List of editiones principes in Greek

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In classical scholarship, the editio princeps (plural: editiones principes) of a work is the first printed edition of the work, that previously had existed only in manuscripts, which could be circulated only after being copied by hand. The following is a list of Greek literature works.

Greek works

15th century

Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
c. 1474 Batrachomyomachia Thomas Ferrandus Brescia Undated and without place or printer. The book carries an interlinear Latin prose translation together with the Greek text on one page and on the opposite one a metrical Latin translation. The first edition with a date is the 1486 edition by Leonicus Cretensis.
1478-1479 Aesopus, Fabulae B. & J. A. de Honate Milan Edited by Bonus Accursius. Undated, the book contained also a Latin translation by Ranuccio Tettalo. These 127 fables are known as the Collectio Accursiana, the newest of the three recensions that form the Greek Aesopica. The oldest Greek recension is the Collectio Augustana, in 231 fables, that was published only in 1812 by Johann Gottlob Theaenus Schneider in Breslau. The last recension is the Collectio Vindobonensis, made of 130 fables, that was first edited in 1776 by Thomas Tyrwhitt. Concerning The Aesop Romance, of it also three recensions exist: the one printed in this edition is the Vita Accursiana, while the second to be printed was in 1845 the Vita Westermanniana, edited in Braunschweig by Anton Westermann. The Last recension to be printed was the Vita Perriana, edited in 1952 in Urbana by Ben Edwin Perry.
Vita Aesopi
c. 1482 Hesiodus, Opera et dies B. & J. A. de Honate Milan Edited by Bonus Accursius. Undated, only Theocritus' first 18 idylls are contained in this edition. A wider arrange of idylls appeared in the 1495–1496 Aldine Theocritus which had idylls I-XXIII. A further amount of yet unpublished idylls were printed in Rome together with their old scholia by Zacharias Calliergis in his 1516 edition of Theocritus.
Theocritus, Idyllia
1488–1489 Homerus, Ilias and Odyssea Florence Edited by Demetrius Chalcondyles, the book was printed with the help of Demetrius Damilas that reelaborated the Greek types he had previously used in Milan. The editorial project was completed thanks to the financial support of Giovanni Acciaiuoli and the patronage of Neri and Bernardo de' Nerli together with, the latter also author of an opening dedication to Piero de' Medici. The edition includes also the previously printed Batrachomyomachia. As for the typography the volume has traditionally been attributed to the prolific printer Bartolomeo de' Libri, attribution denied by recent scholarship. The issue thus remains unresolved.
Hymni Homerici
Ps.-Herodotus, De vita Homeri
Ps.-Plutarch, De vita et poesi Homeri
Dio Cocceianus, De Homero
1493 Isocrates, Orationes Ulrich Scinzenzeler & Sebastianus de Ponte Tremulo Milan Edited by Demetrius Chalcondyles. The edition also contains 3 ancient lives of Isocrates written by Plutarch, Philostratus and Dionysius of Halicarnassus.
Dionysius Halicarnasseus, De Isocrate
1494 Anthologia Planudea Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris. In this occasion Lascaris used as a typographic font exclusively small capitals in an archaistic effect created so to recapture the feeling of ancient epigraphy. This was to be a characteristic aspect of all the Greek books published together by Lorenzo de Alopa and Lascaris.
c. 1494 Euripides, Medea, Hippolytus, Alcestis and Andromache Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris. The volume, undated, was printed sometime before June 18, 1494. The typographic font was, as usual with Lascaris, only made of capital letters.
1494 Menander, Monosticha Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris.
1494–1496 Musaeus, Hero and Leander Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris. About the same time Aldus Manutius printed in Venice another edition of Musaeus, also undated, but probably published in 1495.
c. 1494 Theodorus Prodromus,Galeomyomachia Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Arsenius Apostolius. Undated.
1494-1496 Callimachus, Hymni Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris. Undated.
1495 Ps.-Pythagoras, Aurei Versus Aldus Manutius Venice Also contains Constantine Lascaris' Erotemata. This edition is also notable as Manutius' first publication.
Ps.-Phocylides, Sententiae
1495–1498 Aristoteles Aldus Manutius Venice An edition in five volumes in folio of the complete works of Aristotle. The first volume was printed in November 1495 while the last came out in 1498. Theophrastus' works came out together in 1497. Notably absent in this edition of Aristotle's works are the Rhetorica and the Poetica and also the Rhetorica ad Alexandrum. Concerning the Problemata, they came out in 1497 in its shorter recension in two books; the longer recension in four books came out in Paris in 1857 due to Hermann Usener. As for Theophrastus, all his published works came out in 1497 dispersed through the second, third and fourth volumes.
Theophrastus, De signis, De causis plantarum, De historia plantarum, De lapidibus, De igne, De odoribus, De ventis, De lassitudine, De vertigine, De sudore, Metaphysica, De piscibus in sicco degentibus
Porphyrius, Isagoge
Philo, De mundo
Ps.-Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Problemata
Diogenes Laërtius, Vita Aristotelis and Vita Theophrasti
1495 Apollonius Dyscolus, De constructione Aldus Manutius Venice Contained together with Theodorus Gaza's Grammatica.
Aelius Herodianus, De numeris
1495–1496 Bion, Adonis Aldus Manutius Venice The edition contains also the idylls I–XXIII attributed to Theocritus. It must be also noted that only Theognis' first book of elegies is printed here.
Moschus, Europa
Hesiodus
Scutum Herculis
Theognis
Ps.-Moschus, Epitaphium Bionis
Ps.-Moschus, Megara
1496 Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris. Present in the book are also the so-called Florentine scholia, contained in the manuscript used by Lascaris for this edition.
1496 Lucianus Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris.
1494–1496 Plutarch, De liberis educandis Laurentius de Alopa Florence Edited by Janus Lascaris.
Ps.-Cebes, Tabula Cebetis
Xenophon, Hiero
Basilius Magnus, De liberalibus studiis
1496 Joannes Philoponus, De dialectis Aldus Manutius Venice Found in the Thesaurus cornu copiae et horti Adonidis.
1497 Zenobius, Proverbia Benedetto Filologo Florence Edited by Philippus Junta.
1497 Ammonius Grammaticus, De adfinium vocabulorum differentia Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Giovanni Crastone together with his Lexicon graeco-latinum.
Joannes Philoponus, De vocabulis quae diversum significatum exhibent secundum differentiam accentus
1498 Aristophanes Aldus Manutius Venice 9 of Aristophanes' 11 surviving comedies were printed; together with them were Marcus Musurus' metric scholia. Missing in the volume were the Lysistrata and the Thesmophoriazusae which would appear only in 1515.
1498 Ps.-Phalaris, Epistolae Johannes Bissolus & Benedictus Mangius Venice Edited by Bartholomaeus Pelusius and Gabriel Bracius.
Apollonius Tyaneus, Epistolae
Marcus Junius Brutus, Epistolae
1499 Etymologicum Magnum Zacharias Calliergis Venice Published at the expense of Nikolas Vlastos, the volume was probably edited by Marcus Musurus.
1499 Simplicius, In Aristotelis Categorias commentarium Zacharias Calliergis Venice
1499 Dioscurides, De materia medica Aldus Manutius Venice
Nicander, Theriaca and Alexipharmaca
1499 Suda I. Bissolus & B. Mangius Milan Edited by Demetrius Chalcondyles.
1499 Aratus, Phaenomena Aldus Manutius Venice Present in a bilingual miscellany titled Scriptores astronomici veteres which included also works by Firmicus Maternus, Manilius, Germanicus, Cicero and Avienius.
Ps.-Proclus, Sphaera
Theon Grammaticus, Commentaria in Aratum
Leontius Mechanicus, De Arati Sphaerae constructione
1499 Plato, Epistolae Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Marcus Musurus. All these letters are contained in a compilation titled Epistolae diversorum philosophorum, oratorum, rhetorum. Many of these epistolary collections are incomplete in this edition: for example, only 21 letters by Basil were printed. A larger collection of 61 of his letters was edited by Vincentius Obsopoeus in 1528 in Hagenau. Concerning Alciphron, 44 letters are available in the Aldine and it was only in 1715 in Leipzig that Stephan Bergler edited other 72 letters, printed by Thomas Fritsch. Further discoveries were made until Ernrst Eduard Seiler in 1853 in Leipzig first edited Alciphron's full extant corpus of 123 letters.
