gtp logo

Πληροφορίες τοπωνυμίου

Εμφανίζονται 100 (επί συνόλου 266) τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Βιογραφίες  στην ευρύτερη περιοχή: "ΝΟΤΙΟ ΑΙΓΑΙΟ Περιφέρεια ΕΛΛΑΔΑ" .


Βιογραφίες (266)

Αρχιτέκτονες

Δεινοκράτης ο Ρόδιος, 4-3ος αι., π.Χ.

ΡΟΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
Architect, City Planner. He followed Alexander the Great to his campaign as a technical consultant.
Works:
- City plan of Alexandria - Egypt, 332-331 BCE. The year 332 BCE Alexander commissioned Deinocrates to lead the topographic works and elaborate the city planning drawings of Alexandria. This is reported by Vitruvius, Valerius Maximus, Ammianus Marcellinus and Plinius. Iulius Valerius gave the details for the planning and the construction of the city. The urbanistic system was based on streets perpendicular to each other and was the model for the design of many cities in the Near East. Deinocrates collaborated with Crates the Olynthian, considered to be the best hydraulic engineer of his time. He designed and constructed a very effective system of channels, pipes and installations in order to supply the city with water. Many Greek architects and engineers, like Heron the Libyan and Parmenion, took part at the construction of Alexandria.
- City plan for may cities
- Temples at Delphi, Delos and at her cities.
- Philipp΄s Monument. A grave monument in the form of a pyramid was not realised because of the extremely high cost and Alexander' s death as Diodoros the Sicilan mentions.
- Alteration of Mount Athos, to a statue of Alexander the Great. The plan was rejected by Alexander as utopic. Vitruvius mentions it in the preface of Book II of his writing "De Architectura". According to Deinocrates΄ design Alexander could hold in one hand a whole city and in the other one a wine bowl from which a river would flow to the sea.
- Second Artemis Temple - Ephesos, 334 BCE One of the Seven Wonders of the world. He collaborated with Paeonios the Ephesian and Demetrios.
- Hephaistion΄s Fire. A big monument described by Diodoros the Sicilan, Strabon, Arrianos, Plutarchos and others. It was erected in Babylon in honour of Hephaestion a close friend, general and Vice King of Alexander, who died at Ecbatana 324 BCE. It was a stone monument with 6 stores invested along the whole height with golden plates, total surface 380 sqm. Deinocrates used the Babylonian temples as his model.

