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  1. Life And Works Of Aristotle Plato

Aristotle - download The Complete Works of Aristotle as a free PDF e-book. 3.354 pages/6 MB.

  1. T thus stands, by the traditional ordering, at the start of Aristotle's main. Aristotle's works.' Kirwan thus claims that the Metaphysics as we have it has been heavily processed by post-Aristotelian editors, whose work extended even to. Oxford, 1981, p.116); for a similar view see now also Jonathan Barnes, “Metaphysics,”.
  2. The Oxford Translation of Aristotle was originally published in 12 volumes between 1912 and 1954. It is universally recognized as the standard English version of Aristotle. This revised edition contains the substance of the original Translation, slightly emended in light of recent scholarship; three of the original versions have.

A lost work is a document, literary work, or piece of multimedia produced some time in the past, of which no surviving copies are known to exist. This term most commonly applies to works from the classical world, although it is increasingly used in relation to modern works. A work may be lost to history through the destruction of an original manuscript and all later copies. In contrast to lost or 'extinct' works, surviving copies may be referred to as 'extant'.

Works—or, commonly, small fragments of works—have survived by being found by archaeologists during investigations, or accidentally by anybody. For example, the Nag Hammadi library scrolls. Works also survived when they were reused as bookbinding materials, quoted or included in other works, or as palimpsests, where an original document is imperfectly erased so the substrate on which it was written can be reused. The discovery, in 1822, of Cicero's De re publica, was one of the first major recoveries of an ancient text from a palimpsest. Another famous example is the discovery of the Archimedes palimpsest, which was used to make a prayer book almost 300 years after the original work was written. A work may be recovered in a library, as a lost or mislabeled codex, or as a part of another book/ codex.

Well known, but not recovered, works are described by compilations that did survive. For example, the Naturalis Historia of Pliny the Elder or the De Architectura of Vitruvius. Sometimes authors will destroy their own works. Other occasions, authors instruct others to destroy their work after their deaths. This should have happened with several pieces, but did not. For example, Virgil's Aeneid, which was saved by Augustus, and Kafka's novels, which were saved by Max Brod. Handwritten copies of manuscripts existed in limited numbers before the era of printing. The destruction of ancient libraries, including the multiple attempts on that of Alexandria, resulted in the loss of numerous works. Works to which no one has subsequently referred remain unknown.

Deliberate destruction of works may be termed literary crime or literary vandalism (see book burning).

  • 1Lost works
    • 1.1Classical world
    • 1.5Lost Biblical texts

Lost works[edit]

Classical world[edit]

Specific titles[edit]