Ps.-Diogenes Cynicus, Epistolae
Libanius, Epistolae
Synesius, Epistolae
Isocrates, Epistolae
Claudius Aelianus, Epistolae
Alciphro, Epistolae
Demosthenes, Epistolae
Ps.-Demetrius Phalereus, Epistolae
Ps.-Aristoteles, Epistolae
Ps.-Hippocrates, Epistolae
Ps.-Crates Thebanus, Epistolae
Ps.-Heraclitus Ephesius, Epistolae
Ps.-Anacharsis, Epistolae
Ps.-Euripides, Epistolae
Philostratus Atheniensis, Epistolae
Theophylactus Simocattus, Epistolae
Aeneas Gazaeus, Epistolae
Procopius Gazaeus, Epistolae
Dionysius Sophista, Epistolae
Basilius Caesariensis, Epistolae
Ps.-Chion Heracleensis, Epistolae
Ps.-Aeschines Orator, Epistolae
Julianus Apostata, Epistolae

16th century

Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1500 Ammonius Hermiae, In Porphyrii isagogen sive V voces Zacharias Calliergis Venice
1500 Galenus, Therapeutica Zacharias Calliergis Venice
1500 Argonautica Orphica Benedetto Filologo Florence Edited by Philippus Junta. The volume also carries some of Proclus' hymns.
Hymni Orphici
1501–1502 Philostratus Atheniensis, Vita Apollonii Tyanei Aldus Manutius Venice
Eusebius Caesariensis, Adversus Hieroclem
1502 Sophocles Aldus Manutius Venice
1502 Thucydides, Historiae Aldus Manutius Venice
Dionysius Halicarnasseus, Epistola ad Ammaeum II
1502 Herodotus, Historiae Aldus Manutius Venice
1502 Julius Pollux, Onomasticon Aldus Manutius Venice
1502 Stephanus Byzantinus, Ethnica Aldus Manutius Venice
1503 Harpocration, Lexicon in decem oratores Atticos Aldus Manutius Venice
Ulpianus Sophista, Scholia in Demosthenem
1503 Euripides Aldus Manutius Venice This edition included all of the dramatist's plays except for Electra. Generally thought to have been edited by Marcus Musurus.
1503 Xenophon, Hellenica Aldus Manutius Venice
Herodianus, Historiarum a Marci principatu libri viii
1503 Philostratus Atheniensis, Vitae sophistarum Aldus Manutius Venice
1503 Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis Categorias commentarium Aldus Manutius Venice Also contains a commentary on Aristotle's De Interpretatione by Leo Magentinus.
Ammonius Hermiae, In Aristotelis de interpretatione commentarius
Michael Psellus, In Aristotelis de interpretatione commentarius
1504 Demosthenes Aldus Manutius Venice
1504 Gregorius Nazianzenus, Carmina Aldus Manutius Venice Contained in the collection Poetae Christiani.
1504 Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis analytica posteriora commentaria Aldus Manutius Venice Also contains an anonymous commentary on Aristotle's Analytica posteriora.
1504–1505 Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica Aldus Manutius Venice
Tryphiodorus, Ilii excidium
Coluthus, Raptus Helenae
1505 Ps.-Heraclitus Ponticus, Allegoriae Homericae Aldus Manutius Venice Printed together with Aesop.
Ps.-Horapollo, Hieroglyphica
Cornutus, Theologiae Graecae compendium
1508-1509 Aristoteles, Rhetorica and Poetica Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Demetrius Ducas. Contained in the Rhetores Graeci.
Ps.-Aristotle, Rhetorica ad Alexandrum
Dionysius Halicarnasseus, Ars Rhetorica and De Compositione Verborum
Aphthonius, Progymnasmata
Hermogenes, De statibus, De inventione and De ideis
Ps.-Hermogenes, De methodo sollertiae
Aelius Aristides, De civili oratione and De simplici oratione
Apsines, Rhetorica
Menander Rhetor, Divisio causarum in genere demonstrativo
Sopater, Quaestiones de compendis declamationibus
Cyrus Sophista, differentiae statuum
Ps.-Demetrius Phalereus, De elocutione
Alexander Sophista, De figuris sensus et dictione
Minucianus, De argumentis
1509 Plutarch, Moralia Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Demetrius Ducas.
1509 Agapetus Diaconus, De officio regis Zacharias Calliergis Venice
1512 Dionysius Periegetes, Orbis Terrae Descriptio J. Mazochius Ferrara With annotions by Caelius Calcagninus.
1513 Lysias Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Marcus Musurus, these writers are all contained in a collection known as Oratores Graeci.
Lycurgus Atheniensis
Antiphon of Rhamnus
Andocides
Isaeus
Aeschines Orator
Dinarchus
Gorgias
Alcidamas
Lesbonax
Herodes Atticus
Dionysius Halicanasseus, De Lysia
1513 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, In Aristotelis Topica Commentaria Aldus Manutius Venice
1513 Pindar Aldus Manutius Venice Two years later Zacharias Calliergis printed in Rome an edition also carrying for the first time the poet's scholia. The volume also contains Callimachus and Dionysius Periegetes.
Lycophron, Alexandra
1513 Plato Aldus Manutius Venice This opera omnia of Plato was edited by Marcus Musurus. It contains in its preface an Ode to Plato, a renaissance elegiac poem to the Greek philosopher written by Musurus himself.
Ps.-Plato, Eryxias, Axiochus, De virtute, Definitiones, De justo, Demodochus and Sisyphus
Ps.-Timaeus Locrus, De natura mundi et animae
1513 Aelius Aristides, Panathenaica oratio and In Romam oratio Aldus Manutius Venice First printed among Isocrates'Opera omnia.
1514 Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Marcus Musurus.
1514 Hesychius Alexandrinus, Lexicon Aldus Manutius Venice Edited by Marcus Musurus.
1515 Oppianus Anazarbeus, Halieutica Philippus Junta Florence Edited by Marcus Musurus.
1515 Aristophanes, Lysistrata and Thesmophoriazusae Philippus Junta Florence First complete edition of all eleven Aristophanes' plays.
1516 Xenophon Philippus Junta Florence A complete edition of Xenophon's works with the sole exception of the Apologia Socratis, the Agesilaus and the De vectigalibus.
1516 Gregorius Nazianzenus, Orationes Lectissimae Aldus Manutius Venice
1516 Novum Testamentum Johannes Frobenius Basel Edited by Desiderius Erasmus under the title Novum Instrumentum omne. The first New Testament text to be actually printed (but not published), it contained was in Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros's Complutensian Polyglot Bible, where it was printed as volume 5 in 1514 in Alcalá. It was not published until 1520.
1516 Strabo, Geographica Aldine Press Venice
1516 Pausanias, Graeciae descriptio Aldine Press Venice Edited by Marcus Musurus.
1516 Phrynichus, Sylloge Atticarum vocum Zacharias Calliergis Rome
1516 Ps.-Dionysius Areopagita Philippus Junta Florence
1517 Libanius J. Mazochius Ferrara
1517 Plutarch, Vitae Parallelae Philippus Junta Florence
1517 Aelius Aristides, Orationes Philippus Junta Florence Edited by Eufrosinus Boninus. Two of Aristides' speeches, the XVI (Oratio legati) and LIII (In Aquam Pergami oratio), are missing. The volume also contains Philostratus' Life of Aristides (part of the Lives of the Sophists).
Libanius, Ad Theodosium imperatorem de seditione antiochena
1517 Oppianus Apameensis, Cynegetica Aldine Press Venice Printed together with Oppianus Anazarbeus' Halieutica and its Latin translation.
1518 Septuaginta Aldus Manutius Venice The Septuaginta contained in the Complutensian Polyglot Bible was to follow publication later. The Complutensian Bible had been printed between 1514 and 1517 in Alcalá under the supervision of Cardinal Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros, but it was only published in 1520. For the New Testament, Manutius' Aldine Bible used Erasmus' Novum Instrumentum omne.
1518 Aeschylus Aldine Press Venice Edited by Franciscus Asulanus. This edition contains only 6 of Aeschylus' 7 surviving tragedies: missing is the Choephoroe. This is because the manuscripts had fused Agamemnon and Choephoroe, omitting lines 311-1066 of Agamemnon, a mistake that was corrected for the first time in 1552 in the Venetian edition edited by Franciscus Robortellus. The separation was not fully successful as the text was not correctly divided, leaving it to the 1557 Paris edition by Petrus Victorius, printed with an appendix by Henricus Stephanus, to finally obtain an adequate edition of Aeschylus' plays.