Αστρονόμοι

Ιππαρχος ο Ρόδιος


  The greatest astronomer of antiquity, he is called "The father of Astronomy". Born in Nicaea - Bithynia, he lived in Rhodes and Alexandria. Hipparchos considered as prerequisite for the existence of geography the use of astronomic methods for the determination of the latitude ( gnomon, culmination of the fixed stars, duration of the longest day on a certain place ). Thus he determined the position of different cities. For the determination of the longitude, he used the differences of the local time, calculated during a solar eclipse. His maps were based on geometrical calculations and showed a big progress in the History of Cartography. A crater of the moon was named in his honour "Hipparchos". He is mentioned by Stobaios.
Works
"Astrolabos" He is inventor of this device with which he calculated exactly the coordinates of the stars. Two kinds of "Astrolabos" were in use : The spherical and the level-spherical. Helped by the last one he applied the "stereographic projection", discovered by himself, in order to determine the exact time.
"Dioptra". He completed this instrument and used it for the estimation of the apparent diameter of the sun and the moon as well as of the distance and their real size.
"Cathetion", "Gnomon", "Polos", "Heliotropion or Skiatherion", "Sundial", "Clepsydra", "Solid sphere", "Hydrologion", "Rings".
- He was the first to divide the circle to 360.
- He discovered the spherical shape of earth.
- He constructed the first earth globe.
134 BCE he discovered a star that did not exist before, probably a comet, at the constellation of Scorpion and formulated the principle of astronomy that "the stars on the sky ar not eternal".
Hipparchos' Star Catalogue. Was written in the year 127 BCE and is still in existence today. Contains data on 1039 of the brightest, at this time visible stars like "the sky length and width of them" (corresponding to the geographic longitude and latitude, i.e. the sky coordinates of the stars ).
- He determined the year's duration to 365,246667 days ( the real one is : 365, 242217 days ).
- He calculated the obliquity of the ecliptic (i.e. the angle between the earth΄s trajectory and the equator ) to 23 51' (the real one at Hipparchos΄time was 23 43΄)
- Based on eclipse observations he estimated the average distance Moon-Earth to 33,66 X Earth΄s diameter ( the real one is 30,20 X Earth΄s diameter ) and the Moon΄s diameter to 1/3 X Earth΄s diameter (instead of 0,27 ).
- He estimated the time of lunar eclipses.
- He calculated the length of the maximal circle of the earth to 39.960 kms ( 252.000 stadions ), the real one being 40.000 kms i.e. with an approxmation of 40 kms .
- Using astronomic methods he determined the coordinates of points at the earth surface, estimating their latitude. The longitude estimated through the observation of the eclipses.
- He observed the planets and their trajectories
- He is the founder of both, level and spherical trigonometry .
- He made a table giving the length of the circle΄s chords.
- He was the first to apply the "stereographic projection of the sphere" i.e. the depiction of the spherical surface on the level. This method is still used today by the preparation of geographic maps.
- He criticized the work of Eratosthenes.
Books
- On constellations ( Περί των αστερισμών )
- On fixed stars syntaxis ( Περί της των απλανών συντάξεως )
- On simultaneous reverse attraction ( Περί της των συναναστολών πραγματείας )
- On the twelve signs of the zodiac ( Περί των δώδεκα ζωδίων αναφοράς )
- On the changes of tropical and spring points ( Περί της μεταπτώσεως των τροπικών και εαρινών σημείων )
- Parallactica - 2 books ( Παραλλακτικών - Βιβλία δύο )
- On solar and lunar sizes and distances ( Περί μεγεθών και αποστημάτων ηλίου και σελήνης )
- On the montly side ways movement of the moon ( Περί της κατά πλάτος μηνιαίας της σελήνης κινήσεως )
- On sun eclipses during the seven climates (Περί εκλείψεων ηλίου κατά τα επτά κλίματα )
- On monthly time ( Περί μηνιαίου χρόνου )
- On leap months and days ( Περί εμβολίμων μηνών τε και ημερών )
- On the year΄s size ( Περί του ενιαυσίου μεγέθους )
- On circle straight lines - 12 books ( Περί της πραγματείας των εκ κύκλω ευθειών - Βιβλία δώδεκα )
- On objects falling because of their weight ( Περί των διά βάρους κάτω φερομένων)
- To Eratosthenes and his Geography ( Προς τον Ερατοσθένη και τα εν τη γεωγραφία αυτού λεχθέντα )
- To the bests ( Εις τους αρίστους )
- On Aratos' and Eudoxos΄ Phaenomena - 3 books ( Περί των Αράτου και Ευδόξου φαινομένων - Βιβλία τρία ).
The last book is still in existence today. The others were burned during the fire-raising of the Library of Alexandria. Fortunatelly some extensive excerpts of Hipparchos΄ books still exist today in the writings of other ancient writers, like Ptoloemaeos, Plinius, Strabon, Theon of Smyrna, Theon of Alexandria, and Plutarchos.

Γέμινος ή Γεμίνος ο Ρόδιος

Geminos the Rhodian. Philosopher, mathematician, astronomer, geographer He was a student of Poseidonios at his Rhodes΄School.
Works
He wrote Introduction Books to astronomy and mathematics.
"Introduction to Phaenomena" ( Εισαγωγή εις τα φαινόμενα ). It still exists today Contains the most important theories of ancient astronomy. He analysed them in a very detailed way according to Hipparchos΄ theory.
"Epitomizing the Poseidonian Meteorological Explanation" ( Επιτομή της Ποσειδωνίου Μετεωρολογικών εξηγήσεως ). Excerpts are still in existence today in greek and arabic.
"On mathematic order" ( Περί της των μαθηματικών τάξεως ). History of mathematics. Some parts still exist today in Greek and Arabic. He distinguishes pure mathematics to : Arithmetic, geometry/applied mathematics : Logistic, geodesy, harmony, optic, mechanics, astronomy. In his work he followed the astronomic tradition started by Eudoxos.
  A moon crater was named in his honour "Geminos". A group of shooting stars was called "the Gemenides".