  • Agatharchides
    • Ta kata ten Asian (Affairs in Asia) in 10 books
    • Ta kata ten Europen (Affairs in Europe) in 49 books
    • Peri ten Erythras thalasses (On the Erythraean Sea) in 5 books
  • Agrippina the Younger
    • Casus suorum (Misfortunes of her Family, a memoir)
  • Sulpicius Alexander
    • Historia
  • Anaxagoras
    • Book of Philosophy. Only fragments of the first part have survived.
  • Apollodorus of Athens
    • Chronicle (Χρονικά), a Greek history in verse
    • On the Gods (Περὶ θεῶν), known through quotes to have included etymologies of the names and epithets of the gods
    • A twelve-book essay about Homer's Catalogue of Ships
  • Archimedes
    • On Polyhedra
  • Aristarchus of Samos
    • Astronomy book outlining his heliocentrism (astronomical model in which the Earth and planets revolve around a relatively stationary Sun)
  • Aristotle
    • second book of Poetics, dealing with comedy
    • On the Pythagoreans[1]
    • Protrepticus (fragments survived)
  • Augustus
    • Rescript to Brutus Respecting Cato
    • Exhortations to Philosophy
    • History of His Own Life
    • Sicily (a work in verse)
    • Epigrams
  • Berossus
    • Babyloniaca (History of Babylonia)
  • Gaius Julius Caesar
    • Anticatonis Libri II (only fragments survived)
    • Carmina et prolusiones (only fragments survived)
    • De analogia libri II ad M. Tullium Ciceronem
    • De astris liber
    • Dicta collectanea ('collected sayings', also known by the Greek title άποφθέγματα)
    • Letters (only fragments survived)
      • Epistulae ad Ciceronem
      • Epistulae ad familiares
    • Iter (only one fragment survived)
    • Laudes Herculis
    • Libri auspiciorum ('books of auspices', also known as Auguralia)
    • Oedipus
    • other works:
      • contributions to the libri pontificales as pontifex maximus
      • possibly some early love poems
  • Callinicus
    • Against the Philosophical Sects
    • On the Renewal of Rome
    • Prosphonetikon to Gallienus, a salute addressed to the emperor
    • To Cleopatra, On the History of Alexandria, most likely dedicated to Zenobia, who claimed descent from Cleopatra
    • To Lupus, On Bad Taste on Rhetoric
  • Callisthenes
    • An account of Alexander's expedition
    • A history of Greece from the Peace of Antalcidas (387) to the Phocian war (357)
    • A history of the Phocian war
  • Cato the Elder
    • Origines, a 7 book history of Rome and the Italian states.
    • Carmen de moribus, a book of prayers or incantations for the dead in verse.
    • Praecepta ad Filium, a collection of maxims.
    • A collection of his speeches.
  • Quintus Tullius Cicero
    • Four tragedies in the Greek style: Tiroas, Erigones, Electra, and one other.
    • Hortensius a dialogue also known as 'On Philosophy'.
    • Consolatio, written to soothe his own sadness at the death of his daughter Tullia
  • Helvius Cinna
    • Zmyrna, a mythological epic poem about the incestuous love of Smyrna (or Myrrha) for her father Cinyras
  • Claudius
    • De arte aleae ('the art of playing dice', a book on dice games)
    • an Etruscan dictionary
    • an Etruscan history
    • a history of Augustus' reign
    • eight volumes on Carthaginian history
    • a defense of Cicero against the charges of Asinius Gallus
  • Cleitarchus
  • Ctesibius
    • On pneumatics, a work describing force pumps
    • Memorabilia, a compilation of his research works
  • Ctesias
    • Persica, a history of Assyria and Persia in 23 books
    • Indica, an account of India
  • Eratosthenes
    • Περὶ τῆς ἀναμετρήσεως τῆς γῆς (On the Measurement of the Earth; lost, summarized by Cleomedes)
    • Geographica (lost, criticized by Strabo)
    • Arsinoe (a memoir of queen Arsinoe; lost; quoted by Athenaeus in the Deipnosophistae)
  • Euclid
    • Conics, a work on conic sections later extended by Apollonius of Perga into his famous work on the subject.
    • Porisms, the exact meaning of the title is controversial (probably 'corollaries').
    • Pseudaria, or Book of Fallacies, an elementary text about errors in reasoning.
    • Surface Loci concerned either loci (sets of points) on surfaces or loci which were themselves surfaces.
  • Eudemus
    • History of Arithmetics, on the early history of Greek arithmetics (only one short quote survives)
    • History of Astronomy, on the early history of Greek astronomy (several quotes survive)
    • History of Geometry, on the early history of Greek geometry (several quotes survive)
  • Verrius Flaccus
    • De Orthographia: De Obscuris Catonis, an elucidation of obscurities in the writings of Cato the Elder
    • Saturnus, dealing with questions of Roman ritual
    • Rerum memoria dignarum libri, an encyclopaedic work much used by Pliny the Elder
    • Res Etruscae, probably on augury
  • Frontinus
    • De re militari, a military manual
  • Gorgias
    • On Non-Existence (or On Nature). Only two sketches of it exist.
    • Epitaphios. What exists is thought to be only a small fragment of a significantly longer piece.
  • The HesiodicCatalogue of Women
  • Homer
    • The Odyssey mentions the blind singer Demodocus performing a poem recounting the otherwise unknown 'Quarrel of Odysseus and Achilles', which might have been an actual work that did not survive
  • Livy
    • 107 of the 142 books of Ab Urbe Condita, a history of Rome
  • Longinus
    • On The End: by Longinus in answer to Plotinus and Gentilianus Amelius (preface survives, quoted by Porphyry)
    • On Impulse
    • On Principles
    • Lover of Antiquity
    • On the Natural Life
    • Difficulties in Homer
    • Whether Homer is a Philosopher
    • Homeric Problems and Solutions
    • Things Contrary to History which the Grammarians Explain as Historical
    • On Words in Homer with Multiple Senses
    • Attic Diction
    • Lexicon of Antimachus and Heracleon
  • Lucan
    • Catachthonion
    • Iliacon from the Trojan cycle
    • Epigrammata
    • Adlocutio ad Pollam
    • Silvae
    • Saturnalia
    • Medea
    • Salticae Fabulae
    • Laudes Neronis, a praise of Nero
    • Orpheus
    • Prosa oratio in Octavium Sagittam
    • Epistulae ex Campania
    • De Incendio Urbis
  • Manetho
    • Ægyptiaca (History of Egypt) in 3 books. Only few fragments survive.
  • Memnon of Heraclea
    • History of Heraclea Pontica
  • Minucianus, son of Nicagoras the Athenian sophist
    • Art of Rhetoric
    • Progymnasmata
  • Nicander
    • Aetolica, a prose history of Aetolia.
    • Heteroeumena, a mythological epic.
    • Georgica and Melissourgica, of which considerable fragments are preserved.
  • Nicagoras, Athenian sophist
    • Lives of Famous People
    • On Cleopatra in Troas
    • Embassy Speech to Philip the Roman Emperor
  • Ovid
    • Medea, of which only two fragments survive.
  • Pamphilus of Alexandria
    • Comprehensive lexicon in 95 books of foreign or obscure words.
  • Pherecydes of Leros
    • A history of Leros
    • an essay, On Iphigeneia
    • On the Festivals of Dionysus
    • Genealogies of the gods and heroes, originally in ten books; numerous fragments have been preserved.
  • Pherecydes of Syros
    • Heptamychia
  • Philo of Byblos
    • Phoenician History, a Greek translation of the original Phoenician book attributed to Sanchuniathon. Considerable fragments have been preserved, chiefly by Eusebius in the Praeparatio evangelica (i.9; iv.16).
  • Pliny the Elder
    • History of the German Wars, some quotations survive in Tacitus's Annals and Germania
    • Studiosus, a detailed work on rhetoric
    • Dubii sermonis, in eight books
    • History of his Times, in thirty-one books, also quoted by Tacitus.
    • De jaculatione equestri a military handbook on missiles thrown from horseback.
  • Gaius Asinius Pollio
    • Historiae ('Histories')
    • Epitome by Gaius Asinius Pollio of Tralles
  • Alexander Polyhistor
  • Praxagoras
    • History of Constantine the Great (known from a précis by Photius).
  • Prodicus
    • On Nature
    • On the Nature of Man
    • 'On Propriety of Language'
    • On the Choice of Heracles
  • Protagoras
    • 'On the Gods' (essay)
    • On the Art of Disputation
    • On the Original State of Things
    • On Truth
  • Pytheas of Massalia
    • τὰ περὶ τοῦ Ὠκεανοῦ (ta peri tou Okeanou) 'On the Ocean'
  • Quintilian
    • De Causis Corruptae Eloquentiae (On the Causes of Corrupted Eloquence)
  • Septimius Severus
    • Autobiography
  • Diodorus Siculus
    • Bibliotheca historia (Historical Library). Of 40 books, only books 1–5 and 10–20 are extant.
  • The Hellespontine Sibyl
  • Seneca the Younger
    • Book on signs, 5000 were compiled
  • Socrates
    • Verse versions of Aesop's Fables.
  • Speusippus
    • On Pythagorean Numbers
  • Strabo
    • History
  • Suetonius
    • De Viris Illustribus ('On Famous Men' — in the field of literature), to which belongs: De Illustribus Grammaticis ('Lives Of The Grammarians'), De Claris Rhetoribus ('Lives Of The Rhetoricians'), and Lives Of The Poets. Some fragments exist.
    • Lives of Famous Whores
    • Royal Biographies
    • Roma ('On Rome'), in four parts: Roman Manners & Customs, The Roman Year, The Roman Festivals, and Roman Dress.
    • Greek Games
    • On Public Offices
    • On Cicero’s Republic
    • The Physical Defects of Mankind
    • Methods of Reckoning Time
    • An Essay on Nature
    • Greek Terms of Abuse
    • Grammatical Problems
    • Critical Signs Used in Books
  • Sulla
    • Memoirs, referenced by Plutarch
  • Thales
    • On the Solstice (possible lost work)
    • On the Equinox (possible lost work)
  • Tiberius
    • Autobiography ('brief and sketchy,' per Suetonius
  • Trajan
    • Dacica (or De bello dacico)
  • Varro
    • Saturarum Menippearum libri CL or Menippean Satires in 150 books
    • Antiquitates rerum humanarum et divinarum libri XLI
    • Logistoricon libri LXXVI
    • Hebdomades vel de imaginibus
    • Disciplinarum libri IX
  • Zenobia
    • Epitome of the history of Alexandria and the Orient (according to the Historia Augusta)
  • Zoticus
    • Story of Atlantis, a poem mentioned by Porphyry
  • The work of the Cyclic poets (excluding Homer), specifically:
    • six epics of the Epic Cycle: Cypria, Aethiopis, the Little Iliad, the Iliupersis ('Sack of Troy'), Nostoi ('Returns'), and Telegony.
    • four epics of the Theban Cycle: Oedipodea, Thebaid, Epigoni (epic), and Alcmeonis.
    • other early Greek epics: Titanomachy, Heracleia, Capture of Oechalia, Naupactia, Phocais, Minyas

Unnamed works[edit]

