Aesop

Aesop (6th cent. BC ),
to whom tradition attributes the authorship of the whole stock of Greek fables, is probably a legendary figure. The fables were orally transmitted for the most part, but some were put into verse by Babrius (3rd cent. AD ), while some were translated into Latin by Phaedrus (1st cent. AD ) and Avianus (?4th cent. AD ). They became known to the West in the Renaissance through the 14th-cent. prose version compiled by the Byzantine scholar Maximus Planudes . Erasmus produced a Latin edition in 1513 which was then widely used in schools. They were widely imitated and adapted throughout the 18th cent. Richard Bentley 's attack on the antiquity of the ‘Aesopian’ fables in his Dissertations ( 1697 , 1699 ) was one of the notable contributions to the controversy satirized in Swift's The Battle of the Books .

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