Γεωγράφοι

Διονύσιος ο Ρόδιος, 2ος αι., π.Χ.

Geographer. Priest in the Helios' Temple in Rhodes.
Work: "Voyage around the world" ( Οικουμένης Περιήγησις )
Writings on agriculture, Excerpts are in existence today

Ευδοξος ο Ρόδιος, 3ος αι., π.Χ.

Geographer, Historian
Works: "Earth Period" ( Περίοδος γης ), "Historiae" ( Ιστορίαι ), "Periploi" ( Περίπλοι ).
Some excerpts still exist today.

Τιμοσθένης ο Ρόδιος, 3ος αι., π.Χ.

Geographer, Chartographer, Explorer.
As an admiral of the King of Egypt Ptolemaeos the 2nd, (Philadelphos), took the order to travel and explore. He studied the big philosophers and geographers of the ancient world : Aristoteles, Dicaearchos, Eudoxos, Ephoros, Cleon. His work was commented on by : Eratoshthenes, Strabon, Hipparchos and Marcianos. Strabon notes : "Timosthenes circumnavigated the Tyrrhenian Sea". He is also mentioned by Agathemeros.
Works
"On Ports" ( Περί λιμένων ) 10 Books. Not in existence today. The writing was criticized by Eratosthenes, Hipparchos, and Strabon.
"On Islands" ( Περί νήσων ) He describes the islands : Cyprus, Thera, Sicily, Cephallenia, Hecatonnes ( a group of hundred islands between Lesbos and the Ionian coast ).
"Stadiasmoi - Explanatory" ( Σταδιασμοί - Εξηγητικού ) He made many maps and wind diagrams based on "Meteorologica" of Aristoteles. He was considered to be an expert on wind matters. He took Rhodes as centre of his maps and this was continued by his successors.
Excerpts of his books still exist today in the writings of other scientists

Γλύπτες

Χάρης ο Λίνδιος, 3ος αι., π.Χ.

ΛΙΝΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΛΙΝΔΟΣ
Chares, of Lindus in Rhodes, a statuary in bronze, was the favourite pupil of Lysippus, who took the greatest pains with his education, and did not grudge to initiate him into all the secrets of his art. Chares flourished at the beginning of the third century B. C. (Anon. ad Herenn. iv. 6; printed among Cicero's rhetorical works). He was one of the greatest artists of Rhodes, and indeed he may be considered as the chief founder of the Rhodian school of sculpture. Pliny (H. N. xxxiv. 7. s. 18) mentions among his works a colossal head, which P. Lentulus (the friend of Cicero, cos. B. C. 57) brought to Rome and placed in the Capitol, and which completely threw into the shade another admirable colossal head by Decius which stood beside it (The apparently unnecessary emendation of Sillig and Thiersch, improbabilis for probabilis, even if adopted, would not alter the general meaning of the sentence, at least with reference to Chares).
  But the chief work of Chares was the statue of the Sun, which, under the name of "The Colossus of Rhodes", was celebrated as one of the seven wonders of the world. Of a hundred colossal statues of the Sun which adorned Rhodes, and any one of which, according to Pliny, would have made famous the place that might possess it, this was much the largest. The accounts of its height differ slightly, but all agree in making it upwards of 105 English feet. Pliny, evidently repeating the account of some one who had seen the statue after its fall, if he had not seen it himself, says that few could embrace its thumb; the fingers were larger than most statues; the hollows within the broken limbs resembled caves; and inside of it might be seen huge stones, which had been inserted to make it stand firm. It was twelve years in erecting (B. C. . 292-280), and it cost 300 talents. This money was obtained by the sale of the engines of war which Demetrius Poliorcetes presented to the Rhodians after they had compelled him to give up his siege of their city (B. C. 303). The colossus stood at the entrance of the harbour of Rhodes. There is no authority for the statement that its legs extended over the mouth of the harbour. It was overthrown and broken to pieces by an earthquake 56 years after its erection (B. C. 224, Euseb. Chron., and Chron. Pasch. sub Ol. 139. 1; Polyb. v. 88, who places the earthquake a little later, in B. C. 218). Strabo (xiv.) says, that an oracle forbade the Rhodians to restore it (See also Philo Byzant. de VII Orbis Miraculis, c. iv.). The fragments of the colossus remained on the ground 923 years, till they were sold by Moawiyeh, the general of the caliph Othman IV., to a Jew of Emesa, who carried them away on 900 camels (A. D. 672). Hence Scaliger calculated considering the mechanical difficulties both of modelling and of casting so large a statue, the nicety required to fit together the separate pieces in which it must necessarily have been cast, and the skill needed to adjust its proportions, according to the laws of optics, and to adapt the whole style of the composition to its enormous size, we must assign to Chares a high place as an inventor in his art.
  There are extant Rhodian coins, bearing the head of the Sun surrounded with rays, probably copied from the statue of Chares or from some of the other colossal statues of the sun at Rhodes. There are two epigrams on the colossus in the Greek Anthology.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Another passage concerning Chares, written in Rome around 70 B.C. but probably derived from a second-century Hellenistic rhetorician, has been taken by Preisshofen 1970-1 as a manifesto for eclectic neo-classicism:
Do not these schoolmasters, teachers of rhetoric to all the world, see that they are making asses of themselves when they seek to borrow the very thing they offer to bestow on others? . . . Chares did not learn from Lysippus how to make statues by Lysippus showing him a head by Myron, arms by Praxiteles, a torso by Polycleitus, but observed the master making all right in front of him; he could study the works of others, if he wished, on his own initiative. But these writers believe that those who want to learn [rhetoric] can best be taught by the methods of others.
(Auctor ad Herrenium 4.6.9)

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited Feb 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Architect, Sculptor, student of the famous sculptor Lysippos. Mentioned by Polybios, Plinius, Philon the Byzantian, Stobaios and Strabon.
Work: The Colossus of Rhodes
This bronze statue is a remarkable work combining engineering, architecture and sculpture and is one of the Seven Wonders of the world. It was dedicated to God Apollon and weighed 225 ton. The height was equal to 33 m. The construction time lasted 12 years, from 292 to 280 BCE. A group of almost normal beams, starting at the feet and ending at the head, were connected to the outside covering (3,5 cm thick) which supported the whole statue. Chares used great volume of earth which surrounded the statue. He began the construction from the lowest point going upwards. After finishing the statue he removed the beams and the earth masses. The total cost of the work amounted to 300 talents. Parts of the descriptions of Philon Byzantios, Plinius and Strabon still exist today. Polybios mentions that Plolaemeos promised the Rhodians to spend 3.000 talents for the re-erection, but it never took place. Strabon justifies the "non reerection" by the existence of an adverse oracle. The statue was broken at the knees and destroyed by an earthquake in the year 220 BCE. The year 654 ACE it was sold to a Jewish merchant who used 900 camels to remove it, according to the Byzantine Chonicler Kedrenos (" A composition of Stories" - 11th cent. ACE ).

Scopas (c.395-350BC)

ΠΑΡΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
  Sculptor and architect from the island of Paros. He worked on the Mausoleum in Halicarnassus, depicting the hunt of the Caledonian swine on the east side. Some of the building has survived, as well as parts of a temple of Athena in Tegea.
  Characteristic of Scopas' sculptures is their heads with half-open mouths and deep-set eyes.
  Scopas was together with Praxiteles e leader of the Attic school.

This text is cited Sept 2003 from the In2Greece URL below.