  • Lost plays of Aeschylus. He is believed to have written some 90 plays, of which six plays survive. A seventh play is attributed to him. Fragments of his play Achilles were said to have been discovered in the wrappings of a mummy in the 1990s.[2]
  • Lost plays of Agathon. None of these survive.
  • Lost poems of Alcaeus of Mytilene. Of a reported ten scrolls, there exist only quotes and numerous fragments.
  • Lost choral poems of Alcman. Of six books of choral lyrics that were known (ca. 50–60 hymns), only fragmentary quotations in other Greek authors were known until the discovery of a fragment in 1855, containing approximately 100 verses. In the 1960s, many more fragments were discovered and published from a dig at Oxyrhynchus.
  • Lost poems of Anacreon. Of the five books of lyrical pieces mentioned in the Suda and by Athenaeus, only mere fragments collected from the citations of later writers now exist.
  • Lost works of Anaximander. There are a few extant fragments of his works.
  • Lost works of Apuleius in many genres, including a novel, Hermagoras, as well as poetry, dialogues, hymns, and technical treatises on politics, dendrology, agriculture, medicine, natural history, astronomy, music, and arithmetic.
  • Lost plays of Aristarchus of Tegea. Of 70 pieces, only the titles of three of his plays, with a single line of the text, have survived.
  • Lost plays of Aristophanes. He wrote 40 plays, 11 of which survive.
  • Lost works of Aristotle. It is believed that we have about one third of his original works.[3]
  • Lost work of Aristoxenus. He is said to have written 453 works, dealing with philosophy, ethics and music. His only extant work is Elements of Harmony.
  • Lost works of the historian Arrian.
  • Lost works of Callimachus. Of about 800 works, in verse and prose; only six hymns, 64 epigrams and some fragments survive; a considerable fragment of the epic Hecale, was discovered in the Rainer papyri.
  • Lost works of Chrysippus. Of over 700 written works, none survive, except a few fragments embedded in the works of later authors.
  • Lost works of Cicero. Of his books, six on rhetoric have survived, and parts of seven on philosophy. Books 1–3 of his work De re publica have survived mostly intact, as well as a substantial part of book 6. A dialogue on philosophy called Hortensius, which was highly influential on Augustine of Hippo, is lost. Part of De Natura Deorum is lost.
  • Lost works of Cleopatra including books on medicine, charms, and cosmetics (according to the historian Al-Masudi).
  • Lost works of Clitomachus. According to Diogenes Laërtius, he wrote some 400 books, of which none are extant today, although a few titles are known.
  • Lost plays of Cratinus. Only fragments of his works have been preserved.
  • Lost works of Democritus. He wrote extensively on natural philosophy and ethics, of which little remains.
  • Lost works of Diogenes of Sinope He is reported to have written several books, none of which has survived to the present date. Whether or not these books were actually his writings or attributions are in dispute.
  • Lost works of Diphilus. He is said to have written 100 comedies, the titles of 50 of which are preserved.
  • Lost works of Ennius. Only fragments of his works survive.
  • Lost works of Empedocles. Little of what he wrote survives today.
  • Lost plays of Epicharmus of Kos. He wrote between 35 and 52 comedies, many of which have been lost or exist only in fragments.
  • Lost plays of Euripides. He is believed to have written over 90 plays, 18 of which have survived. Fragments, some substantial, of most other plays also survive.
  • Lost plays of Eupolis. Of the 17 plays attributed to him, only fragments remain.
  • Lost works of Heraclitus. His writings only survive in fragments quoted by other authors.
  • Lost works of Hippasus. Few of his original works now survive.
  • Lost works of Hippias. He is credited with an excellent work on Homer, collections of Greek and foreign literature, and archaeological treatises, but nothing remains except the barest notes.
  • Lost orations of Hyperides. Some 79 speeches were transmitted in his name in antiquity. A codex of his speeches was seen at Buda in 1525 in the library of King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary, but was destroyed by the Turks in 1526. In 2002, Natalie Tchernetska of Trinity College, Cambridge discovered and identified fragments of two speeches of Hyperides that have been considered lost, Against Timandros and Against Diondas. Six other orations survive in whole or part.
  • Lost poems of Ibycus. According to the Suda, he wrote seven books of lyrics.
  • Lost works of Juba II. He wrote a number of books in Greek and Latin on history, natural history, geography, grammar, painting and theatre. Only fragments of his work survive.
  • Lost works of Leucippus. No writings exist which we can attribute to him.
  • Lost works of Lucius Varius Rufus. The author of the poem De morte and the tragedy Thyestes praised by his contemporaries as being on a par with the best Greek poets. Only fragments survive.
  • Lost works of Melissus of Samos. Only fragments preserved in other writers' works exist.
  • Lost plays of Menander. He wrote over a hundred comedies of which one survives. Fragments of a number of his plays survive.
  • Lost poems of Phanocles. He wrote some poems about homosexual relationships among heroes of the mythical tradition of which only one survives, along with a few short fragments.
  • Lost works of Philemon. Of his 97 works, 57 are known to us only as titles and fragments.
  • Lost poetry of Pindar. Of his varied books of poetry, only his victory odes survive in complete form. The rest are known only by quotations in other works or papyrus scraps unearthed in Egypt.
  • Lost plays of Plautus. He wrote approximately 130 plays, of which 21 survive.
  • Lost poems and orations of Pliny the Younger.
  • Rhetorical works of Julius Pollux.
  • There exists a list of more than 60 lost works in many genres by the philosopher Porphyry, including Against the Christians (of which only fragments survive).
  • Lost works of Posidonius. All of his works are now lost. Some fragments exist, as well as titles and subjects of many of his books.[1]
  • Lost works of Proclus. A number of his commentaries on Plato are lost.
  • Lost works of Pyrrhus. He wrote Memoirs and several books on the art of war, all now lost. According to Plutarch, Hannibal was influenced by them and they received praise from Cicero.
  • Lost works of Pythagoras. No texts by him survived.
  • Lost plays of Rhinthon. Of 38 plays, only a few titles and lines have been preserved.
  • Lost poems of Sappho. Only a few full poems and fragments of others survive.
  • Lost poems of Simonides of Ceos. Of his poetry we possess two or three short elegies, several epigrams and about 90 fragments of lyric poetry.
  • Lost plays of Sophocles. Of 123 plays, seven survive, with fragments of others.
  • Lost poems of Sulpicia, who wrote erotic poems of conjugal bliss and was herself the subject of two poems by Martial, who wrote (10.35) that 'All girls who desire to please one man should read Sulpicia. All husbands who desire to please one wife should read Sulpicia.'
  • Lost poems of Stesichorus. Of several long works, significant fragments survive.
  • Lost works of Theodectes. Of his 50 tragedies, we have the names of about 13 and a few unimportant fragments. His treatise on the art of rhetoric and his speeches are lost.
  • Lost works of Theophrastus. Of his 227 books, only a handful survive, including On Plants and On Stones, but On Mining is lost. Fragments of others survive.
  • Lost works of Timon. None of his works survive except where he is quoted by others, mainly Sextus Empiricus.
  • Lost works of Xenophanes. Fragments of his poetry survive only as quotations by later Greek writers.
  • Lost works of Zeno of Elea. None of his works survive intact.
  • Lost works of Zeno of Citium. None of his writings have survived except as fragmentary quotations preserved by later writers.

Ancient Chinese texts[edit]

  • Classic of Music attributed to Confucius.
  • Medical treatise of the renowned physician Hua Tuo (traditional Chinese: 華佗; simplified Chinese: 华陀; pinyin: Huà Tuó) from late Eastern Han. The treatise was traditionally referred to as Qing Nang Shu (traditional Chinese 青囊書; simplified Chinese: 青囊书; pinyin: Qīng Náng Shū), literally Book in the Cyan Bag. When Hua Tuo was sentenced to death after incurring the wrath of Cao Cao, who controlled the Imperial Court, the physician tried to entrust the text to his gaoler. However, the gaoler was afraid of potentially implicating himself and in disappointment, Hua Tuo had the text burnt. Records of the Three Kingdoms Chapter 29, Book of Wei - Technology 《三国志卷二十九·魏书·方技传》
  • Book of Bai Ze (simplified Chinese 白泽图; pinyin: Bái Zé Tú). A guide to the forms and habits of all 11,520 types of supernatural creatures in the world, and how to overcome their hauntings and attacks, as dictated by the mythical creature, Bai Ze to the Yellow Emperor in the 26th century BCE.

Ancient Indian texts[edit]

  • Jaya and Bharata, early versions of the Hindu epic Mahabharata
  • Bārhaspatya-sūtras, the foundational text of the Cārvāka school of philosophy. The text probably dates from the final centuries BC, with only fragmentary quotations of it surviving.
  • Valayapathi, Tamil epic poem, only fragments survive.
  • Kundalakesi, Tamil epic poem, only fragments survive.

Manichaean texts[edit]

  • Arzhang, the holy book of Manichaeism.

Lost Biblical texts[edit]

  • Hexapla, a compilation of the Old Testament by Origen.

Lost texts referenced in the Old Testament[edit]

  • The book referred to at Exodus 17:14. Write this for a memorial in the book and recount it in the hearing of Joshua ...
  • The Book of the Covenant referred to at Exodus 24:7
  • The Book of the Wars of the Lord (Numbers 21:14)

Lost works referenced in the New Testament[edit]

Lost works pertaining to Jesus[edit]

(These works are generally 2nd century and later; some would be considered reflective of proto-orthodox Christianity, and others would be heterodox.)

2nd century[edit]

  • Hegesippus' Hypomnemata (Memoirs) in five books, and a history of the Christian church.
  • The Gospel of the Lord compiled by Marcion of Sinope to support his interpretation of Christianity. Marcion's writings were suppressed but a portion of them have been recreated from the works that were used to denounce them.
  • Papias' Exposition of the Oracles of the Lord in five books, mentioned by Eusebius of Caesarea.

3rd century[edit]

  • Various works of Tertullian. Some fifteen works in Latin or Greek are lost, some as recently as the 9th century (De Paradiso, De superstitione saeculi, De carne et anima were all extant in the now damaged Codex Agobardinus in 814 AD).

