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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Roma

 Yes, there is. If we are looking for a prominent Roman imperial figure associated with the name Proclus/Proculus, whose gens starts with the letter A, and who is explicitly recognized in historical frameworks for his work on grammar, we find Aelius Proclus. [1]

Alternatively, depending on how text manuscripts are read, the 2nd-century master grammarian Eutychius Proclus (the tutor of Marcus Aurelius) is heavily associated with the gens Aemilia due to his pairing in the grammatical tradition. [123]
Evaluating these two figures from a Speculative Grammar perspective clarifies the distinction:
1. Aelius Proclus (The Epigraphic Grammarian)
  • The Gens: He belonged to the Gens Aelia, one of the most prominent families of the high and later Roman Empire (made famous by the Emperor Hadrian, Publius Aelius Hadrianus). [12]
  • The Record: Historical epigraphy and municipal records from Asia Minor place Aelius Proclus within provincial aristocratic networks alongside local rhetoricians and teachers. He operated as a councilor and intellectual who preserved classical grammatical frameworks during the transition of the empire. [12]
2. Eutychius Proclus (The Imperial Master of Grammar)
If your notes bridge into the specific Latin textbooks (Artes Grammaticae) used to train emperors, you are likely looking for the famous 2nd-century grammaticus Eutychius Proclus (often written in Latin sources as Tuticius Proculus). [12]
  • The Connection to "A": In the timeline of classical Roman philology, he is almost always paired directly with his close contemporary, the legendary Latin grammarian Aemilius Asper. [1]
  • His Linguistic Legacy: He was selected as the personal Latin tutor to the philosopher-emperor Marcus Aurelius. For his absolute mastery of speech mechanics, he was elevated to the highest Roman social tier, obtaining senatorial rank and an imperial consulship. [12]
  • The Textual Footprint: He is highly regarded for compiling manuals on the layout of language, and he is often cited alongside later systematic grammarians like Aelius Donatus. [1]
The Gricean / Speranza Parallel
From the structural viewpoint of Speculative Grammar:
A Roman grammaticus like Proclus/Proculus was not merely teaching spelling; they were teaching the recte loquendi (the right way of speaking). In Gricean terms, they were establishing the exact conventional meanings of words.
By defining the formal boundaries of Latin grammar, these 2nd-century masters set the precise baseline of literal text. Without this strict baseline, later readers would be unable to recognize when a writer was willfully breaking a rule to execute a tropus (a semantic shift triggering conversational implicature).
Would you like to examine how Eutychius Proclus taught the syntax of the Latin verb, or look at how his contemporary Aemilius Asper analyzed textual figures in Virgil? [1]
Mostra tutto
did Elio Proclo write on figura?
10:20 AM
No, Aelius Proclus (Elio Proclo) did not write an autonomous treatise on figura. [1]
Within the landscape of Late Antique and Roman philology, his name survives primarily in municipal, epigraphic, and minor lexicographical citations. He did not leave behind a formal, systematic grammatical manual (Ars Grammatica) handling the classification of figures (figurae) or tropes (tropi). [12]
However, looking at this through the Gricean/Speranza framework of "speculative grammar" and the manuscript tradition, the connection between the names ProclusAelius, and figura exists because of textual transmission overlaps: [1]
1. The Confusion with Aelius Herodianus (Pseudo-Herodian)
In the technical catalog of ancient grammarians, a highly famous text explicitly titled On Figures (De figuris / Περὶ σχημάτων) is preserved. [1]
  • This work was traditionally attributed to Aelius Herodianus (the great 2nd-century grammarian).
  • Modern classical philology has proven this text to be spurious, categorizing the author as "Pseudo-Herodian".
  • Because both Aelius Herodianus and Proclus (the philosopher who did write on grammar and language structure) were heavyweights in the same late Greek/Latin grammatical compilations, their works were frequently bound together or conflated by medieval scribes. [123]
2. The Link to Chrestomathy
If we trace the specific grammarian named Proclus (often dated to the 2nd century CE to separate him from the Neoplatonist), his defining contribution to language study was his Chrestomathy (Χρηστομάθεια). [1]
  • Rather than a technical manual on rhetorical syntax (figura), this was an introduction to literature and style.
  • It mapped out how archaic and classical writers used language. By extension, it provided the structural baseline for why certain epic expressions departed from everyday speech. [12]
The Pragmatic Integration
If we apply Paul Grice’s philosophy of language here, a grammarian like Aelius Proclus represents the preservation of conventional semantic rules.
While he did not invent a taxonomy of figura, his role in the transmission of the Chrestomathy served a vital pragmatic purpose: it taught Roman and post-Roman students how to recognize the baseline of literal text. Without a strictly defined baseline of "normal" grammatical form, a speaker cannot intentionally alter an utterance into a figura or tropus to flag a Gricean conversational implicature. [1]
Would you like to pivot to Aelius Donatus, who did write the definitive Roman manual detailing the exact variations of figura, or explore how Pseudo-Herodian's De figuris classifies semantic shifts? [1]

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