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Paul the Silentiary
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Paul the Silentiary, also known as Paulus Silentiarius (d. Constantinople, 575-580 AD) was an officer in the imperial household of the Byzantine emperor Justinian, responsible for the silence (hence his name Silentiarius) in the imperial palace. But he's best known as a Byzantine epigrammatist who is noted for his famous hymn of praise of the Hagia Sophia, in which he described the church as if it were a meadow of marble (due to the many colours of marble employed in its construction). Through this eulogy and elaborate praise in verses of the architectural and decorative characteristics of the Hagia Sophia after the reconstruction of the dome in 562, we're able to imagine the magnificence of this basilica before it was plundered many times in the course of history. These poems were most probably commissioned by the emperor Justinian I himself. Paul had to read these verses to the emperor through the inauguration of the basilica. It consists of 1029 verses, starting with 134 iambic trimeters and the rest dactylic hexameters.
   A hundred of his epigrams, a few erotic, are preserved in the Greek Anthology. These pagan epigrams are interesting primarily because of their social and historical information.
   He was a close friend of Agathias Scholastikos, another author of epigrams, who provides some scarce data about his life.

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