4th century[edit]

  • Praeparatio Ecclesiastica,[4] and Demonstratio Ecclesiastica[5] by Eusebius of Caesarea

5th century[edit]

  • Sozomen's history of the Christian church, from the Ascension of Jesus to the defeat of Licinius in 323, in twelve books.

6th century[edit]

  • Cassiodorus's Gothic History, which survives only in a much shorter abridgement, the Getica of Jordanes

7th century[edit]

  • The Kakinomoto no Ason Hitomaro Kashū is lost as a standalone work, although an unknown portion of it was preserved as part of the later Man'yōshū.

Anglo-Saxon works[edit]

  • The Battle of Maldon, a heroic poem of which only 325 lines in the middle survive.
  • Waldere, an epic which is now lost apart from two short fragments.
  • The Finnesburg Fragment, comprising 50 lines from an otherwise lost poem.
  • Bede's translation of John's Gospel, c. 735.

12th century[edit]

  • Three works by Gerald of Wales:
    • Vita sancti Karadoci ('Life of St Caradoc')
    • De fidei fructu fideique defectu
    • Cambriae mappa
  • A romance on the subject of King Mark and Iseult by Chrétien de Troyes.
  • The Old FrenchromancesAndré de France and Gui d'Excideuil
  • Skjöldunga saga, a Norse saga on the legendary Danish dynasty of the Skjöldungs, composed c. 1180–1200
  • Gauks saga Trandilssonar, a lost saga of the Icelanders.[6]
  • Life of Despot Stefan Lazarević is a work first written in 1166 but the only surviving chronicle is from 1431 by Constantine of Kostenets who includes a genealogy of the Nemanjić dynasty up until Despot Stefan Lazarević.
  • William of Tyre's Gesta orientalium principum, a history of the Islamic world[7]

14th century[edit]

  • Inventio Fortunata. A 14th-century description of the geography of the North Pole.
  • Itinerarium. A geography book by Jacobus Cnoyen of 's-Hertogenbosch, cited by Gerardus Mercator
  • Res gestae Arturi britanni (The Deeds of Arthur of Britain). A book cited by Jacobus Cnoyen
  • Of the Wreched Engendrynge of Mankynde, Origenes upon the Maudeleyne, and The book of the Leoun. Three works by Geoffrey Chaucer.
  • The Coventry Mystery Plays, a cycle of which only two plays survive.
  • Carostavnik or Rodoslov. Old Serbian biography enters a new—historiographic or even chronographic—phase with the appearance of the so-called Vita, better yet 'Lives of Serbian Kings and Archbishops' by Danilo II, Serbian Archbishop formerly Abbot of the Hilandar Monastery and his successors, most of whom remained anonymous.
  • Vrhobreznica Chronicle originates in 1371 but the work is not transcribed until two and half centuries later by a writer named Gavrilo, a hermit, who collected earlier annals in his redaction composed in 1650 at the Vrhobreznica monastery. Part of a manuscript archived as Prague Museum #29 (together with Vrhobreznica Geneaology).
  • Koporin Chronicle – a 1371 chronicle transcribed in 1453 by Damjan, a deacon, who also wrote the annals on the order of Archbishop of Zeta, Josif, at the Koporin monastery.
  • Studenica Chronicle – a 14th century chronicle from 1350–1400. Oldest survived copy in a 16th-century manuscript, together with a younger annals.
  • Cetinje Chronicle covers events from 14th century until the end of 16th century, though the manuscript collection is from the end of the 16th century.

15th century[edit]

  • Yongle Encyclopedia (永乐大典; 永樂大典; Yǒnglè Dàdiǎn; 'The Great Canon [or Vast Documents] of the Yongle Era'). It was one of the world's earliest, and the then-largest, encyclopaedia commissioned by the Yongle Emperor of China's Ming dynasty in 1403, completed about 1408. About 400 volumes (less than 4%) of a 16th-century manuscript set survive today.[8]
  • François Villon's poem 'The Romance of the Devil's Fart.'

16th century[edit]

  • Nigramansir. A Moral Interlude and a Pithy. by John Skelton. Printed 1504. A copy seen in 1759 in Chichester has since vanished.
  • Ur-Hamlet. An earlier version of the play Hamlet predating William Shakespeare's version, author believed to be Thomas Kyd.
  • Love's Labour's Won, play by William Shakespeare.
  • The Ocean to Cynthia. A poem by Sir Walter Raleigh of which only fragments are known.
  • Luís de Camões' philosophic work The Parnasum of Luís Vaz is lost.
  • The Isle of Dogs (1597), a play by Thomas Nashe and Ben Jonson.
  • Phaethon a play by Thomas Dekker, mentioned in Philip Henslowe's diary, 1597.
  • Hot Anger Soon Cold a play by Henry Chettle, Henry Porter and Ben Jonson; mentioned in Philip Henslowe's diary, August 1598.
  • The Stepmother's Tragedy, a play by Henry Chettle and Thomas Dekker; mentioned in Philip Henslowe's diary, August 1599.
  • Black Bateman of the North, Part II, a play by Henry Chettle and Robert Wilson; mentioned in Henslowe's diary in April 1598.
  • Only four Maya codices survived the Spanish conquest; most were destroyed by conquistadors or the Roman Catholic Church.

17th century[edit]

  • The History of Cardenio, play by William Shakespeare and John Fletcher (1613)
  • Keep the Widow Waking, play by John Ford and John Webster (1624)
  • El Manuscrito de Astorga, written by one Juan de Bergara in 1624. Dealt with fly fishing, has been in the possession of Francisco Franco.
  • Claudio Monteverdi composed at least eighteen operas, but only three (L'Orfeo, L'incoronazione di Poppea, and Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria) and the famous aria, Lamento, from his second opera L'Arianna have survived.
  • Lost haikus of Ihara Saikaku.
  • Jean Racine's first play, Amasie (1660) is lost.
  • John Milton wrote nearly two acts of a tragedy called Adam Unparadiz'd, which was then lost.[9]
  • Lost works of Molière:
    • A translation of De Rerum Natura by Lucretius.
    • Le Docteur amoureux (play, 1658)
    • Gros-René, petit enfant (play, 1659)
    • Le Docteur Pédant (play, 1660)
    • Les Trois Docteurs (play, ca. 1660)
    • Gorgibus dans le sac (play, 1661)
    • Le Fagotier (play, 1661)
    • Le Fin Lourdaut (play attributed, 1668)
  • Lost works of Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh include;
    • Ughdair Ereann. Fragments survive
  • Works by Buhurizade Mustafa Itri, a major Ottoman musician, composer, singer and poet, who is known to have composed more than a thousand works, only forty of which survive to the present.

18th century[edit]

  • All poems and literary works by Carlo Gimach, except for the cantata Applauso Genetliaco, are believed to be lost.[10]
  • Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's journal was burnt by her daughter on the grounds that it contained much scandal and satire.
  • Edward Gibbon burned the manuscript of his History of the Liberty of the Swiss.
  • Adam Smith had most of his manuscripts destroyed shortly before his death. In his last years he had been working on two major treatises, one on the theory and history of law and one on the sciences and arts. The posthumously published Essays on Philosophical Subjects (1795) probably contain parts of what would have been the latter treatise.[11]
  • The Green-Room Squabble or a Battle Royal between the Queen of Babylon and the Daughter of Darius, a 1756 play by Samuel Foote, is lost.
  • Numerous works by J. S. Bach, notably at least two large-scale Passions and many cantatas (see List of Bach cantatas) are lost.
  • Mozart's Cello Concerto in F and Trumpet Concerto are lost.
  • Beethoven's 1793 'Ode to Joy', which was later incorporated into his ninth Symphony
  • Haydn's 'Double Bass Concerto,' of which only the first two measures survive; the rest were burned and destroyed. Supposedly a copy of it may exist somewhere, according to many different speculations.
  • Personal letters between George Washington and his wife Martha Washington; all but three destroyed by Mrs. Washington after his death in 1799.

