Inferpedia - an encyclopedia of the missing

Abydenus' lost Assyrian-Chaldaean history

A lost Near Eastern historical work preserved through chronographic fragments

This article describes an entity that is not directly attested. It is an inference from the evidence listed below.
Existence warrant
82
how strongly the evidence implies it existed
Direct attestation
65
how directly sources name it — low is normal here
Specificity
78
how precisely it can be pinned down
Reconstruction
68
how much rests on modern reconstruction
Counterevidence
15
pressure from contrary evidence

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Abydenus' lost Assyrian-Chaldaean history

This article describes an entity that is not directly attested as a complete surviving work. Abydenus' Assyrian-Chaldaean historical writing is known through fragments and notices preserved by later authors, especially Eusebius and chronographic transmission.

Epistemic status

Fragment-attested lost text transmitted through later chronographic witnesses.

Summary

Abydenus' Assyrian-Chaldaean historical writing is warranted as a lost text because later chronographic sources name Abydenus and preserve material attributed to him on Chaldaean and Babylonian kings, flood traditions, Babel material, and Near Eastern chronology. The work is not extant as an independent manuscript.

What is being inferred

The inferred object is the lost historical work or work-cluster behind the Abydenus fragments, not a surviving book. It is reconstructed from later source lists, excerpts, paraphrases, and fragment collections.

What is attested

Eusebius' Chronicle preserves Abydenus material and the Armenian source-list route names Abydenus as an author of books on Assyrians and Medes. Smith's reference entry and older fragment collections summarize further transmission through Eusebius, Cyril, Syncellus, and related chronographic traditions.

Why infer this entity

The source-list and fragment surfaces point to a coherent lost historical-writing dossier rather than isolated anonymous notices. The named author, recurring Near Eastern chronological subject matter, and later reference tradition make a bounded lost-text draft warranted.

Evidence ledger

  • Eusebius' Chronicle transmission route provides the main mediated surface for Abydenus material.
  • The Attalus Abydenus section preserves attributed material on Chaldaean/Babylonian kings and flood traditions.
  • The Armenian source-list route names Abydenus as author of books on Assyrians and Medes.
  • Smith's DGRBM entry gives older reference control and names Eusebius, Cyril, and Syncellus as fragment witnesses.
  • Cory's Ancient Fragments preserves an older collected route for Abydenus-linked passages.

Counterarguments

The surviving material is mediated and may overlap with Berossus, Alexander Polyhistor, and Megasthenes traditions. Some passages could be paraphrased, displaced, or misassigned in chronographic transmission. The title and scope are therefore approximate.

Confidence scores

What would change the score

The score would rise with a critical edition alignment of all Abydenus fragments across Eusebius, Cyril, Syncellus, and Armenian witnesses. It would fall if specific passages now attributed to Abydenus were shown to be anonymous chronographic paraphrase or misassigned Berossian material.

Related lacunae

  • Menander of Ephesus' lost Tyrian history survives the same way: through quotation by a later author rather than by direct transmission.