The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Statius, Publius Papinius
(pb´ls ppn´s st´shs) (KEY) , c.A.D. 45c.A.D. 96, Latin poet, b. Naples. A favorite of Emperor Domitian, he won the poetry prize at an annual festival under Domitians auspices but later was an unsuccessful competitor at the Capitoline contest in Rome. His surviving works include two epics in the manner of Vergilthe Thebaid, on the Seven against Thebes, and the Achilleid (incomplete), on the early life of Achillesand the Silvae, a collection of poems, some displaying careful craftsmanship, others apparently hastily composed improvisations. Statius was much esteemed in his own time and through the Middle Ages.