Publius Nigidius Figulus (c.
98-45 BC) was a savant of
ancient Rome, next to
Varro the most learned of the age.
He was a friend of
Cicero, to whom he gave his support at the time of the
Catilinarian conspiracy (
Plutarch, Cicero, 20; Cicero,
Pro Sulla, XIV. 42). In
58 BC he was
praetor, sided with
Pompey in the
civil war, and after his defeat was banished by
Julius Caesar, and died in exile.
According to Cicero (
Timaeus, 1), Figulus endeavoured with some success to revive the doctrines of
Pythagoreanism. With this was included
mathematics, astronomy and
astrology, and even the
magic arts. According to
Suetonius (
Augustus, 94) he foretold the greatness of the future emperor on the day of his birth, and
Apuleius (
Apologia, 42) records that, by the employment of magic boys (
magici pueri), he helped to find a sum of money that had been lost.
Jerome (the authority for the date of his death) calls him
Pythagoricus et magus.
The abstruse nature of his studies, the mystical character of his writings, and the general indifference of the Romans to such subjects, caused his works to be soon forgotten. Amongst his scientific, theological and grammatical works mention may be made of
De diis, containing an examination of various cults and ceremonials; treatises on divination and the interpretation of dreams; on the sphere, the winds and animals. His
Commentarii grammatici in at least 29 books was an ill-arranged collection of linguistic, grammatical and antiquarian notes. In these he expressed the opinion that the meaning of words was natural, not fixed by man. He paid especial attention to
orthography, and sought to differentiate the meanings of cases of like ending by distinctive marks (the apex to indicate a long vowel was once incorrectly attributed to him, but has now been proven to be older; see R. P. Oliver 'Apex and Sicilicus', AJP c. 1950). In etymology he endeavoured to find a Roman explanation of words where possible (according to him
frater(brother) was
fere alter (practically another (self)).
Quintilian (
Instit. oral. xi. 3. 143) speaks of a rhetorical treatise
De gestu by him.
See Cicero,
Ad Fam. iv. 13; scholiast on
Lucan I. 639; several references in
Aulus Gellius; Teuffel, History of Roman Literature, 170; M. Hertz,
De N. F. studiis atque operibus (I845);
Quaestiones Nigidianae (1890), and edition of the fragments (1889) by
A. Swoboda.
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