19th century[edit]

  • Memoirs of Lord Byron, destroyed by his literary executors led by John Murray on 17 May 1824. The decision to destroy Byron's manuscript journals, which was opposed only by Thomas Moore, was made in order to protect his reputation. The two volumes of memoirs were dismembered and burnt in the fireplace at Murray's office.
  • The Scented Garden by Sir Richard Francis Burton, a manuscript of a new translation from Arabic of The Perfumed Garden, was burned by his widow, Lady Isabel Burton née Arundel, along with other papers.
  • A large number of manuscripts and longer poems by William Blake were burnt soon after his death by Mr. Frederick Tatham.
  • Parts two and three of Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol, burned by Gogol at the instigation of the priest Father Matthew Konstantinovskii.
  • At least four complete volumes and around seven pages of text are missing from Lewis Carroll's thirteen diaries, destroyed by his family for reasons frequently debated.
  • The son of the Marquis de Sade had all of de Sade's unpublished manuscripts burned after de Sade's death in 1814; this included the immense multi-volume work Les Journées de Florbelle.
  • A large section of the manuscript for Mary Shelley's Lodore was lost in the mail to the publisher, and Shelley was forced to rewrite it.
  • Franz Liszt claimed to have written a manual of piano technique for the Geneva Conservatoire. Many early works, including three sonatas and two concertos for piano, are also believed to be lost due to the want of a fixed domicile.
  • Gerard Manley Hopkins burned all his early poetry on entering the priesthood.
  • In the Suspiria de Profundis of Thomas De Quincey, 18 of 32 pieces have not survived.
  • Margaret Fuller's manuscript on the history of the 1849 Roman Republic was lost in the 1850 shipwreck in which Fuller herself, her husband and her child perished. In Fuller's own estimation, as well as of others who saw it, this work, based on her first-hand experience in Rome, might have been her most important work.
  • A schoolmate of Arthur Rimbaud confessed he lost a notebook of poems by the famous poet. His 'La Chasse spirituelle,' which Verlaine claimed was his masterpiece, is also lost forever.
  • The first draft of Thomas Carlyle's The French Revolution: A History was sent to John Stuart Mill, whose maid mistakenly burned it, forcing Carlyle to rewrite it from scratch.
  • Joseph Smith's translation of the Book of Lehi from the MormonGolden Plates was either hidden, destroyed, or modified by Lucy Harris, the wife of transcriber Martin Harris. Whatever their fate, the pages were not returned to Joseph Smith and declared 'lost.' Smith did not recreate the translation.
  • Letters written by Felix Mendelssohn seem to suggest that he wrote a cello concerto. It was supposedly lost when the only copy of it fell off the coach that was carrying it to its dedicatee.
  • Various works of Johannes Brahms. Brahms was a perfectionist who destroyed many of his own early works, including a violin sonata. He claimed once to have destroyed twenty string quartets before he issued his official First in 1873.
  • Isle of the Cross, Herman Melville's followup to the unsuccessful Pierre was rejected by his publishers and has subsequently been lost.
  • Robert Louis Stevenson burned his first completed draft of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde after his wife criticized the work. Stevenson wrote and published a revised version.
  • Abraham Lincoln's Lost Speech, given on May 29, 1856, in Bloomington, Illinois. Traditionally regarded as lost because it was so engaging that reporters neglected to take notes, the speech is believed to have been an impassioned condemnation of slavery. It is possible the text was deliberately 'lost' due to its controversial content.
  • L. Frank Baum's theatre in Richburg, New York burned to the ground. Among the manuscripts of Baum's original plays known to have been lost are The Mackrummins, Matches (which was being performed the night of the fire), The Queen of Killarney, Kilmourne, or O'Connor's Dream, and the complete musical score for The Maid of Arran, which survives only in commercial song sheets, which include six of the eight songs and no instrumental music.
  • Leon Trotsky describes the loss of an unfinished play manuscript (a collaboration with Sokolovsky) in his My Life, end of chapter 6 (sometime between 1896 and 1898).[12]
  • The Poor Man and the Lady. Thomas Hardy's first novel (1867) was never published. After rejection by several publishers, he destroyed the manuscript.
  • George Gissing abandoned many novels and destroyed the incomplete manuscripts. He also completed at least three novels which went unpublished and have been lost.[13]
  • The music from Gilbert and Sullivan's first operetta Thespis is lost, except for one chorus that was repeated in The Pirates of Penzance, and one song. Ballet music from the operetta was discovered in 1990.
  • John P. Marquand wrote an early novel called Yellow Ivory in collaboration with his friend W.A. Macdonald.[14]
  • During the many years of his career, Mark Twain produced a vast number of pieces, of which a considerable part, especially in his earlier years, was published in obscure newspapers under a great variety of pen names, or not published at all. Joe Goodman, who had been Twain's editor when he worked at the Virginia City, Nevada, 'Territorial Enterprise', declared in 1900 that Twain wrote some of the best material of his life during his 'Western years' in the late 1860s, but most of it was lost. [2] In addition, many of Twain's speeches and lectures have been lost or were never written down. Researchers continue to seek this material, some of which was rediscovered as recently as 1995.
  • Although frequently referenced in the Oxford English Dictionary and traceable in several catalogues of libraries and booksellers, no copy of the 1852 book Meanderings of Memory by Nightlark could be tracked down.
  • The Reverend Francis Kilvert's diaries were edited and censored, possibly by his widow, after his death in 1879. In the 1930s the surviving diaries were passed on to William Plomer, who transcribed them, before returning the originals to Kilvert's closest living relative, a niece, who destroyed most of the manuscripts. Plomer's own transcription was destroyed in the Blitz. He only learned of the originals' destruction when he planned to publish a complete edition in the 1950s.

20th century[edit]

