Lucius Cornelius Alexander Polyhistor was a Greek scholar who was enslaved by the Romans during the Mithridatic war and taken to Rome as a tutor. After his release, he continued to live in Italy as a Roman citizen. He was so productive a writer that he earned the surname ‘’polyhistor’’. The majority of his writings are now lost, but the fragments that remain shed valuable light on antiquarian and eastern Mediterranean subjects.
Cornelius was born at Miletus or Myndus in Caria, and flourished about 70 B.C. Taken prisoner by Sulla, he assumed the name Cornelius upon receiving his freedom. He accompanied Crassus on his Parthian campaigns, and perished at the destruction by fire of his house at Laurentum.
His Chaldæan History was based on Sibylline oracles, Book III, especially for the account of the Tower of Babel.
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