inartistic text" (Myers) offers the briefest summaries of lost metamorphoses by more ambitious writers, such as Nicander and Boios.

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