De fluviīs (Latin for "concerning rivers"), also called Dē fluviōrum et montium nōminibus et dē iīs quae in illīs inveniuntur ("concerning the names of rivers and mountains and those things which are found in them") or the Greek Περὶ ποταμῶν καὶ ὀρῶν ἐπωνυμίας, is a Greek text by Pseudo-Plutarch written during the 2nd century CE.[1] It discusses twenty-five rivers in Greece, Asia Minor, India, Gaul, Egypt, Scythia, and Armenia. The chapters typically start with a myth about the river, include information about local flora and stones, and end with details about a nearby mountain.
Scholars today classify it as paradoxography, or even a parody of paradoxography.
Notably, Pseudo-Plutarch describes 22 of the 25 rivers as deriving their names from people who committed suicide in them. Six of the rivers were renamed twice due to suicide. Several of the mountains are also said to have gotten their names from suicides.
Most of the plants and stones described have mystical qualities to them, from warding off spirits and gods, to causing and healing madness, to exposing liars and thieves.
Sources are cited throughout the book including the Treatise of Rivers by Achelaus, the Second Book of Rivers by Sostratus, the Third Book of Mountains by Dercyllus, the Third Book of Plants by Ctesiphon, and the History of Boeotia by Leo of Byzantium. A full list is given below.
The work is considered pseudepigrapha, meaning written by someone other than the attributed author, Plutarch. It is only preserved by the 9th century codex Palatinus gr. Heidelbergensis 398, which includes a marginal note stating, "This is pseudepigraphic, for the intellectual level and diction are far from the genius of Plutarch. Unless he might be some other Plutarch."[2] [3]
Hydaspes | India | Yes | Elephas | [river] "like a heliotrope" used to prevent sunburn | [river] precious stone called "lychnis" which is found during the waxing moon while pipers are piping | [4] | |
Ismenus | Boeotia | Yes | Cithaeron | — | — | [5] | |
Hebrus | Thrace | Yes | Pangaeus |
| — | [6] | |
Ganges | India | Yes | Anatole | [river] "resembling bugloss" the juice of which is sprinkled on tiger's dens, which causes the tigers to sleep to death | — | [7] | |
Phasis | Scythia | Yes | Caucasus |
| — | [8] | |
Arar | Gallia Celtica | Yes | Lugdunum | — | [river] fish called "Clupaea" which changes colors with the moon, and which has a stone in its head that can cure "quartan agues" | [9] | |
Pactolus | Lydia | Yes, twice | Tmolus | [river] purple flower called "chrysopolis" used to test the purity of gold |
| [10] | |
Lycormas | Aetolia | Yes | Myenus |
| — | [11] | |
Maeander | Asia (Turkey) | Yes | Sipylus | — |
| [12] | |
Marsyas | Phrygia | No | Berecyntus | [river] called "the pipe" which sounds like a pipe in the wind | [mountain] a stone called "machaera" which causes a person to go mad if found during the mysteries of Rhea | [13] | |
Strymon | Thrace | Yes | Rhodope and Haemus | — |
| [14] | |
Sagaris | Phrygia | Yes | Ballenaeus | — |
| [15] | |
Scamander | Troas | Yes | Ida (formerly Gargarus) | [river] herb with rattling seedpods that repel apparitions and gods | [mountain] stone called "cryphius" which can only be found during the mystery rituals of a god | [16] | |
Tanais | Scythia | Yes | Brixaba |
| [river] a crystal which causes the bearer to be elected king upon the king's death | [17] | |
Thermodon | Scythia | Probably | Text of codex incomplete | — | — | [18] | |
Nile | Egypt | Yes, twice | Argyllus | — |
| [19] | |
Eurotas | Laconia | Yes, twice | Taygetus | [mountain] called "Charisia" which women wear to increase male desire for them | [river] stone called "thrasydeilos, or rash and timorous" which jumps up at a trumpet sound, but sinks on hearing the name Athenians | [20] | |
Inachus | Argos | Yes, twice | Mycenae, Apesantus, Coccygium, and Athenaeum |
|
| [21] | |
Alpheus | Arcadia | Yes, twice | Cronium | [river] called "cenchritis" which cures madness | [mountain] stone called "the cylinder" which rolls down whenever there's lightning | [22] | |
Euphrates | Parthia | Yes, twice | Drimylus | [river] called "axalla" which cures fits of "quartan-ague" |
| [23] | |
Caicus | Mysia | Yes | Teuthras |
| [mountain] stone called "the resister" which can cure leprosy when mixed with wine | [24] | |
Achelous | Aetolia | Yes | Calydon |
| [river] a stone called "linurgus" which turns linen white | [25] | |
Araxes | Armenia | Yes | Diorphus |
| [river] black stone called "sicyonus" which can be used as proxy when human sacrifice is required | [26] | |
Tigris | Armenia | No | Gauran | [mountain] "like to wild barley" which guards against all sickness except death | [river] white stone called "myndan" which protects against wild beasts | [27] | |
Indus | India | Yes | Lilaeus | [river] "not unlike to bugloss" remedy against the "king's evil" |
| [28] |
Some 49 different writers are cited with 65 works between them, including 13 on rivers, 9 on stones, 7 histories, and 12 on international relations. Five are listed as the thirteenth volume on that topic by that author. Based on the titles, there would be at least 204 works by these authors.
