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Malalas

MALALAS (or MALELAS) (Syriac for " orator "), JOHN (c. 491- 578), Byzantine chronicler, was born at Antioch. He wrote a povoy pacfrla in 18 books, the beginning and the end of which e lost. In its present state it begins with the mythical history Egypt and ends with the expedition to Africa under Marcianus, e nephew of Justinian. Except for the history of Justinian id his immediate predecessors, it possesses little historical alue; it is written without any idea of proportion and contains tonishing blunders. The writer is a supporter of Church and tate, an upholder of monarchical principles. The work is rather chronicle written round Antioch, which he regarded as the tre of the world, and (in the later books) round Constantiople. It is, however, important as the first specimen of a ronicle written not for the learned but for the instruction of ,e monks and the common people, in the language of the vulgar, with an admixture of Latin and Oriental words. It obtained great popularity, and was conscientiously exploited by various writers until the 11th century, being translated even into the Slavonic languages. It is preserved in an abridged form in a single MS. now at Oxford.

For the authorities consulted by Malalas, the influence of his work on Slavonic and Oriental literature, the state of the text, the original form and extent of the work, the date of its composition, the relation of the concluding part to the whole, and the literature of the subject, see C. Krumbacher's Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur (1897). See also the editio princeps, by E. Chilmead (Oxford, 1691), containing an essay by Humphrey Hody and Bentley's well-known letter to Mill; other editions in the Bonn Corpus scriptorum hist, byz., by L. Dindorf (1831), and in J. P. Migne Palrologia graeca, xcvii.

Note - this article incorporates content from Encyclopaedia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, (1910-1911)

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