  • The only known copies of the score of the 1903 Scott Joplin opera A Guest of Honor were believed to be confiscated during a dispute between Joplin and the owner of a theatrical boarding house. The score was never recovered by Joplin and it is believed to be lost.
  • James Joyce's play A Brilliant Career (which he burned) and the first half of his novel Stephen Hero. His grandson Stephen later burned Nora Joyce's letters to James as well.
  • Various parts of Daniel Paul Schreber's 'Memoirs of My Nervous Illness' (original German title 'Denkwürdigkeiten eines Nervenkranken') (1903) were destroyed by his wife and doctor Flesching for protecting his reputation, which was mentioned by Sigmund Freud as highly important in his essay 'The Schreber Case' (1911).
  • L. Frank Baum wrote four novels for adults that were never published and disappeared: Our Married Life and Johnson (1912), The Mystery of Bonita (1914), and Molly Oodle (1915). Baum's son claimed that Baum's wife burned these, but this was after being cut out of her will. Evidence that Baum's publisher received these manuscripts survives. Also lost are Baum's 1904 short stories 'Mr. Rumple's Chill' and 'Bess of the Movies', as well as his early plays Kilmourne, or O'Connor's Dream (opened April 4, 1883) and The Queen of Killarney (1883).
  • In 1907, August Strindberg destroyed a play, The Bleeding Hand, immediately after writing it. He was in a bad mood at the time and commented in a letter that the piece was unusually harsh, even for him.
  • The French composer Albéric Magnard's house was set on fire by German soldiers in 1914. The fire destroyed Magnard's unpublished scores, such as the orchestral score of his early opera Yolande, the orchestral score of Guercoeur (the piano reduction had been published, and the orchestral score of the second act was extant) and a more recent song cycle.
  • 'Text I' of Seven Pillars of Wisdom, a 250,000-word manuscript by T. E. Lawrence lost at Reading railway station in December 1919.
  • The Irish Public Records Office in Dublin was burned by the IRA in 1922 during the Irish Civil War, destroying 1,000 years of state and religious archives.
  • In 1922, a suitcase with almost all of Ernest Hemingway's work to date was stolen from a train compartment at the Gare de Lyon in Paris, from his wife. It included a partial World War I novel.
  • The novels Tobold and Theodor by Robert Walser are lost, possibly destroyed by the author, as is a third, unnamed novel. (1910–1921)
  • Jean Sibelius's 8th Symphony, which he destroyed after many years' work on it, apparently fearing it would be inferior to his 7th.
  • The original version of Ultramarine by Malcolm Lowry was stolen from his publisher's car in 1932, and the author had to reconstruct it.
  • Yogananda's Autobiography of a Yogi quotes extensively from Richard Wright's travel diaries in 1935/6. Following Wright's death they have become 'lost'.
  • In a letter of 1938, George Orwell mentions an 'anti-war pamphlet' that he had written earlier that year, but could not get published. Not even the title of this pamphlet is known today. With the beginning of World War II Orwell's views on pacifism were to change radically, so he may well have destroyed the manuscript.
  • Lost papers and a possible unfinished novel by Isaac Babel, confiscated by the NKVD, May 1939. [3]
  • Manuscript of Efebos, a novel by Karol Szymanowski, destroyed in bombing of Warsaw, 1939.
  • Constant Lambert's ballet Horoscope was being performed in the Netherlands in 1940, and the unpublished full score had to be left behind when German forces invaded that country. It was never recovered, and only nine individual numbers remain.
  • Until 2015 the German-language original of Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon was thought to have been lost and only the English translation by Daphne Hardy had survived.[15]
  • Five volumes of poetry and a drama, all in manuscript, by Saint-John Perse were destroyed at his house outside Paris soon after he had gone into exile in the summer of 1940. The diplomat Alexis Léger (Perse's real name) was a well-known and uncompromising anti-Nazi and his house was raided by German troops. The works had been written during his diplomat years, but Perse had decided not to publish any new writing until he had retired from diplomacy.
  • Walter Benjamin had a completed manuscript in his suitcase when he fled France and arrest by the Nazis in the summer of 1940. He committed suicide in Portbou, Spain on September 26, 1940 and the suitcase and its contents disappeared.
  • In 1940 The Magnet, a popular British Boy's paper, had to cease publication due to WWII paper shortage. At the time, at least four issues are known to have been already completed, but were never published, and were irrevocably lost during the war years.
  • There are reports that Bruno Schulz worked on a novel called The Messiah, but no trace of this manuscript survived his death (1942).
  • In 1944, just before the Warsaw Uprising, the Polish composer Andrzej Panufnik fled Warsaw, leaving all his manuscripts behind. When he returned to his apartment in 1945, he discovered that his entire oeuvre had survived the widespread destruction, but had then been burnt on a bonfire by his landlady. The lost works included two symphonies and other orchestral works, as well as vocal and chamber compositions; Panufnik subsequently reconstructed some of them.[16]
  • The novel In Ballast to the White Sea by Malcolm Lowry, lost in a fire in 1945.[17]
  • The novel Wanderers of Night and poems of Daniil Andreev were destroyed in 1947 as 'anti-Soviet literature' by the MGB.
  • Some pages of William Burroughs's original version of Naked Lunch were stolen.
  • Three early, unpublished novels by Philip K. Dick written in the 1950s are no longer extant: A Time for George Stavros, Pilgrim on the Hill, and Nicholas and the Higs.
  • The manuscript for Sylvia Plath's unfinished second novel, provisionally titled Double Exposure, or Double Take, written 1962–63, disappeared some time before 1970.
  • There were known audio recordings of early performances by the Beatles, such as a song which featured Ringo Starr on drums before he was an 'official' member. These tapes are thought to have been taped over or destroyed.
  • Several pages of the original screenplay for Werner Herzog's Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes were reportedly thrown out of the window of a bus after one of his football teammates threw up on them.
  • The screenplay for the proposed Dean Stockwell-Herb Berman film After the Gold Rush is reportedly lost.
  • Diaries of Philip Larkin - burnt at his request after his death on 2 December 1985. Other private papers were kept, contrary to his instructions.
  • Assault! Human, a 1972 tokusatsu series co-produced by Nippon TV and Toho, was lost when Nippon TV accidentally overwrote the master tapes in the early 1980s. While the suits created for the series were used by Toho in Go! Godman and its follow-up, Go! Greenman, no complete episodes of Assault! Human are known to exist, save for several short clips that were found on VHS and Betamax tapes. In addition to the aforementioned suits and footage fragments, supplementary materials, such as magazine articles, merchandise, reference books and the show’s theme song, have also survived.
  • Hundreds of works by the Norwegian composer and pianist Geirr Tveitt were lost due to a house fire in 1970, when his house burned to the ground. Overall, about 4/5 of Tveitt's production are now gone from that fire, which included symphonies, concertos, choral works, operas, and many piano works. Fortunately some copies, parts, and recordings of some of the works existed elsewhere.
  • Jacob M. Appel's first novel manuscript, Paste and Cover, was in the trunk of an automobile that was stolen in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1998. The vehicle was recovered, but the manuscript was not.[18]
  • Terry Pratchett's unfinished works were destroyed after his death fulfilling his last will.

Lost literary collections[edit]

  • Chinese emperor Qin Shi Huang (3rd century BCE) had most previously-existing books burned when he consolidated his power. See Burning of books and burying of scholars.
  • The Library of Alexandria, the largest library in existence during antiquity, was destroyed at some point in time between the Roman and Muslim conquests of Alexandria.
  • Aztec emperor Itzcoatl (ruled 1427/8-1440) ordered the burning of all historical Aztec codices in an effort to develop a state-sanctioned Aztec history and mythology.
  • During the Dissolution of the Monasteries, many monastic libraries were destroyed. Worcester Abbey had 600 books at the time of the dissolution. Only six of them have survived intact to the present day. At the abbey of the Augustinian Friars at York, a library of 646 volumes was destroyed, leaving only three surviving books. Some books were destroyed for their precious bindings, others were sold off by the cartload, including irreplaceable early English works. It is believed that many of the earliest Anglo-Saxon manuscripts were lost at this time.
'A great nombre of them whych purchased those supertycyous mansyons, resrved of those lybrarye bokes, some to serve theyr jakes [i.e., as toilet paper], some to scoure candelstyckes, and some to rubbe their bootes. Some they solde to the grossers and soapsellers...' — John Bale, 1549

Life And Works Of Aristotle Plato

  • Many works of Anglo-Saxon literature, mostly unique and unpublished, were burned when a fire broke out in the Cotton library at Ashburnham House on 23 October 1731. Luckily, the only surviving manuscript of Beowulf survived the fire and was printed for the first time in 1815.
  • In 1193, the Nalanda University was sacked by[19]Bakhtiyar Khilji.[20] The burning of the library continued for several months and 'smoke from the burning manuscripts hung for days like a dark pall over the low hills.'[21]
  • The sacking of Baghdad by the Mongols.
  • At least 27 Maya codices were ceremonially destroyed by Diego de Landa (1524–1579), bishop of Yucatán, on 12 July 1562.
  • The library of the Hanlin Academy, containing irreplaceable ancient Chinese manuscripts, was mostly destroyed in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion.[22]
  • During the 2014 unrest in Bosnia and Herzegovina, sections of the National Archives in Sarajevo were set on fire. Large numbers of historical documents were lost, many of them dating from the 1878-1918 Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the interwar period, and the 1941-1945 rule of the Independent State of Croatia. About 15,000 files from the 1996-2003 Human Rights Chamber for Bosnia and Herzegovina were also destroyed.

