Digital Logos Edition
Plutarch was a Greek historian, biographer, priest, and essayist. For nearly two millenia his writings have influenced some of the world’s greatest literary figures, including Shakespeare, Emerson, Montaigne, and others. The ethical discussions contained in Plutarch’s writings gave the American founding fathers the tools to formulate their own ideas about freedom and government. During his lifetime, his writings and lectures made him a celebrity on top of his role as priest of Apollo and mayor of the town of Chaeronea. Throughout the centuries, Plutarch has been referenced so frequently and in so many ways that some scholars estimate only a third or half of his works actually survive today. This volume contains Bernadotte Perrin’s translation of the parallel biographies of Sertorius and Eumenes, and Phocion and Cato the Younger.