Nobile nomen Eurydamas: The reception of Homer’s Odyssey in Silius Italicus’ Punica
EDN: MWGDFS
Abstract
The article analyzes an instance of intertextuality in the second book of Silius Italicus’ Punica. The author focuses on fragment II.177–187 with its mention of Eurydamas, a descendant of one of Penelope’s suitors, among the defenders of besieged Saguntum. The description of this ancestor’s actions, particularly the claim about Odysseus’s death, corresponds in Homer’s Odyssey not to Eurydamas, but to another suitor — Eurymachus. The work examines the hypotheses proposed in historiography to resolve this contradiction. The first suggests that Silius makes the Eurydamas in Punica a descendant of Eurydamas from the Odyssey. The second hypothesis proposes an error by Silius, who confused Eurydamas with another, more prominent suitor of Penelope — Eurymachus — or a similar accidental scribal error. Finally, some scholars suggest an intentional ambiguity concealing a reference to Eurymachus. The author criticizes the first two versions, pointing to the unlikelihood of a random scribal error or a mistake by the highly erudite Silius. The use of a minor Homeric character and Silius’s supplementation of the Homeric tradition also seem improbable. The author supports and elaborates on the third hypothesis proposed in historiography: Silius deliberately uses the name Eurydamas to demonstrate his erudition and create an intertextual reference, while the description unequivocally points the educated reader to Eurymachus. Such ambiguity, according to the author, aligns with the overall poetics of Punica as a work rich in allusions. The proposed interpretation resolves the contradiction without textual emendations and fits Silius’s method of complex literary play with sources.
Keywords
About the Author
D. V. ZaytsevRussian Federation
Dmitry Vladimirovich Zaytsev, Cand. Sci. (History) Associate Professor, General History Department, Faculty of History and Philology, Institute for Social Sciences; Senior Research Fellow, Laboratory for Interdisciplinary Analysis of Society, Culture and History, Phystech School of Applied Mathematics and Informatics
119571, Moscow, Prospekt Vernadskogo, 82
141701, Moscow Region, Dolgoprudny, Institutsky Lane, 9
References
1. Albrecht, M. von (1964). Silius Italicus: Freiheit und Gebundenheit römischer Epik. Schippers.
2. Augoustakis, A. (2010). Silius Italicus, a Flavian poet. In A. Augoustakis (Ed.). Brill’s companion to Silius Italicus (pp. 1–23). Brill.
3. Bauer, L. (1883). Das Verhältnis der Punica des C. Silius Italicus zur dritten Dekade des T. Livius. Druck der Universitäts — Buchdruckerei von Junge & Sohn.
4. Estarán Tolosa, M. J. (2021). Arse-Saguntum, la ciudad de los dos nombres. Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica, 27(1), 109–132. https://doi.org/10.47743/saa-2021-27-1-5.
5. Gimadeev, E. R. (2025). Mif o Falerne Siliia Italika v svete istorii falernskogo vina [The myth of Falernus by Silius Italicus in light of history of Falernian wine]. https://doi.org/10.30842/ielcp2306901529026. Indoevropejskoe âzykoznanie i klassičeskaâ filologiâ, 29(1), 483–504. (In Russian).
6. Hardie, Ph. (1993). The epic successors of Virgil: A study in the dynamics of a tradition. Cambridge Univ. Press.
7. Heynacher, M. (1877). Die Stellung des Silius Italicus unter den Quellen zum zweiten punischen Kriege. Weidmannsche Buchhandlung.
8. Klotz, A. (1933). Die Stellung des Silius Italicus unter den Quellen zur Geschichte des zweiten punischen Krieges. Rheinisches Museum für Philologie, 82(1), 1–34.
9. Lucarini, C. M. (2004). Le fonti storiche di Silio Italico. Athenaeum, 92, 103–126.
10. Nesselrath, H.-G. (1986). Zu den Quellen des Silius Italicus. Hermes, 114(2), 203–230.
11. Nicol, J. (1936). The historical and geographical sources used by Silius Italicus. Blackwell.
12. Spaltenstein, F. (1986). Commentaire des Punica de Silius Italicus (livres 1 à 8). Librairie Droz.
13. Spaltenstein, F. (2006). А propos des sources historiques de Silius Italicus. Un reponse à Lucarini. Athenaeum, 94, 717–718.
14. Vessey, D. W. T. C. (1973). The myth of Falernus in Silius, Punica 7. The Classical Journal, 68(3), 240–246.
15. Wilson, M. (2004). Ovidian Silius. Arethusa, 37(2), 225–249.
Review
For citations:
Zaytsev D.V. Nobile nomen Eurydamas: The reception of Homer’s Odyssey in Silius Italicus’ Punica. Shagi / Steps. 2026;12(1):181-191. (In Russ.) EDN: MWGDFS
JATS XML




