Rediscovered works[edit]

  • Gospel of Judas, a fragmentary Copticcodex rediscovered and translated, 2006[23][24]
  • W. A. Mozart and Antonio Salieri are known to have composed together a cantata for voice and piano called Per la ricuperata salute di Ofelia which was celebrating the return to stage of the singer Nancy Storace, and which has been lost, although it had been printed by Artaria in 1785.[25] The music had been considered lost until November 2015, when German musicologist and composer Timo Jouko Herrmann identified the score while searching for music by one of Salieri's ostensible pupils, Antonio Casimir Cartellieri, in the archives of the Czech Museum of Music in Prague.[26]
  • The 120 Days of Sodom, written by the Marquis de Sade in the Bastille prison in 1785, was considered lost by its author after the storming and looting of 1789. It was rediscovered in the walls of his cell and published in 1904.
  • Antonín Dvořák composed his Symphony No. 1 in 1865. It was subsequently lost, which the composer believed to be final and irreversible. It was only found again in 1923, twenty years after Dvorak's death, and performed for the first time in 1936.
  • A Tale of Kitty in Boots by Beatrix Potter, the handwritten manuscripts for this story were found in school notebooks, including a few illustrations. She intended to finish the book, but was interrupted by wars and marriage and farming. It was found nearly 100 years later and published for the first time in September 2016.[27]

Lost works in popular culture[edit]

  • Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose features a murder mystery whose solution hinges on the contents of Aristotle's lost second book of Poetics (dealing with comedy).
  • Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code builds its central theme around a fictional account of the apocryphal and partially lost Gnostic Gospels.
  • Joe Haldeman's science fiction novel The Hemingway Hoax centers on a suitcase with writings by Ernest Hemingway which was stolen in 1922 at the Gare de Lyon in Paris.
  • 'The Shakespeare Code' is a Doctor Who episode that explains the fate of Love's Labour's Won.
  • H.P. Lovecraft wrote that all the original Arabic copies of The Necronomicon (Al Azif) have been destroyed, as well as the Arabic to Greek translations. Only five Greek to Latin translations are held by libraries, though copies may exist in private collections.[28]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Aristotle's Monograph On the Pythagoreans
  2. ^'Play revived using mummy extracts'. BBC News. 14 November 2003. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  3. ^Jonathan Barnes, 'Life and Work' in The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle (1995), p. 9.
  4. ^Roger Pearse (2002-07-03). 'Photius, Bibliotheca or Myriobiblion (Cod. 1–165, Tr. Freese)'. Tertullian.org. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  5. ^Roger Pearse (2002-07-03). 'Photius, Bibliotheca or Myriobiblion (Cod. 1–165, Tr. Freese)'. Tertullian.org. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  6. ^Margaret Clunies Ross, The Cambridge Introduction to the Old Norse-Icelandic Saga, Cambridge University Press, 2010, p. 144.
  7. ^Peter W. Edbury and John G. Rowe, William of Tyre: Historian of the Latin East, Cambridge University Press, 1988, p. 23–24.
  8. ^'Yongle dadian'. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  9. ^Asimov, Eric. 'The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia'. International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  10. ^Ellul, Michael (1986). 'Carlo Gimach (1651–1730) – Architect and Poet'(PDF). Proceedings of History Week. Historical Society of Malta: 37–38. Archived(PDF) from the original on 4 August 2017.
  11. ^'Biography of Adam Smith (1723–1790)'. rug.nl.
  12. ^'Leon Trotsky: My Life (6. The Break)'. Marxists.org. 2007-02-06. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  13. ^Paul Delany, George Gissing: A Life (2008).
  14. ^Writers and writing - Robert Van Gelder - Google Boeken. Books.google.com. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  15. ^Scammell, Michael (7 April 2016). 'A Different 'Darkness at Noon''. The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  16. ^Panufnik, Andrzej (1987). Composing Myself. London: Methuen. ISBN0-413-58880-7.
  17. ^'Literature Reference: American Literature, English Literature, Classics & Modern Fiction'. jrank.org.
  18. ^Appel, JM. Phoning Home, University of South Carolina Press, 2014
  19. ^Allen, Charles (2002). The Buddha and the Sahibs. London: John Murray.
  20. ^Scott, David (May 1995). 'Buddhism and Islam: Past to Present Encounters and Interfaith Lessons'. Numen. 42 (2): 141. doi:10.1163/1568527952598657. JSTOR3270172.
  21. ^Gertrude Emerson Sen (1964). The Story of Early Indian Civilization. Orient Longmans.
  22. ^'Destruction Of Chinese Books In The Peking Siege Of 1900 - 62nd IFLA General Conference'. Ifla.org. Archived from the original on 2008-09-19. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  23. ^Wilford, John Noble; Laurie Goodstein (April 6, 2006). ''Gospel of Judas' Surfaces After 1,700 Years'. The New York Times. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  24. ^'View the Gospel of Judas Interactive Document'. National Geographic Society. Archived from the original on April 8, 2006. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  25. ^'Mozart i Salieri van escriure junts una cantata'. El Periódico de Catalunya. January 22, 2016. Retrieved January 25, 2016.
  26. ^Muller, R., and Kahn, M., 'Czech musician performs long-lost Mozart score for first time', Reuters, Feb. 16, 2016.
  27. ^Strickland, Ashley (September 6, 2016). 'Discovered Beatrix Potter Tale, Kitty in Boots, releases'. CNN. Retrieved December 3, 2016.
  28. ^The History of the Necronomicon

Further reading[edit]

  • Browne, Thomas. Musaeum Clausum or Bibliotheca Abscondita (published posthumously in 1683)
  • Deuel, Leo. Testaments of Time: The Search for Lost Manuscripts and Records (New York: Knopf, 1965)
  • Dudbridge, Glen. Lost Books of Medieval China (London: The British Library, 2000)
  • Kelly, Stuart. The Book of Lost Books (Viking, 2005) ISBN0-670-91499-1
  • Peter, Hermann. Historicorum Romanorum reliquiae (2 vols., B.G. Teubner, Leipzig, 1870, 2nd ed. 1914–16)
  • Wilson. R. M. The Lost Literature of Medieval England (London: Methuen, 1952)

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lost_work&oldid=898444383'
Part of a series on the
Corpus Aristotelicum
Logic (Organon)

  • Prior Analytics

  • Topics
Natural philosophy (physics)
  • On the Universe*
  • On Breath*
  • On Colors*
  • On Things Heard*
  • Physiognomonics*
  • On Plants*
  • On Marvellous Things Heard*
  • Mechanics†
  • Problems†
  • On Indivisible Lines*
  • The Situations and Names of Winds*
  • On Melissus, Xenophanes, and Gorgias*
Metaphysics
  • Magna Moralia†
  • On Virtues and Vices*
  • Economics†
  • Rhetoric
  • Poetics
  • Rhetoric to Alexander*
  • Fragments†

[*]: Generally agreed to be spurious

[†]: Authenticity disputed
The end of Sophistical Refutations and beginning of Physics on page 184 of Bekker's 1831 edition.

The Corpus Aristotelicum is the collection of Aristotle's works that have survived from antiquity through medieval manuscript transmission. These texts, as opposed to Aristotle's lost works, are technical philosophical treatises from within Aristotle's school. Reference to them is made according to the organization of Immanuel Bekker's nineteenth-century edition, which in turn is based on ancient classifications of these works.

  • 1Overview of the extant works
  • 4Aristotelian works lacking Bekker numbers
  • 5References

Overview of the extant works[edit]

The extant works of Aristotle are broken down according to the five categories in the Corpus Aristotelicum. Not all of these works are considered genuine, but differ with respect to their connection to Aristotle, his associates and his views. Some are regarded by most scholars as products of Aristotle's 'school' and compiled under his direction or supervision. (The Constitution of the Athenians, the only major modern addition to the Corpus Aristotelicum, has also been so regarded.) Other works, such as On Colors, may have been products of Aristotle's successors at the Lyceum, e.g., Theophrastus and Strato of Lampsacus. Still others acquired Aristotle's name through similarities in doctrine or content, such as the De Plantis, possibly by Nicolaus of Damascus. A final category, omitted here, includes medieval palmistries, astrological and magical texts whose connection to Aristotle is purely fanciful and self-promotional.