1518 Artemidorus, Oneirocritica Aldine Press Venice
Synesius, De somniis
1520 Xenophon, Apologia Socratis and Agesilaus Johannes Reuchlin Hagenau This edition also carries the Hiero.
1520 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Commentaria in Aristotelis Analytica Priora Aldine Press Venice
Ps.-Alexander Aphrodisiensis, In Aristotelis sophisticos elenchos commentarium
1521 Alcinous, Didascalicus Aldine Press Venice Edited by Franciscus Asulanus and printed together with Apuleius.
1525 Galenus Aldine Press Venice
1525 Xenophon, De vectigalibus Aldine Press Venice De vectigalibus was in a new edition of the complete works lacking only Apologia Socratis.
Ps.-Xenophon, Atheniensium respublica
1526 Hippocrates Aldine Press Venice
1526 Joannes Philoponus, In libros de generatione animalium commentaria Johannes Antonio de Sabio Venice
1526 Simplicius, In Aristotelis physicorum libros commentaria and In Aristotelis de caelo commentaria Aldus Manutius Venice Simplicius' commentary on De caelo is Basilius Bessarion's Greek translation of William of Moerbeke's Latin version.
1526 Maccabeorum liber IV Strasbourg Edited by Johannes Leonicerus in the Strasbourg Septuagint.
1527 Theophrastus, Characteres Johannes Petreius Nuremberg Edited by Bilibaldus Pirckheimerus, the volume only contains the first fifteen chapters. In a later edition in Venice of the Aldine altera of Aristotle and Theophrastus' collected works eight chapters were added in 1551-1552 by Joannes Baptista Camotius. To these, a further five chapters were adjoined by Isaac Casaubon in Lyon in 1599. The last two chapters were found by Giovanni Cristofano Amaduzzi who edited them in Parma in 1786.
1527 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Commentaria in Aristotelis Librum de Sensu Aldine Press Venice This edition also contains Themistius' De Anima.
Simplicius, In libros Aristotelis de anima commentaria
Michael Ephesius, In parva naturalia commentaria
1527 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, In Aristotelis metereologicorum libros commentarium and De mixtione Aldine Press Venice
Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis libros de generatione et corruptione commentaria
1528 Epictetus, Enchiridion Johannes Antonio de Sabio Venice Epictetus was not published fully and separately in 1528 but as integrated in Simplicius' commentary; it was in 1529 that the complete text came out in Nuremberg edited by Gregorius Haloander.
Simplicius, Commentarius in Enchiridion Epicteti
1528 Paulus Aegineta, De Re Medica Libri VII Aldine Press Venice
1528 Gregorius Nazianzenus, Epistolae Hagenau Edited by Vincentius Obsopoeus. It contains 57 letters written by Gregory together with many letters from Basil that had never been printed before.
1529 Joannes Chrysostomus, In Pauli Epistolas Stephanus de Sabio Verona Edited by Bernardinus Donatus.
1530 Polybius, Historiae Johannes Secerius Hagenau A part of Book VI had been already printed in Venice in 1529 by Johannes Antonio de Sabio, edited by Janus Lascaris with his Latin translation incorporated. The 1530 edition, edited by Vincentius Obsopoeus, only contained Books I–V together with their Latin translation made by Nicolaus Perottus. What survived of the rest of Polybius thanks to the excerpta antiqua of the other Books was first printed by Joannes Hervagius in Basel in 1549 together with a Latin translation by Wolfgang Musculus. Further Polybian excerpts came to light thanks to Fulvius Ursinus that in Antwerp in 1582 published Constantinus Porphyrogenitus' Excerpta de legationibus. All this additional material was incorporated in Isaac Casaubon's 1609 Polybius Paris edition.
1531 Parthenius, Erotica Pathemata Hieronymus Frobenius Basel Edited by Janus Cornarius.
1531 Procopius Caesariensis, De aedificiis Basel Edited by Beatus Rhenanus. The edition was incomplete; the full text came out in 1607 in Augsburg, edited by David Hoeschel.
1531 Proclus, De motu I. Bebel & M. Ysingrinius Basel Edited by Simon Grynaeus.
1532 Stobaeus, Anthologium Hieronymus Frobenius Basel Edited by Sigismundus Gelenius together with the hymns of Callimachus. Gelenius only published the second part, the Florilegium, and a selection of that; a complete edition of the Florilegium came in 1535 or 1536 in Venice where it was printed by Bartolomeo Zanetti and edited by Victor Trincavelius. In 1575 the first part, the Eclogae, was first published in 1575 in Antwerp, printed by Christoph Plantin and edited by William Canter. The complete text was first printed together in 1609 in Geneva by F. Fabro.
1533 Diogenes Laërtius, Vitae Philosophorum Hieronymus Frobenius Basel The lives of Aristotle and Theophrastus had been previously printed in Aristotle's 1495-98 Aldine edition.
1532 Ps.-Oecumenius, Catena in Actus Apostolorum, Catena in Pauli epistulas, Catena in epistulas catholicas Stephanus de Sabio Verona Edited by Bernardinus Donatus in a volume titled Expositiones antiquae ex diversis sanctorum partum commentariis ab Oecumenio et Aretha collectae in hosce Novi Testamenti tractatus. Oecumenii quidem in Acta Apostolorum. In septem Epistolas quae Catholicae dicuntur. In Pauli omnes. Arethae vero in Ioannis Apocalypsim.
Arethas Caesariensis, Commentarius in Apocalypsin
1533 Hanno, Periplus Hannonis Hieronymus Frobenius Basel Contained in a miscellany of geographical writings. Edited by Sigismundus Gelenius.
Periplus Maris Erythraei
Arrianus, Periplus Pontis Euxini
Strabo, Chrestomathiae
Ps.-Plutarch, De fluviis
1533 Euclides, Elementa Geometriae Joannes Hervagius Basel Edited by Simon Grynaeus.
Proclus, In primum Euclidis Elementorum librum commentarii
1533 Ptolemaeus, Geographia Hieronymus Frobenius Basel
1534 Proclus, In Platonis rem publicam commentarii and In Platonis Timaeum commentaria J. Valder Basel Edited by Simon Grynaeus as part of his edition of Plato.
1534 Aëtius Amidenus, Libri Medicinales Aldine Press Venice Only the first half of the Libri Medicinales were printed.
1534 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, De Anima, De Fato and De Intellectu Aldine Press Venice It is generally believed that De Anima's Book II is not in its current form to be ascribed to Alexander.
Themistius
1534 Eustratius, In analyticorum posteriorum librum secundum commentarium Aldine Press Venice Also contained Joannes Philoponus' In Posteriora Analytica and an anonymos commentary also on the Posterior Analytics.
1534 Heliodorus Emesenus, Aethiopica Joannes Hervagius Basel Edited by Vincentius Obsopoeus.
1535 Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis physicorum libros commentaria Bartolomeo Zanetti Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius. Only the commentary to the first 4 Books was printed.
1535 Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis de anima libros commentaria Bartolomeo Zanetti Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius.
1535 Joannes Philoponus, Contra Proclum de aeternitate mundi Aldine Press Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius.
1535 Epictetus, Dissertationes Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius.
1535 Arrianus, Anabasis Alexandri and Indica Bartolomeo Zanetti Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius.
1535 Ptolemaeus, Quadripartitum Hieronymus Frobenius Nuremberg Edited by Joachim Camerarius.
1535 Aelius Aristides, Oratio legati Hagenau Edited by Joachim Camerarius.
Libanius, Achillis ad Ulixem antilogia
1536 Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis analytica priora commentaria Bartolomeo Zanetti Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius.
1536 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Quaestiones naturales et morales Bartolomeo Zanetti Venice Edited by Victor Trincavelius together with works of Damascius and others. The Quaestiones are generally thought to be not his in their current form, but they include material from his school of thought.
1536 Aspasius, In ethica Nicomachea commentaria Aldine Press Venice Contained in a collection of commentaries to Aristotle's Ethica Nicomachea. It also includes an anonymous Byzantine scholiast.
Eustratius, In ethica Nicomachea commentaria
Michael Ephesius, In ethica Nicomachea commentaria
1537 Hippiatrica Johannes Walderus Basel Edited by Simon Grynaeus.
1538 Ptolemaeus, Almagestum Johannes Walderus Basel Edited by Ioachimus Camerarius. The second part of the edition is a commentary to the Almagest that used several different authors: while it mostly uses Theon (he covers Books I-II, IV, VI-X, XII-XIII), he also uses Pappus for Book V and Nicolaus Cabasilas for Book III. Despite having reached us also Pappus' commentary to Book VI, it was not printed on this occasion, and was instead published in 1931 by Adolphe Rome in the first volume of his Commentaires de Pappus et de Théon d'Alexandrie sur l'Almageste. On a similar vein, Theon's Book III was not published and was printed in 1943 the third volume of his collection.
