Category
page 1Latin pseudepigrapha
Corpus Hermeticum
Egyptian-Greek wisdom text
Pseudo-Plutarch
Pseudo-Plutarch is the conventional name given to the actual, but unknown, authors of a number of pseudepigrapha attributed to Plutarch but now known not to have been written by him. Some of these works were included in editions of Plutarch's Moralia.
Distichs of Cato
Latin collection of proverbial wisdom and morality
Correspondence of Paul and Seneca
4th-century forgery claiming to be a set of letters between Paul the Apostle and Seneca the Younger
Martyrologium Hieronymianum
5th-century Christian text
Pseudo-Augustine
thumb|Start of the Sermo de symbolo contra Iudaeos, paganos et Arianos in the early 14th-century manuscript B.II.20 of the Durham Cathedral Library
Pseudo-Augustine is the name given by scholars to the authors, collectively, of works falsely attributed to Augustine of Hippo. Augustine himself in his Retractiones lists many of his works, while his disciple Possidius tried to provide a complete list in his Indiculus. Despite this check, false attributions to Augustine abound.