In comparison, Plutarch's Alexander, a much longer work, cites around 25 sources by name.[29] The authors cited in De fluviis seem to very conveniently come in rashes of similar syllables, e.g. Ctesias (x2), Ctesiphon, Ctesippus. The text itself is highly repetitive. These facts among others cause scholars to doubt heavily that any of the works and authors cited ever existed.[30]
However, it does provide insight into the mind of a 2nd century Greek writer, shedding some light on what they would have considered legitimate. If the intended genre was parody, then it gives insight on what a writer from the period found humorous.
Achelaus |
| I, VIII | |
Agatharchides the Samian |
| IX, X | |
Agatho the Samian | Second Book of Scythian Relations | XIV | |
Agathocles the Milesian | History of Rivers | XVIII | |
Agathocles the Samian | Commonwealth of Pessinus | IX | |
Alexander Cornelius | Third Book of Phrygian Relations | X | |
Antisthenes | Third Book of Meleagris | XXII | |
Aretazes | Phrygian Relations | XII | |
Aristobulus | First Book of Stones | XIV | |
Aristonymus | Third Book of [text missing] | XXIV | |
Aristotle | Fourth Book of Rivers | XXV | |
Caemaron | Tenth Book of the Affairs of India | IV | |
Callisthenes | Third Book of Hunting | IV | |
Callisthenes the Sybarite | Thirteenth Book of Gallic Relations | VI | |
Chrysermus |
| I, VII, XX | |
Chrysermus the Corinthian | First Book of his Peloponnesiacs | XVIII | |
Cleanthes |
| V, XVII | |
Clitonymus | Third Book of Thracian Relations | III | |
Clitophon | Thirteenth Book of the Building of Cities | VI, VII | |
Clitophon the Rhodian | First Book of Indian Relations | XXV | |
Ctesias | First Book of Rivers | XIX | |
Ctesias the Cnidian | Second Book of Mountains | XXI | |
Ctesias the Ephesian | First Book of the Acts of Perseus | XVIII | |
Ctesiphon |
| XIV, XVIII, XXIII | |
Ctesippus | Second Book of Scythian Relations | V | |
Damaratus |
| IX | |
Demodocus | First Book of the History of Hercules | XVIII | |
Demostratus of Apamea | Second Book of Rivers | IX, XIII | |
Dercyllus |
| I, VIII, X, XIX, XXII | |
Diocles the Rhodian | Aetolics | XXII | |
Dorotheus the Chaldaean | Second Book of Stones | XXIII | |
Heraclitus the Sicyonian | Second Book of Stones | XIII | |
Hermesianax of Cyprus | Second Book of his Phrygian Relations | II, XII, XXIV | |
Hermogenes | (borrowed from Sosthenes) | XVII | |
Jason of Byzantium | Thracian Histories | XI | |
Leo of Byzantium |
| II, XXIV | |
Nicanor the Samian | Second Book of Rivers | XVII | |
Nicias Mallotes | Book of Stones | XX | |
Plesimachus | Second Book of the Returns of the Heroes | XVIII | |
Sosthenes the Cnidian | Thirteenth Book of Iberian Relations | XVI | |
Sostratus |
| II, XXIV | |
Theophilus | First Book of Stones | XXIV | |
Thrasyllus | Third Book of Stones | XI | |
Thrasyllus the Mendesian |
| XVI | |
Timagenes the Syrian | (borrowed an argument from Callisthenes the Sybarite) | VI | |
Timagoras | First Book of Rivers | XXI | |
Timolaus | First Book of Phrygian Relations | IX | |
Timotheus |
| III, XVIII |