Pappus, Commentaria in Almagestum
Theon Alexandrinus, Commentaria in Almagestum
1539 Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Vincentius Obsopoeus. Only books XVI–XX were printed. In 1559 Henricus Stephanus printed in Geneva all complete surviving books, that is I–V and XI–XX. To this Stephanus also added a summary left by Photius of the lost books.
1539 Cassianus Bassus, Geoponica Robert Winter Basel Edited by Johannes Alexander Brassicanus. Printed together with Aristotle's De plantis.
1539 Ps.-Iustinus Martyr, Cohortatio ad Graecos Ioannes Lodovicus Paris
1539 Cleomedes, De motu circulari corporum caelestium Conrad Neobar Paris The editor is unknown.
1540 Proclus, Hypotypsosis astronomicarum positionum J. Valder Basel Edited by Simon Grynaeus.
1540 Adamantius Judaeus, Physiognomica Paris
1541 Priscianus Lydus, Metaphrasis in Theophrastum Johannes Oporinus Basel Published in an edition of Theophrastus' Opera.
1541 Athenagoras, De resurrectione mortuorum Bartholomaeus Gravius Leuven Edited by Petrus Nannius.
1543 Ps.-Iamblichus, Theologoumena Arithmethicae Paris
1543 Galenus, De ossibus Paris Edited by Martinus Gregorius.
1544 Eusebius Caesariensis, Historia Ecclesiastica and Vita Constantini Robertus Stephanus Paris Stephanus put in a single large folio volume works of Eusebius, Socrates, Sozomen, Evagrius, Theodoret and the surviving excerpts of Theodorus Lector's work. The manuscripts used appear to have been the Codex Regius and the Codex Medicaeus.
Socrates Scholasticus, Historia Ecclesiastica
Sozomenus, Historia ecclesiastica
Evagrius Scholasticus, Historia ecclesiastica
Theodoret, Historia Ecclesiastica
Theodorus Lector, Historia Ecclesiastica
1544 Eusebius Caesariensis, Demonstratio Evangelica Robertus Stephanus Paris
1544 Archimedes Joannes Hervagius Basel Edited by Thomas Gechauff Venatorius.
1544 Josephus Flavius Hieronymus Frobenius & Nicolaus Episcopius Basel Edited by Arnoldus Arlenius. The volume also contained the 4 Maccabees, then attributed to Josephus.
1545 Claudius Aelianus, Variae Historiae Antonio Blado Rome Edited by Camillus Peruscus.
Ps.-Melampus, Divinatio ex palpitatione
1544 Epiphanius Constantiensis Johannes Hervagius Basel Edited by Johannes Oporinus.
1545 Euripides, Electra Rome Edited by Petrus Victorius.
1545 Oracula Sibyllina Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Xystus Betuleius.
1546 Eusebius Caesariensis, Praeparatio Evangelica Robertus Stephanus Paris
1546 Theophilus Antiochenus, Ad Autolycum Christophorus Froschoverus Zürich Edited by Johannes Frisius.
1546 Dionysius Halicarnasseus, Antiquitates Romanae Robertus Stephanus Paris
1546 Tatianus, Oratio ad Graecos Christoph Froschauer Zürich Edited by Conradus Gesnerus.
1548 Cassius Dio Robertus Stephanus Paris Only contains Books 23 and 36–58.
1548 Porphyrius, De abstinentia Juntine Press Florence Edited by Petrus Victorius. The volume also contained Porphyrius' Sententiae, Eunapius' Vita Porphyrii (part of his Vitae sophistarum) and Michael of Ephesus' commentaries to Aristotle's De Partibus Animalium.
1548 Alexander Trallianus, Therapeutica and De febribus Robertus Stephanus Paris Edited by Iacobus Goupyl.
1550 Gregorius Nazianzenus Johannes Hervagius Basel Appeared under Gregory Nazianenus' Opera omnia with the title Divi Gregorii Theologi, Episcopi Nazianzeni Opera, quae quidem extant, omnia, tam soluta quam pedestri oratione conscripta, partim quidem iam olim, partim vero nunc primum etiam è Greco in Latinum conversa.The Thaumaturge's work is here erroneously attributed to the other Gregory, even if Hervagius noted some doubts concerning to such an ascription.
Gregorius Thaumaturgus, Metaphrasis in Ecclesiasten
1550 Clemens Alexandrinus Florence Edited by Petrus Victorius
1551 Appianus C. Stephanus Paris
1551 Joannes Xiphilinus, Epitome Robertus Stephanus Paris Epitome of Cassius Dio (comprising books 36–80), thus following up on Estienne's Cassius Dio edition of 1548.
1551 Olympiodorus Alexandrinus, In Aristotelis meteora commentaria Aldine Press Venice Contained in the so-called Aldina minor, a re-edition of Aristotle's opera omnia.
Joannes Philoponus, In Aristotelis meteorologicorum librum primum commentarium
c. 1551 Dio Cocceianus Aldine Press Venice
1551 Iustinus Martyr Robertus Stephanus Paris Published by Robert Estienne as Justin's collected works under the title Iustini Opera Omnia, the edition includes both the author's genuine and spurious works.
Ps.-Iustinus Martyr, Expositio rectae fidae, De monarchia, and Epistula ad Zenam et Serenum
1552 Theophrastus, De sensibus Aldine Press Venice Edited by Joannes Baptista Camotius in the so-called Aldina altera, that is the new Aldine edition of Aristotle's works.
1552 Philo Adrianus Turnebus Paris
1552 Aelianus Tacticus, Tactica A. & J. Spinelli Venice Edited by Franciscus Robortellus.
1553 Hermias philosophus, Irrisio gentilium philosophorum Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Raphael Seiler.
1553 Synesius Adrianus Turnebus Paris
1554 Anacreontea Henricus Stephanus Paris
1554 Ps.-Proclus, Paraphrasin Tetrabibli Basel Edited by Philipp Melanchthon.
1554 Poemander Adrianus Turnebus Paris
Definitiones
1554 Dionysius Halicarnasseus, Epistola ad Ammaeum I, Epistola ad Pompeium and De antiquis oratoribus Henricus Stephanus Paris
1554 Ps.-Longinus, De Sublimitate Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Franciscus Robortellus.
1554 Aretaeus of Cappadocia, De causis et signis acutorum morborum, De causis et signis chronicorum morborum, De curatione acutorum morborum and De curatione chronicorum morborum Paris Edited by Iacobus Goupyl.
1555 Ps.-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca Antonio Blado Rome Edited by Benedictus Aegius with a Latin translation.
1555 Ps.-Clemens Romanus, Epitome prior Adrianus Turnebus Paris Also edited by Adrianus Turnebus.
1556 Claudius Aelianus, De natura animalium Zürich Edited by Conradus Gesnerus in Aelian's first printed complete works.
1557 Maximus Tyrius, Sermones Henricus Stephanus Paris
1557 Theophrastus, De animi defectione, De nervorum resolutione, De animalibus quae colorem mutant, De animalibus quae repente apparent, De animalibus quae dicuntur invidere, De melle Henricus Stephanus Paris Edited by Henricus Stephanus in his edition of Aristotle and Theophrastus' collected works Aristotelis et Theophrasti scripta quaedam.
1557 Joannes Zonaras, Annales Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited buy Hieronymus Wolfius.
1557 Nicetas Choniates, Historia Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Hieronymus Wolfius.
1557 Euclides, Optica, Catoptrica, Sectio Canonis and Introductio harmonica Andreas Wechelus Paris Edited by Johannes Pena.
1557 Ignatius Antiochenus, Epistolae Sebaldus Mair Dillingen Edited by Valentinus Paceus. Two different recensions survive of his letters: a longer one (AKA recensio longior), which is the one printed here; and a shorter one (AKA Recensio brevior), of which six letters were edited by Isaak Vossius in Amsterdam in 1646. That left the recensio brevior of the Epistola ad Romanos, that was first published in Paris in 1689 by Thierry Ruinart together with the Martyrium Ignatii.
Ps.-Ignatius Antiochenus, Epistolae
1557 Athenagoras, Legatio pro Christianis Henricus Stephanus Geneva Edited by Conradus Gesnerus. This edition also contains Athenagoras' De resurrectione.
1559 Marcus Aurelius, Meditationes Andreas Gesner Zürich Edited by Guilielmus Xylander. Both texts are translated in Latin, the Meditationes by Xylander. He also added some passages on evidence regarding Marcus Aurelius taken from the Suda and from Aurelius Victor.
