Theophilus wrote the following works on astrology in Greek: •
Works on Elections for Wars and Campaigns and Sovereignty •
Astrological Effects •
Various Elections •
Collection on Cosmic Beginnings These books have been preserved more or less intact, along with fragments of their
Arabic versions. Theophilus also wrote a lost historical chronicle in Syriac. His lost history was used by a number of later writers. The Jacobite patriarch
Dionysius of Tel Mahre (818–45) cited it on several occasions in his own world history, the
Annals. The tenth-century Melkite historian
Agapius of Hierapolis also used material from Theophilus. Theophilus translated the
Iliad and perhaps the
Odyssey into Syriac. According to Bar Hebraeus, Theophilus translated "the two books of the poet Homer about the conquest of the city Ilion", which probably includes
Odyssey, since only the
Odyssey mentions the fall of Troy. Syriac quotations from the
Iliad are found in the
Rhetoric of
Antony of Tagrit of 825 and presumably derive from Theophilus' translation. ==References==