Valerius Maximus (flourished ad 30) was a Roman historian and moralist who wrote an important book of historical anecdotes for the use of rhetoricians.
Born into a poor family, Valerius Maximus owed everything to Sextus Pompeius (consul ad 14 and proconsul of Asia), his friend and patron, whom he accompanied to the East about ad 24/25. His book, Factorum et dictorum memorabilium libri ix (c. ad 31; “Nine Books of Memorable Deeds and Sayings”), was intended for use in the schools of rhetoric and written to exemplify human virtues and vices. The book’s anecdotes, drawn chiefly from Roman history, include extracts from the annals of other peoples, principally the Greeks. The arrangement is loose and irregular and the style turgid, artificial, and showy, but Valerius sometimes managed an effective and well-placed pointed expression, an ingenious transition, or a clever piece of fancy. Despite its contradictions and errors, his collection proved very popular, especially in the Middle Ages.
Valerius’ sources are not easily determined. He made considerable use of Cicero and Livy, and he also used Pompeius Trogus, Varro, and some Greek writers. Valerius was a champion of the empire and of the emperor Tiberius, to whom the work is dedicated, and he voiced the general feeling that the Romans of his day were inferior to their ancestors but greatly superior to the rest of the world.