1559 Aeneas Gazaeus, Theophrastus Zürich Edited by Johannes Wolfius.
1561 Epistula Aristeae Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Simone Schard.
1561 Photius, Nomocanon Johannes Oporinus Basel
1562 Maximus Confessor, Scholia in Dionysium Areopagitam G. Morelius Paris In this edition of the Corpus Dionysiacum the commentaries of Maximus the Confessor and John of Scythopolis are merged.
Ioannes Scythopolitanus, Scholia in Dionysium Areopagitam
1563 Constitutiones Apostolorum Venice Edited by Franciscus Turrianus.
1564 Proteuangelium Iacobi Johannes Oporinus Basel Edited by Michael Neander in his Catechesis Martini Lutheri parva graeco-latina.
1565 Nemesius, De Natura Hominis Christophe Plantin Antwerp
1565 Moschus, In Amorem Fugitivum Hubertus Goltzius Bruges Edited by Adolphus Mekerchus in his edition of Greek bucolic idylls.
1566 Georgius Cedrenus Basel Edited by Guilielmus Xylander.
1567 Hipparchus, In Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena commentarium Florence Edited by Petrus Victorius.
Achilles Tatius, Isagoge ad Arati Phaenomena
1568 Cleanthes, Hymnus in Jovem Antwerp Edited by Fulvius Ursinus. The hymn with printed in a selection containing other Greek samples of lyric, elegiac and pastoral poetry.
1568 Eunapius, De vitis sophistarum Antwerp Edited by Junius Hadrianus.
1568 Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses Thomas Guarini Basel Edited by Guilhelmus Xylander.
1569 Nonnus, Dionysiaca Christophorus Plantinus Antwerp Edited by Gerartus Falkenburgius.
1569 Palladius Helenopolitanus, De gentibus Indiae et Bragmanibus Leipzig Edited by Joachim Camerarius in his Libellus gnomologicus.
1570 Dialexeis Henricus Stephanus Paris Henri Estienne added the anonymous treatise, better known as Dissoi logoi, in appendix to his edition of Diogenes Laërtius.
1570 Alexander Trallianus, De lumbricis Paolo & Antonio Meietti Venice Edited by Hieronymus Mercurialis.
1572 Plutarch Henricus Stephanus Geneva
1572 Autolycus Pitanaeus, De sphaera mota and De ortu et occasu siderum Strasbourg Edited by Conradus Dasypodius in Theodosius Opera.
1573 Heliodorus Larissaeus, Capita opticorum Juntine Press Florence Edited by Egnatius Dantes together with a Latin translation.
1580 Plotinus, Enneades Petrus Perna Basel With a Latin translation of Marsilio Ficino.
Porphryrius, Vita Plotini
1583 Hierocles Alexandrinus Nicolas Nivelle Paris
1586 Dionysius Halicanasseus, De Thucydide Johann Wechel Frankfurt Edited by Fridericus Sylburgius. Contained in an edition of Dionysius' opera omnia.
1587 Origenes, Hexapla Rome Edited by Petrus Morinus under the form of hexaplar scholia to the Sixtine Septuagint. Morinus' work was expanded by Johannes Drusus in Arnhem in 1622 and by Lambertus Bos in Franeker in 1709; these works were supersed by Bernardus de Montfaucon's edition in Paris in 1713, in which he gathered in two volumes the surviving fragments of the Hexapla.
1588 Constantinus Porphyrogenitus, De thematibus Christophe Plantin Leiden Edited by Bonaventura Vulcanius.
1589 Heraclides Creticus, De urbis in Graecia Henricus Stephanus Geneva These four excerpts were erroneously attributed to Dicaearchus.
Dionysius Calliphontis, Desciptio Graeciae
1589 Polyaenus, Stratagemata Jean de Tournes Lyon Edited by Isaac Casaubon.
1590 Geminus, Elementa Astronomiae Altdorf Edited by Edo Hildericus together with a Latin translation.
1592 Epistula ad Diognetum Henricus Stephanus Paris Edited under the title Justini philosophi et martyris Epistula ad Diognetum et Oratio ad Graecos, the volume also contains Justin Martyr's Oratio ad Graecos. p. 48
Ps.-Iustinus Martyr, Oratio ad Graecos
1593 Ps.-Andronicus, De affectibus Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius.
1594 Agathias, Historiae Plantin Press Leiden Edited by Bonaventura Vulcanius.
1596 Andreas Caesariensis, Commentarii in Apocalypsin Heidelberg Edited by Fridericus Sylburgius.
1597 Theophylactus Simocatta, Quaestiones physicae Plantin Press Leiden Edited by Bonaventura Vulcanius.
Cassius Iatrosophista, Quaestiones medicae
1598 Iamblichus, De vita Pythagorae and Protrepticus Heidelberg Edited by Joannes Arcerius Theodoretus.
1598 Longus, Daphnis et Chloe Juntine Press Florence Edited by Raphael Columbanius.
1598–1599 Onasander, Strategica Abrahamus Saugranius Paris Edited by Nicolaus Rigaltius.
1600 Ps.-Scylax, Periplus Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius in his Geographica.
Ps.-Scymnus, Periegesis
Marcianus Heracleensis, Periplus maris exteri
Marcianus Heracleensis, Menippei Peripli Epitome
Isidorus Characenus, Stathmi Parthici

17th century

Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1601 Photius, Bibliotheca Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius.
1601 Achilles Tatius I. & N. Bonnvitius Heidelberg Printed together with Longus' Daphnis and Chloe and Parthenius' Erotica Pathemata.
1602 Origenes, Epistula ad Iulium Africanum Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius as part of an edition titled Adriani Isagoge, Sacrarum Litterarum et antiquissimorum Graecorum in prophetas fragmenta. The volume contained only the very beginning of Origen's letter; a further fragment was published in London in 1637 by Patricius Junius. Origen's complete letter was eventually edited by Johannes Rodolfus Wetstenius in Basel in 1674 together with Origen's Exhortatio ad martyrium and a Pseudo-Origenian dialogue.
Julius Africanus, Epistula ad Origenem
1604 Constantinus Porphyrogenitus, Excerpta de legationibus Ad insigne pinus Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius.
1604 Theophylactus Simocatta, Historiae Ingolstadt Edited by Jacobus Pontanus.
1604 Gregorius Thaumaturgus Mainz Edited by Gerardus Vossius in the Thaumaturge's Opera omnia under the title Sancti Gregorii episcopi Neocaesariensis, cognomento Thaumaturgi, opera omnia. Among other works this edition included for the first time the In Origenem oratio panegyrica. Vossius also added Gregory of Nyssa's De vita Gregorii Thaumaturgi.
Ps.-Gregorius Thaumaturgus, De fide capitula duodecim, Disputatio de anima ad Tatianum, Homilia I in annuntiationem Virginis Mariae, Homilia II in annuntiationem Virginis Mariae, Fides secundum partem and Homilia I in sancta theophania
Gregorius Nyssenus, De vita Gregorii Thaumaturgi
1605 Cyrillus Alexandrinus, Adversus antropomorphitas Plantin Press Leiden Edited by Bonaventura Vulcanius, it had not been previously included in Cyril's Opera omnia.
1605 Origenes, Contra Celsum Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius. To Origen's work Hoeschel adds Gregorius Thaumaturgus' Address to Origen.
1606 Nicephorus, Chronologia Compendiaria Thomas Basson Leiden Edited by Joseph Justus Scaliger in his Thesaurus Temporum.
1607 Ps.-Andronicus, Aristotelis Ethicorum Nicomacheorum Paraphrasis Leiden Edited by Daniël Heinsius.
1607 Procopius Caesariensis, Bella Ad insigne pinus Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius. Summaries of Procopius' De Aedificiis were also contained.
1608 Basilius Seleucensis, De vita et miraculis Sanctae Theclae Jan Moretus Antwerp Edited by Pierre Pantin together with a Vita of Saint Thecla by Symeon Metaphrastes.
1609 Aeneas Tacticus Paris Edited by Isaac Casaubon who appended it to his edition of Polybius.
1609 Paralipomena Jeremiae Venice The short form of the text was published as part of the Greek Menaion.
1610 Anna Comnena, Alexias Ad insigne pinus Augsburg Edited by David Hoeschelius.
1611 Constantinus Porphyrogenitus, De administrando imperio Leiden Edited by Johannes Meursius.
1612 Joannes Chrysostomus John Norton Eton Edited by Sir Henry Saville.
1612 Diogenianus, Proverbia Antwerp Edited by Andreas Schott.
1612 Leo Sapiens, Tactica Leiden Edited by Johannes Meursius.
1615 Chronicon Paschale Munich Edited by Matthaeus Raderus.
1616 Nicephorus, Breviarium historicum Paris Edited by D. Petavius.
1616 Alypius Musicus, Introductio musica Ludovicus Elzevierius Leiden Edited by Johannes Meursius in his Aristoxenus, Nicomachus, Alypius, auctores musices antiquissimi hactenus non editi.
