While
Oppian's Halieutica was well-known soon after its composition, the
Cynegetica is never mentioned by any ancient author. The manuscripts of the
Cynegetica all ascribe the poem to
Oppian of Cilicia. It was not until 1776 that the first scholar,
Johann Schneider, argued that Oppian's
Halieutica and the
Cynegetica must have been composed by two different poets, based on the fact that the narrator of the
Halieutica claims
Anazarbus in
Cilicia as his hometown, whereas the narrator of the
Cynegetica comes from Apamea in Syria. Later scholarship has uncovered further evidence to back up this claim: there are considerable differences in the two poems' style and adherence to the metrical norms of Hellenistic scholars. The
Halieutica is the main source for the ''Cynegetica's'' structure and content, with specific passages in the latter poem alluding to or reworking their model. The most widely accepted explanation why the
Cynegetica was ascribed to Oppian is that the
Halieutica,
Cynegetica, and a third didactic epic on
fowling, the
Ixeutica (Ἰξευτικά,
Ixeutiká), were circulated as a complementary trio. In time, all three poems were then attributed to Oppian of Cilicia. Although some scholars have assumed that the ''Cynegetica's
poet was also coincidentally named Oppian, there is no evidence to back up this claim. In order to distinguish the creator of the Cynegetica'' from Oppian of Cilicia, he is generally referred to as Pseudo-Oppian. ==The
Cynegetica==