Iamblichus's novel was about two lovers, Rhodanes and Sinonis. Garmus, a legendary king of Babylon, forces Sinonis to marry him and throws Rhodanes into prison. The lovers manage to escape, and after many singular adventures, in which magic plays a considerable part, Garmus is overthrown by Rhodanes, who becomes king of Babylon. According to the
Suda, it consisted of 39 books, but
Photios, who gives a tolerably full
epitome of the work, mentions only 16. A perfect copy of the work in
manuscript existed down to the year 1671, when it was destroyed by fire. A few fragments of the original work have been preserved. The epitome of Photios and the fragments are collected in Chardon de la Rochette's
Melanges de Critique et de Philologie, Vol. 1, pp. 18, 34 and 53, and in
Franz Passow's
Corpus Erotic., vol. i.; comp. Fabric.
Bibl. Graec. vol. viii. p. 152;
Gerardus Vossius,
De Hist. Graec. p. 275, ed. Westermann. ==References==