Aristoxenus, Elementa harmonica
Nicomachus Gerasenus, Harmonices manuale
1617–1618 Eustathius Macrembolites, Hysmine and Hysminias Paris Edited by Gilbert Gaulmin.
1618 Proclus, Theologia Platonica and Elementatio Theologica Hamburg Edited with Latin translation by Aemilius Portus. The volume also contains Marinus' life of Proclus.
1618 Michael Glycas, Chronicon Leiden Edited by Johannes Meursius. Only the first part of the text was printed.
1618 Origenes, Philocalia Paris Edited by Joannes Tarinus. This is a 4th-century anthology made by Basil the Great and Gregory of Nazianzus. Tarinus also added to these works the Opiniones de Anima which he had found in another manuscript of the Philocalia.
Zacharias Rhetor, Ammonius sive de mundi opificio disputatio
1621 Sextus Empiricus, Adversus Mathematicos and Pyrroniae Hypotyposes Petrus and Jacobus Chouet Geneva
1621 Diophantus, Arithmetica Sebastianus Cramoisy Paris Edited by C. G. Bachetus.
1623 Procopius Caesariensis, Arcana Historia Lyon Edited by Nicolò Alemanni.
1623 Bacchius, Introductio musica Sebastianus Cramoisy Paris Edited by Marinus Mersennus in his Quaestiones celeberrimae in Genesim, i.e. in a commentary on the Book of Genesis.
1623 Clemens Alexandrinus, Quis Dives Salvetur Lyon Edited by Michael Ghislerius as part of his In Jeremiam prophetam commentarii. Only eight of Origen's homilies were published in this edition; the other surviving homilies on Jeremiah written by Origen were first published in 1648 in Antwerp by Balthasar Corderius, who mistakenly attributed them to Cyril of Alexandria.
Origenes, Homiliae in Ieremiam
1625 Theodorus Prodromus, De Rhodanthe et Dosiclis amoribus Paris Edited by Gilbert Gaulmin.
1625 Euclides, Data Paris Edited by Claudius Hardy with a Latin translation.
Marinus, Commentarius
1626 Psalmi Salomonis Lyons Edited by Ioannes Ludovicus de la Cerda. The Psalms are contained as an appendix in a work entitled Adversaria sacra, opus varium ac veluti fax ad lucem quam multorum locorum utriusque Instrumenti, Patrumque et Scriptorum quorumcunque.
1626 Ps.-Themistocles, Epistolae Rome Edited by Johannes Mathaeus Caryophilos.
1629 Origenes, Homilia in Librum primum Regum 28 Laurentius Durand Lyon Edited by Leo Allatius under the title S. P. N. Eustathii archiepiscopi Antiocheni, et martyris, In Hexahemeron Commentarius: ac De Engastrimytho dissertatio adversus Origenem. Item Origenis De eadem Engastrimytho.
Eustathius Antiochenus, De engastrimytho contra Origenem
Ps.-Eustathius Antiochenus, Commentarius in hexaemeron
1630 Joannes Philoponus, De opificio mundi Vienna Edited by Balthasar Corderius.
1633 Clemens Romanus, 1 Clemens Oxford Edited by Patricius Junius. Young's edition was made from the Codex Alexandrinus which suffered from lacunae that involved both of the epistles. The Later retrieval of the Codex Hierosolymitanus consented to the publication by Philotheos Bryennios in 1875 in Constantinople of a new edition which contained the two intact texts attributed to Clement.
Ps.-Clemens Romanus, 2 Clemens
1633 Polycarpus, Epistola ad Philippenses Douai Edited by Petrus Halloisius in his Illustrium Ecclesiae Orientalis Scriptorum Vitae et Documenta.
1637 Ps.-Socrates Atheniensis, Epistolae Sebastianus Cramoisy Paris Edited by Leo Allatius under the title Socratis Antisthenis et aliorum Socraticorum epistulae, these form the epistolary corpus known as Socratic letters.
Ps.-Speusippus, Epistolae
Ps.-Aristippus, Epistolae
Ps.-Aeschines Socraticus, Epistolae
Ps.-Xenophon, Epistolae
1638 Sallustius, De diis et de mundo Rome Edited by Leo Allatius.
1640 Philo Paradoxographus, De Septem Orbis Spectaculis Rome Edited by Leo Allatius.
1644 Arrianus, Cynegeticus Sebastianus Cramoisy Paris Edited by Lucas Holstenius.
1645 Ps.-Barnabas, Epistula Paris Edited by Hugues Ménard under the title Sancti Barnabae apostoli (ut fertur) epistola catholica. Due to defective manuscripts, this edition only started from chapter 5.7 of the epistle; it was only following the retrieval of the Codex Sinaiticus that Constantin von Tischendorf edited the complete text in 1862.
1647 Martyrium Polycarpi London Edited by James Ussher in his Appendix Ignatiana.
1652 Joannes Cinnamus, Historiae Utrecht Edited by Cornelius Tollius.
1652 Aristides Quintilianus, De musica Lodewijk Elzevir Amsterdam Edited by Marcus Meibomius in his Antiquae musicae auctores septem together with Aristoxenus, Nicomachus, Bacchius and Cleonides.
Gaudentius Philosophus, Harmonica introductio
1655 Theophanes Paris Edited by Jacques Goar.
1656 Methodius Olympius, Convivium decem virginum Rome Edited by Leo Allatius. Extracts had previously been published by François Combefis in Paris in 1644, availing himself of what was present in Photius' Bibliothetca.
1657 Hypsicles, De Ascensionibus Sebastianus Cramoisy Paris Edited by J. Mentelius.
1661 Hippolytus Romanus, De Christo et Antichristo Paris Edited by Marquardus Gudius.
1664 Arrianus, Tactica and Acies contra Alanos Henricus Curio Uppsala Edited by Johannes Schefferus.
Mauritius, Strategicon
1668 Iamblichus, In Nicomachi Gerasini arithmeticam introductionem Arnhem Edited by Samuel Tennulius.
1668 Origenes, In Matthaeum and In Joannem Rouen Edited by Petrus Daniel Huetius under the title Origenis in sacras Scripturas Commentaria quaecunque Graece reperiri potuerunt. As for the Late antique Latin Vetus interpretatio of the In Matthaeum, which contain books that have not survived in the Greek original, they had been already published by Jacques Merlin in Paris in 1512.
1670 Paulus Silentiarius, Descriptio Sanctae Sophiae Paris Edited by Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange together with his edition of Ioannes Cinnamus' Historia as part of the series Corpus Byzantinae Historiae.
1671 Agathemerus, Geographiae informatio Amsterdam Edited by Samuel Tennulius in his Agathemeris libri duo
Hypotyposis geographiae
Diagnosis geographiae
1672 Ps.-Clemens Romanus, Homiliae XX Paris Edited by Jean-Baptiste Cotelier in his SS. Patrum qui temporibus apostolicis floruerunt. The edition is incomplete since Cotelier used the Codex Parisinus graecus 930 which contains the twenty homilies only those from 1 to 19a, thus having only part of homily 19 and lacking completely homily 20. It was only in 1853 that a complete text was published in Göttingen by A. R. M. Dressel thanks to the retrieval of the Codex Ottobonianus graecus 443. Cotelier also inserted in his collection the Shepherd of Hermas, using the ancient Latin translation together with the few Greek excerpts that were available at the time. Things changed in 1855 when the almost complete Codex Athous was found by the forger Constantine Simonides who made a transcription with a counterfeit ending and several made-up interpolations. This script was given to Rudolf Anger who published it in Leipzig in 1856. In 1887 another edition was made in Leipzig by Oscar von Gebhardt and Adolf von Harnack, but mostly using Simonides transcription, albeit an uncounterfeited one. Eventually, in 1880 Spyridon Lambros collated the manuscript's leaves, opening the road to Armitage Robinson's edition in 1888.
Hermas, Pastor Hermae
1674 Origenes, Exhortatio ad Martyrium Basel Edited by Johannes Rodolfus Wetstenius with the title Origenis Dialogus contra Marcionitas, sive de recta ίn Deum fide: Exhortatio ad Martyrium: Responsum ad Africani Epistolam de historia Susannae. In this volume is also contained for the first time Origen's complete letter to Julius Africanus.