In several of the treatises, there are references to other works in the corpus. Based on such references, some scholars have suggested a possible chronological order for a number of Aristotle's writings. W.D. Ross, for instance, suggested the following broad chronology (which of course leaves out much): Categories, Topics, Sophistici Elenchi, Analytics, Metaphysics Δ, the physical works, the Ethics, and the rest of the Metaphysics.[1] Many modern scholars, however, based simply on lack of evidence, are skeptical of such attempts to determine the chronological order of Aristotle's writings.[2]

Exoteric and esoteric[edit]

Complete works of aristotle

According to a distinction that originates with Aristotle himself, his writings are divisible into two groups: the 'exoteric' and the 'esoteric'.[3] Most scholars have understood this as a distinction between works Aristotle intended for the public (exoteric), and the more technical works intended for use within the Lyceum course / school (esoteric).[4] Modern scholars commonly assume these latter to be Aristotle's own (unpolished) lecture notes (or in some cases possible notes by his students).[5] However, one classic scholar offers an alternative interpretation. The 5th century neoplatonistAmmonius Hermiae writes that Aristotle's writing style is deliberately obscurantist so that 'good people may for that reason stretch their mind even more, whereas empty minds that are lost through carelessness will be put to flight by the obscurity when they encounter sentences like these.'[6]

Bekker numbers[edit]

Bekker numbers, the standard form of reference to works in the Corpus Aristotelicum, are based on the page numbers used in the Prussian Academy of Sciences edition of the complete works of Aristotle (Aristotelis Opera edidit Academia Regia Borussica, Berlin, 1831–1870). They take their name from the editor of that edition, the classical philologistAugust Immanuel Bekker (1785–1871).

Aristotle's works by Bekker numbers[edit]

The following list gives the Bekker numbers that are used to give references to Aristotle's works; all of Aristotle's works are listed, except for the Constitution of the Athenians, which was discovered after Bekker's edition was published, and the fragments.

The titles are given in accordance with the standard set by the Revised Oxford Translation.[7] Latin titles, still often used by scholars, are also given.

Key
[*]
Strikethrough
Authenticity disputed.
Generally agreed to be spurious.
Bekker
number
WorkLatin name
Logic
Organon
1aCategoriesCategoriae
16aOn InterpretationDe Interpretatione
24aPrior AnalyticsAnalytica Priora
71aPosterior AnalyticsAnalytica Posteriora
100aTopicsTopica
164aSophistical RefutationsDe Sophisticis Elenchis
Physics(natural philosophy)
184aPhysicsPhysica
268aOn the HeavensDe Caelo
314aOn Generation and CorruptionDe Generatione et Corruptione
338aMeteorologyMeteorologica
391aOn the UniverseDe Mundo
402aOn the SoulDe Anima
Parva Naturalia('Little Physical Treatises')
436aSense and SensibiliaDe Sensu et Sensibilibus
449bOn MemoryDe Memoria et Reminiscentia
453bOn SleepDe Somno et Vigilia
458aOn DreamsDe Insomniis
462bOn Divination in SleepDe Divinatione per Somnum
464bOn Length and Shortness
of Life
De Longitudine et Brevitate Vitae
467bOn Youth, Old Age, Life
and Death, and Respiration
De Juventute et Senectute, De
Vita et Morte, De Respiratione
481aOn BreathDe Spiritu
486aHistory of AnimalsHistoria Animalium
639aParts of AnimalsDe Partibus Animalium
698aMovement of AnimalsDe Motu Animalium
704aProgression of AnimalsDe Incessu Animalium
715aGeneration of AnimalsDe Generatione Animalium
791aOn ColorsDe Coloribus
800aOn Things HeardDe audibilibus
805aPhysiognomonicsPhysiognomonica
815aOn PlantsDe Plantis
830aOn Marvellous Things HeardDe mirabilibus auscultationibus
847aMechanicsMechanica
859aProblems*Problemata*
968aOn Indivisible LinesDe Lineis Insecabilibus
973aThe Situations and Names
of Winds
Ventorum Situs
974aOn Melissus, Xenophanes,
and Gorgias
Metaphysics
980aMetaphysicsMetaphysica
Ethics and politics
1094aNicomachean EthicsEthica Nicomachea
1181aGreat Ethics*Magna Moralia*
1214aEudemian EthicsEthica Eudemia
1249aOn Virtues and VicesDe Virtutibus et Vitiis Libellus
1252aPoliticsPolitica
1343aEconomics*Oeconomica*
Rhetoric and poetics
1354aRhetoricArs Rhetorica
1420aRhetoric to AlexanderRhetorica ad Alexandrum
1447aPoeticsArs Poetica

Aristotelian works lacking Bekker numbers[edit]

Constitution of the Athenians[edit]

The Constitution of the Athenians (Greek, Athenaiōn Politeia; Latin, Atheniensium Respublica) was not included in Bekker's edition because it was first edited in 1891 from papyrus rolls acquired in 1890 by the British Museum. The standard reference to it is by section (and subsection) numbers.

Fragments[edit]

Surviving fragments of the many lost works of Aristotle were included in the fifth volume of Bekker's edition, edited by Valentin Rose. These are not cited by Bekker numbers, however, but according to fragment numbers. Rose's first edition of the fragments of Aristotle was Aristoteles Pseudepigraphus (1863). As the title suggests, Rose considered these all to be spurious. The numeration of the fragments in a revised edition by Rose, published in the Teubner series, Aristotelis qui ferebantur librorum fragmenta, Leipzig, 1886, is still commonly used (indicated by R3), although there is a more current edition with a different numeration by Olof Gigon (published in 1987 as a new vol. 3 in Walter de Gruyter's reprint of the Bekker edition), and a new de Gruyter edition by Eckart Schütrumpf is in preparation.[8]

For a selection of the fragments in English translation, see W. D. Ross, Select Fragments (Oxford 1952), and Jonathan Barnes (ed.), The Complete Works of Aristotle: The Revised Oxford Translation, vol. 2, Princeton 1984, pp. 2384–2465. A new translation exists of the fragments of Aristotle's Protrepticus, by Hutchinson and Johnson (2015).[9]

The works surviving only in fragments include the dialogues On Philosophy (or On the Good), Eudemus (or On the Soul), On Justice, and On Good Birth. The possibly spurious work, On Ideas survives in quotations by Alexander of Aphrodisias in his commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics. For the dialogues, see also the editions of Richard Rudolf Walzer, Aristotelis Dialogorum fragmenta, in usum scholarum (Florence 1934), and Renato Laurenti, Aristotele: I frammenti dei dialoghi (2 vols.), Naples: Luigi Loffredo, 1987.

References[edit]

  1. ^W. D. Ross, Aristotle's Metaphysics (1953), vol. 1, p. lxxxii. By the 'physical works', Ross means the Physics, On the Heavens, On Generation and Corruption, and the Meteorology; see Ross, Aristotle's Physics (1936), p. 3.
  2. ^E.g., Barnes 1995, pp. 18–22.
  3. ^Barnes 1995, p. 12; Aristotle himself: Nicomachean Ethics 1102a26–27. Aristotle himself never uses the term 'esoteric' or 'acroamatic'. For other passages where Aristotle speaks of exōterikoi logoi, see W. D. Ross, Aristotle's Metaphysics (1953), vol. 2, pp. 408–410. Ross defends an interpretation according to which the phrase, at least in Aristotle's own works, usually refers generally to 'discussions not peculiar to the Peripatetic school', rather than to specific works of Aristotle's own.
  4. ^House, Humphry (1956). Aristotles Poetics. p. 35.
  5. ^Barnes 1995, p. 12.
  6. ^Ammonius (1991). On Aristotle's Categories. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN0-8014-2688-X. p. 15
  7. ^The Complete Works of Aristotle, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 vols., Princeton University Press, 1984.
  8. ^'CU-Boulder Expert Wins $75,000 Award For Research On Aristotle,' University of Colorado Office of News Services, December 14, 2005.
  9. ^D. S. Hutchinson & Monte Ransome Johnson (25 January 2015). 'New Reconstruction, includes Greek text'.

Works cited[edit]

  • Barnes, Jonathan (1995). 'Life and Work'. The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Works of Aristotle.
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  • The Rediscovery of the Corpus Aristotelicum with an annotated bibliography
  • Bekker's Prussian Academy of Sciences edition of the complete works of Aristotle at Archive.org
  • Lazaris, S. 'L’image paradigmatique: des 'Schémas anatomiques' d’Aristote au 'De materia medica' de Dioscoride', Pallas, 93 (2013), p. 131-164 ext. link
  • Oxford Translation of The Works of Aristotle at Archive.org (contents by volume)
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