of Herodotus from the first half of the fourth century BC|300x300px Prose literature can largely be said to begin with
Herodotus; his book
The Histories is among the oldest works of prose literature in existence. Thucydides's book
History of the Peloponnesian War greatly influenced later writers and historians, including the author of the book of
Acts of the Apostles and the
Byzantine Era historian
Procopius of
Caesarea. A third historian of ancient Greece,
Xenophon of
Athens, began his
Hellenica where Thucydides ended his work about 411 BC and carried his history to 362 BC. Xenophon's most famous work is his book
The Anabasis, a detailed, first-hand account of his participation in a Greek mercenary army that tried to help the Persian Cyrus expel his brother from the throne, another famous work relating to Persian history is his
Cyropaedia. The historian
Timaeus was born in
Sicily but spent most of his life in
Athens. His
History, though lost, is significant because of its influence on
Polybius. In 38 books it covered the history of Sicily and Italy to the year 264 BC, which is where Polybius begins his work. Timaeus also wrote the
Olympionikai, a valuable chronological study of the Olympic Games. The historian
Polybius was born about 200 BC. He was brought to
Rome as a hostage in 168. In Rome he became a friend of the general Scipio Aemilianus. He probably accompanied the general to Spain and North Africa in the wars against Carthage. He was with Scipio at the destruction of
Carthage in 146.
Diodorus Siculus was a Greek historian who lived in the 1st century BC, around the time of Julius Caesar and Augustus. He wrote a
universal history,
Bibliotheca Historica, in 40 books. Of these, the first five and the 11th through the 20th remain. The first two parts covered history through the early Hellenistic era. The third part takes the story to the beginning of Caesar's wars in Gaul, now France.
Dionysius of Halicarnassus lived late in the first century BC. His history of Rome from its origins to the First Punic War (264 to 241 BC) is written from a Roman point of view, but it is carefully researched. He also wrote a number of other treatises, including
On Imitation,
Commentaries on the Ancient Orators, and
On the Arrangement of Words. The historians
Appian of Alexandria and
Arrian of Nicomedia both lived in the second century AD. Appian wrote on Rome and its conquests, while Arrian is remembered for his work on the campaigns of Alexander the Great. Arrian served in the Roman army. His book therefore concentrates heavily on the military aspects of Alexander's life. Arrian also wrote a philosophical treatise, the
Diatribai, based on the teachings of his mentor
Epictetus. , one of the most famous ancient Greek historians, from his hometown of
Chaeronea|282x282px
Ancient biography, or
bios, as distinct from modern biography, was a genre of Greek (and Roman) literature interested in describing the goals, achievements, failures, and character of ancient historical persons and whether or not they should be imitated. Authors of ancient
bios, such as
Plutarch's
Parallel Lives imitated many of the same sources and techniques of the contemporary historiographies of ancient Greece, notably including the works of
Herodotus and
Thucydides. There were various forms of ancient biographies, including philosophical biographies that brought out the moral character of their subject, literary biographies which discussed the lives of orators and poets (such as
Philostratus's
Lives of the Sophists), school and reference biographies that offered a short sketch of someone including their ancestry, major events and accomplishments, and death, autobiographies, commentaries and memoirs where the subject presents his own life, and historical/political biography focusing on the lives of those active in the military, among other categories. Plutarch's other surviving work is the
Moralia, a collection of essays on ethical, religious, political, physical, and literary topics. During later times, so-called "
commonplace books", usually describing historical anecdotes, became quite popular. Surviving examples of this popular genre include works such as
Aulus Gellius's
Attic Nights,
Athenaeus of Naucratis's
Deipnosophistae, and
Claudius Aelianus's
De Natura Animalium and
Varia Historia. == Philosophy ==