Ps.-Origenes, De recta in Deum fide
1678 Iamblichus, De Mysteriis Aegyptiorum Oxford University Press Oxford Edited by Thomas Gale.
1682 Ptolemaeus, Harmonicorum libri III Oxford Edited by Johannes Wallis together with Porphyry's commentary to Ptolemy.
1686 Origenes, De oratione Oxford Edited anonymously by Thomas Gale.
1688 Aristarchus Samius, De magnitudinibus et distantiis solis et lunae Oxford Edited by Johannes Wallis. Wallis only published what is left of Pappus' Book II of the Mathematical Collection, most of which Book is lost. Extensive parts of Book VII were edited in Oxford in 1706 and 1710 by Edmond Halley; similarly, Hermann J. Eisenmann printed part of Book V in Paris in 1824. In Halle in 1871 C. J. Gerhardt planned a complete edition of Pappus, but only Books VII and VIII reached publication. The first complete printed edition of the Collection was published in three volumes in Berlin between 1876 and 1878, edited by Friedrich Hultsch.
Pappus, Collectio
1689 Martyrium Ignatii Franciscus Muguet Paris Edited by Thierry Ruinart in his Acta Primorum Martyrum sincera et selecta. Ruinart's work also contains the editio princeps of Ignatius' Epistola ad Romanos.
1692 Olympiodorus Alexandrinus, Vita Platonis Henricus Wetstein Amsterdam Edited by Marcus Meibomius. As part of Wetstein's edition of Diogenes Laërtius, the printer added Olympiodorus' work, taken from papers left by Isaac Casaubon.
1695 Euangelium Thomae de infantia Saluatoris Only a small part of the text was published by Richard Simon in his Nouvelles observations sur le texte et les versions du Nouveau Testament. The gospel was completely published and edited in Antwerp in 1698 by Jean-Baptiste Cotelier.
1695 Martyrium Iustini et sociorum Antwerp Three versions of the text exist; the first one to be printed was the so-called middle recension, edited by Daniel Papebroch in the Acta Sanctorum. This one was followed by the longer one, edited by Pio Franchi de' Cavalieri in Rome in 1902 in the Nuove note agiografiche. The shorter version was eventually printed in 1920 by the same Franchi de' Cavalieri in another edition of the Note Agiografiche.
1698 Testamenta XII. Patriarcharum Oxford University Press Oxford Edited by Johann Ernst Grabe as part of the Spicilegium SS. Patrum, ut haereticorum.
Acta Pauli et Theclae
1698 Acta Barnabae apostoli P. Jacobs Antwerp edited by Daniel Papebroch and contained in the Acta Sanctorum.
1699 Porphyrius, Commentarius in Claudii Ptolemaei Harmonica Oxford Edited by Johannes Wallis.

18th century - present

Date Author, Work Printer Location Comment
1703 Euclides, Phaenomena Oxford Edited by David Gregory in his edition of Euclid's complete works. Also contains a translation by the same Gregory.
1703 Euangelium Thomae de infantia Saluatoris Schiller Hamburg Edited by Johannes Albertus Fabricius in the Codex apocryphus Novi Testamenti.
1706 Cosmas Indicopleustes, Topographia Christiana Paris Edited by Bernard de Montfaucon in his Collectio Nova Patrum et Scriptorum Graecorum. pp. 2, 330.
1710 Apollonius Pergaeus, Conica Oxford Edited by Edmond Halley.
1715 Proemium in artem rhetoricam Paris Edited by Bernard de Montfaucon.
1715 Dionysius Thrax, Ars Grammatica Hamburg Edited by Johannes Albertus Fabricius as volume vii of his Bibliotheca Graeca.
1718 Hippolytus, Contra Noetum Christian Liebezeit Hamburg Edited by Johannes Albertus Fabricius in the second volume of Hippolytus' works under the title S. Hippolyti episcopi et martyris opera et fragmenta.
1719 Anaphora Pilati Hamburg Edited by Johannes Albertus Fabricius together with other apocrypha in the second volume of his Codex Apochryphus Novi Testamenti.
1726 Xenophon Ephesius, Ephesiaca London Edited by Antonio Cocchi. A Latin translation was inserted by the same editor.
1733 Genesius Stephan Bergler Venice Edited by Johannes B. Mencken.
1749 Epistula presbyterorum et diaconorum Achaiae Leipzig Edited by Carolus Christianus Woog.
1750 Chariton, De amoribus Chaereae et Calliroes Petrus Mortier Amsterdam Edited by Jacques Philippe d'Orville with a Latin translation.
1754 Vita Secundi philosophi Leipzig Edited by Johann Adam Schier, who omitted the part of the text containing emperor Hadrian's "Questions". The latter had been previously edited by Lucas Holstenius in 1638 in Rome.
1768 Aelius Aristides, In aquam Pergami oratio Florence Edited by Angelo Maria Bandini in his Catalogus Codicum Graecorum Bibliothecae Mediceae Laurentianae II. This oration (Oratio LIII) has come down to us incomplete but it was partially integrated in 1825 in Rome by Angelo Mai who added to it in his Scriptorum Veterum Nova Collectio e Vaticanis Codicibus Edita I.
1769 Stadiasmus Maris Magni Madrid Edited by Joannes Iriarte in Regiae Bibliothecae Matritensis Codices Graeci.
Polybius Rhetor, De soloecismo, De Acyrologia and De Speciebus Orationis
1772–1776 Anthologia Palatina Strasbourg Edited by R. F. P. Brunck that for the first time printed the full content of the anthology. Brunck modified radically the order of the epigrams in the manuscript arranging them instead by author.
1780 Hymnus in Cererem Leyden Edited by David Ruhnken. One of the Hymni Homerici.
1781 Iamblichus, De generali mathaematum scientia typis et sumptibus fratrum Coleti Venice Contained in the Anecdota Graeca prepared by Jean-Baptiste-Gaspard d'Ansse de Villoison.
1785 Aelius Aristides, Adversus Leptinem declamatio Venice Edited by Jacopo Morelli in a volume titled Aristidis oratio adversus Leptinem, Libanii declamatio pro Socrate, Aristoxeni rhythmicorum elementorum fragmenta. The book also contains Aristoxenus.
Libanius, De Socratis silentio
1790 Hermogenes, Progymnasmata Göttingen Edited by Arnold Heeren. Heeren only published parts viii and ix of Hermogenes' work, which was completely printed in 1812 in Nuremberg by G. Veesenmeyer.
1804 Acta Pilati Copenhagen Edited by Andreas Birch in the collection titled Auctarium codicis apocryphi Novi Testamenti Fabriciani.
Paradosis Pilati
1 Apocalypsis Iohannis apocrypha
1810 Hermias Alexandrinus, In Platonis Phaedrum scholia Leipzig Edited by Georg Anton Friedrich Ast.
1811 Apollonius Dyscolus, De pronomine Berlin Edited by Immanuel Bekker.
1816 Apollonius Dyscolus, De adverbio and de disiunctivis Berlin Edited by Immanuel Bekker in the second volume of the Anecdota Graeca.
1820 Damascius, In Platonis Philebum Commentaria Leipzig Edited by Johann Gottfried Stallbaum.
1820 Proclus, In Platonis Alcibiadem Priorem Commentarii Officina Broennerianna Frankfurt Edited by Georg Friedrich Creuzer.
1820 Proclus, In Platonis Cratylum Scholia A. G. Weigel & J. Luchtmans Leipzig and Leiden Edited by Jean François Boissonade.
1820 Ps.-Arcadius, De accentibus Leipzig Edited by Edmund Henry Barker. An epitome of Herodian's lost De prosodia catholica.
1820-1827 Proclus J. M. Eberhart (voll. I-V) & F. Didot (vol. VI) Paris Edited by Victor Cousin in six volumes. This publication contains' Proclus first printed edition of his Commentary on the Parmenides. In 1827 in the sixth volume was added Damascius' Commentary.
Damascius, In Parmenidem commentaria
1821 Ps.-Alexander Aphrodisiensis, De Febribus Cambridge Edited by D. G. Schinas in the Museum Criticum Cantabrigiese.
1821 Olympiodorus Alexandrinus, In Platonis Alcibiadem Priorem Commentaria Frankfurt Edited by Georg Friedrich Creuzer.
1823 Acta Thomae F. C. G. Vogelius Leipzig Edited by Johannes Carolus Thilo.
1825 Aelius Aristides, Pro Leptine declamatio Rome Edited by Angelo Mai in the volume titled Scriptorum Veterum Nova Collectio e Vaticanis Codicibus Edita I.
1825 Joannes Philoponus, Praecepta Tonica Leipzig Edited by Karl Wilhelm Dindorf.
1826 Damascius, Quaestiones de primis principiis H. L. Broenner Frankfurt Edited by J. Kopp, only part of the text was published. It was in 1889 that the full text was published by C. A. Ruelle.
1827 De scientia politica dialogus Rome Edited by Angelo Mai in his Scriptorum veterum nova collectio e Vaticanis codicibus edita II. It was found in the Vatican Library in a palimpsest which had been written over with material from Aelius Aristides. A further fragment which is from this dialogue was found later and published in 1974 by C. A. Behr.
1830 Galenus, De musculorum dissectione Leipzig Edited by Karl Gottlob Kühn in the eighteenth volume of Galen's Opera omnia.
1831 Ps.-Herodianus Grammaticus, De soloecismo et barbarismo Paris Edited by Jean François Boissonade in the third volume of the Anecdota Graeca e codicibus regiis.
1832 Ps.-Iohannes Damascenus, Vita Barlaam et Ioasaph Paris Edited by Jean François Boissonade in the fourth volume of the Anecdota Graeca e codicibus regiis.
1833 Vita Abercii Levrault Paris The Vita has come down to us in four different recensions. This edition was edited by Jean François Boissonade in the fifth volume of the Anecdota Graeca e codicibus regiis. A second recension was compiled by Symeon Metaphrastes: this version was published by Benjamin Bossue in 1858 as part of the Acta Sanctorum. The third version was published by Elie Batareikh in 1904 in the journal Oriens Christianus; the fourth, instead, was edited by F. Halkin in Brussels in 1963 under the Inédits byzantins d’Ochrida, Candie et Moscou.
1833 Testament of Job A. Mai Rome
1836 Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Commentaria in Aristotelis Metaphysica Berlin Edited by Christian August Brandis in 1836 in Berlin by Christian August Brandis in the fourth volume of Aristotle's complete works, which goes under the title Scholia in Aristotelem. This volume contains many extracts from several commentaries: concerning the Metaphysics, he used Asclepius, Syrianus and the scholia from the Codex Parisinus gr. 1853 and, obviously, Alexander. Addressing more specifically the latter, Brandis published completely Alexander's commentary to Aristotle's first five books of the Metaphysics (Books I-V) while only publishing extracts of Books VI-XII. This was due to his doubting Alexander's authorship of the second part of the commentary and instead believing it has been written by Michael of Ephesus, a view generally upheld today. The first complete edition of the commentary traditionally credited to Alexander came out in 1847 in Berlin, edited by Hermann Bonitz.
1837 Testament of Solomon F. F. Fleck Leipzig
1837 Acts of Peter and Paul Johann Karl Thilo Leipzig
1839 Ioannes Philoponus, De usu astrolabii eiusque constructione Bonn Edited by Heinrich Hase.
1840 Anonymus Seguerianus, Ars Rhetorica Paris Edited by Nicolas Séguier de Saint-Brisson.
1841 Anonymus Bellermannianus, Scriptio de musica Berlin Edited by Johann Friedrich Bellermann.
1846 Ps.-Callisthenes, Historia Alexandri Magni Paris Edited by Karl Müller together with Arrian's works. This represents the A version mixed with the B.
1847 Ps.-Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Commentaria in Aristotelis Metaphysica Berlin edited by Hermann Bonitz as part of his publication of the full commentary attributed to Alexander. Previously, Christian August Brandis had only printed a number of excerpts in 1836 of the second part of the commentary, i.e. Books VI-XII. Bonitz published instead the whole second part (Books VI-XIV), which is currently considered to be in its present form to have been probably authored by Michael of Ephesus.
1847 Olympiodorus Alexandrinus, In Platonis Phaedonem Commentaria Heilbronn Edited by Christopher Eberhard Finckh. Previously, parts of this commentary had been previously published by Nathaniel Forster in Oxford in 1752 and in a more complete form by Mystoxides and D. G. Schinas in Venice in 1816.
1848 Olympiodorus Alexandrinus, In Platonis Gorgiam Commentaria Teubner Leipzig Edited by Albert Jahn in a supplementary volume to the Neue Jahrbücher für Philologie und Pädagogik.
1850 Hypereides Churchill Babington
1851 Hippolytus Romanus, Elenchus Oxford Edited by Emmanuel Miller.
1855 Asclepiodotus, Tactica Leipzig Edited by H. Köchly and W. Rüstow.
1856 Constitutiones per Hippolytum Teubner Leipzig Edited by Paul de Lagarde as part of his Reliquae iuris ecclesiastici antiquissimae.
1859 Dexippus, In Arirstotelis Categorias Commentaria Munich Edited by Leonard Spengel. A limited number of extracts had been previously edited in 1836 in Berlin by Christian August Brandis in his Scholia in Aristotelem.
1866 Greek Apocalypse of Ezra Constantin von Tischendorf Leipzig
1866 Greek Apocalypse of Moses Constantin von Tischendorf Leipzig
1866 Acts of Philip Constantin von Tischendorf Leipzig
1869 Ps.-Clemens Romanus, Epitome altera Leipzig Edited by A. R. M. Dressel in his Clementinorum Epitomae duae which also contains the first Clementine epitome.
1877 Acta Timothei Bonn Edited by Hermann Usener in a collection of papers put together on the occasion of Germany's Emperor Wilhelm I's birthday.
1878 Ascensio Isaiae Edited by Oscar von Gebhardt.
1878 Ps.-Thessalus Trallianus, De virtutibus herbarum Leipzig The single surviving manuscript, which is incomplete, was only partially edited by Charles Graux and was completely published by Pierre Boudreaux in 1910 in Brussels. A shortened version of the text had been partially published in 1827 in Leipzig and Darmstadt by C. F. Baehr and completely edited always by Boudreaux in the same edition that contained the original version.
1883 Didache Constantinople Edited by Philotheos Bryennios.
1891 Herodas F. G. Kenyon Transcribed from papyrus.
1892 Testament of Abraham M. R. James Cambridge
1892 Gospel of Peter Urbain Bouriant Paris
1892 Apocalypse of Peter Urbain Bouriant Paris
1892 Ps.-Sextus, Sexti Sententiae Leipzig Edited by Anton Elter in his Gnomica I.
1893 Testament of Adam M. R. James Cambridge
1893 Acts of Xanthippe, Polyxena, and Rebecca M. R. James Cambridge
1893 Lives of the Prophets Eberhard Nestle Tübingen
1894 Anonymus Parisinus, De morbis acutis et chroniis Partially edited by Robert Fuchs in the fiftieth volume of the Rheinisches Museum, it was only fully published in 1997 in Leiden by Ivan Garofalo.
1896 Martyrium Pionii Edited by Oscar von Gebhardt in the 18th volume of the Archiv für slavische Philologie.
1897 3 Baruch M. R. James Cambridge
1897 Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius V. Istrin Moscow
1897 Questions of Bartholomew N. Bonwetsch Also includes Slavonic version.
1900 Elias, In Aristotelis Categorias Commentaria Reimer Berlin Edited by Adolf Busse. Possibly by David.
1904 Heidelberg Epitome Teubner Leipzig Edited by Richard Reitzentstein.
1905 Hippolytus Romanus, Chronicon Teubner Leipzig Edited by A. Bauer.
1907 Archimedes, Methodus and Stomachion Weidmann Berlin Edited by J. L. Heiberg
1910 Theophylactus Simocatta, De vitae termino Saint Petersburg Edited by A. Papadopoulos-Kerameus.
1911 Origenes, Scholia in Apocalypsin Hinrichs Leipzig Edited by Constantin Diobouniotis and Adolf von Harnack.
1928 Oecumenius, Commentarius in Apocalypsin University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor Edited by Herman C. Hoskier.
1928 Ioannes Sardianus, Commentarium in Aphthonii Progymnasmata Teubner Leipzig Edited by H. Rabe as the 15th volume of the Rhetores Graeci.
2005 Galenus, De propriis placitis Edited by Véronique Boudon-Millot and Antoine Pietrobelli in the One hundred eighteenth volume of the Revue des Études Grecques.
2015 Origenes, Homiliae in Psalmos De Gruyter Berlin Edited by Lorenzo Perrone under the title Die neuen Psalmenhomilien: Eine kritische Edition des Codex Monacensis Graecus 314.

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