Σκόπας

  First-century Delian inscriptions record restoration work by Aristandros of Paros, son of Skopas; if the sequence holds, the Aristandros of Paros active around 400 thus becomes the great Skopas' father. Skopas' recorded works, all marbles but for no. 1, are:
Divinities
1. Aphrodite Pandemos riding a goat, at Elis
2. Aphrodite and Pothos, in Samothrace
3. Aphrodite, later in Rome
4. Apollo Kitharoidos at Rhamnous, taken to Rome by Augustus
5. Apollo Smintheus and a mouse, at Chryse in the Troad
6. Ares, seated and colossal, later in Rome
7. Artemis Eukleia at Thebes
8. Asklepios and Hygieia at Gortys in Arkadia
9. Asklepios and Hygieia at Tegea
10. Athena at Knidos
11. Athena Pronaos at Thebes
12. Dionysos at Knidos
13. Hekate at Argos
14. Hermes (a herm)
15. Hestia, later in Rome
16. Leto and Ortygia with the babies Apollo and Artemis, at Ephesos
Others
17. Two Erinyes (Furies) flanking another by Kalamis, at Athens
18. Eros, Himeros and Pothos, grouped with the Peitho and Paregoros of Praxiteles around the ancient Aphrodite Praxis at Megara
19. Herakles at Sikyon
20. Basket-bearer ('kanephoros') and two pillars, later in Rome
21. A Maenad
Architectural sculpture
22. Poseidon, Thetis, Achilles, and their train, later in the Circus Flaminius at Rome
23. Reliefs on one of the columns of the temple of Artemis at Ephesos
24. East side of the Mausoleum at Halikarnassos
25. Temple of Alea Athena at Tegea
Uncertain or spurious
26. The dying children of Niobe, later in Rome (also given to Praxiteles)
27. 'Janus' taken by Augustus from Alexandria to Rome (ditto)
28. Eros/Alkibiades with a thunderbolt, later in Rome (ditto)
29. Artemis, supposedly in an Athenian private collection ca. A.D. 150
  The Mausoleum apart (24), none of these is exactly datable, and the floruit of Pliny (N.H. 35.49-52) is clearly wrong. What other information we have tends to cluster in the 340s and 330s. The old temple at Tegea (25) was burnt in 395, but it now seems that Skopas's replacement postdates the Mausoleum (Norman 1986), with which it shares the same foot-module. A relief with Ada, Idrieus, and Zeus Stratios found at the site and dated to 345 was presumably dedicated by a worker he brought back with him from Halikarnassos. The Temenos at Samothrace, probably the location of (2) and provided with coffer reliefs in the style of the Tegea heads (25) was built in the 330s. (7) and (11), on the other hand, must predate the destruction of Thebes in 335. Finally, (23) was also begun around 340, to replace the temple burnt in 356.
  Skopas' career is thus only documented from ca. 360 to ca. 335, though most studies assume that it began in the 370s, and make him an exact contemporary of Praxiteles. In fact, Praxiteles apparently collaborated on (18) and was a rival candidate for (26)-(28); elsewhere, the two are often paired by Greek and Roman writers, Pliny included:
"Scopas rivals these [Praxiteles and his sons] in merit. He made the Venus and Pothos which are worshipped with the most solemn ritual in Samothrace, also the Palatine Apollo, the seated and much-praised Vesta in the Gardens of Servilius, two turning-posts beside her (duplicated in Asinius [Pollio's] collection, where his Basket-bearer is also to be found). But most highly esteemed are those works in the shrine of Cn. Domitius in the Circus Flaminius: Neptune himself, Thetis, Achilles, Nereids seated on dolphins, sea-dragons, or sea-horses, Tritons, the chorus of Phorcys, swordfish and many other sea-creatures, all carved by the same hand, a magnificent achievement, even if it had taken his whole life. As it is, apart from the works just mentioned and those unknown to us, there is furthermore the colossal seated Mars by the same artist in the temple of Brutus Callaecus, also in the Circus, and especially a nude Venus, that surpasses the one by Praxiteles and would have brought fame to anywhere else but Rome. (Pliny N.H. 36.25-6)
  Given the limitations of ancient connoisseurship (Dionysios of Halikarnassos, Demosthenes 50), some caution is necessary, but such a consistent pattern of association may shed unexpected light on Skopas' style, at least in those genres where their work overlapped.
  Of the 25 secure works, fragments of only (25) and perhaps (9) and (22) can be recognized in the original, thanks to unusually detailed accounts in the literature:
" [The old temple at Tegea] was completely destroyed by a sudden fire when Diophantos was archon at Athens, in the 2nd year of the 96th Olympiad, when Eupolemos of Elis won the foot-race [395]. The present temple is far superior to all other temples in the Peloponnese on many grounds, but particularly as regards its embellishment and size. The first colonnade is Doric, and the one after that is Corinthian; also [in]side the temple stand Ionic columns. I learnt that its architect was Skopas of Paros, who made the images in many places in ancient Greece, and some besides in Ionia and Caria.
Concerning the pedimental sculptures, on the front is the Hunt of the Kalydonian Boar. The boar stands right in the center, and on one side are Atalante, Meleager, Theseus, Telamon and Peleus, Polydeukes, and Iolaos -- Herakles' companion in most of his Labors -- and the sons of Thestios and brothers of Althaia, Prothoos and Kometes. On the other side of the boar comes [. . . lacuna? . . .], Epochos supporting Ankaios who is now wounded and has dropped his axe, then Kastor, Amphiaraos son of Oikles, then Hippothous son of Kerkyon, son of Agamedes, son of Stymphalos. The last figure is Peirithous. On the rear pediment is the battle between Telephos and Achilles on the plain of Kaikos." (Pausanias 8.45)
"The ancient image of Alea Athena was carried off by the Roman emperor Augustus, together with the tusks of the Kalydonian boar, after he defeated Antony and his allies , among whom were all the Arcadians except the Mantineans . . . . It is in the Forum of Augustus, right in the entrance, . . . made throughout of ivory, the work of Endoios." (Pausanias 8.46)
"The present image at Tegea was brought from the deme of Manthyrenses, and was surnamed by them "Hippia" . . . On one side of it stands Asklepios, on the other Hygieia, works of Skopas of Paros in Pentelic marble. Of the votives in the temple the following are the most notable..." (Pausanias 8.47)
  On the Tegea sculptures: head of Telephos (Tegea Museum 60), head of a warrior from the west pediment (Athens, NM 180), head supposedly from Tegea (Malibu 79.AA.1); the Getty head (Stewart 1982b; Hafner 1984) is a fake. The Grimani Triton in Berlin is a likely survivor from (22), whose base is often thought to be the so-called 'Ahenobarbus Ara' (marriage of Poseidon and Amphitrite (Munich 239), census, with Mars looking on (Louvre MA 975; Stewart 1990, figs. 843-46), though the arguments deployed in support are both tortuous and ultimately unconvincing. P.W. Lehmann 1973 and P.W. Lehmann1982 adds the Samothracian coffer reliefs, together with the architecture of the propylon to the Temenos itself.
  As to copies, replicas of (2) or (18), (4), (19), and (21) have been identified with varying degrees of certainty, and the Lansdowne-type Herakles (Malibu 70.AA.109) and Meleager (Vatican 490) added to the list. Most secure among these is the Maenad (21), thanks once again to an extended description:
"Skopas, as if moved by some inspiration, imparted to the making of his statue the divine frenzy that possessed him. Why should I not describe to you from the beginning the inspiration of this work of art?
The statue of a Maenad, wrought from Parian marble, has been transformed into a real Maenad. For the stone, while retaining its own nature, yet seemed to depart from the law which governs stone; what one saw was really an image, but art carried imitation over into actual reality. You would have seen that, hard as it was, it became soft to resemble the feminine, though its vigor corrected the femininity, and that, though it lacked the power to move, it knew how to dance in Bacchic frenzy, responding to the god as he entered within.
When we saw her face we stood speechless, so clear upon it was the evidence of sense perception, though perception was not present; so clear was the intimation of Bacchic divine possession stirring Bacchic frenzy, though no such possession aroused it; and as many signs of passion that a soul goaded by divine madness displays, these blazed out from it, fashioned by art in fashion indescribable. The hair fell free to be tossed by the wind, and was divided to show the glory of each strand; this most of all transcended reason, since, stone though the material was, it obeyed the lightness of hair and yielded to imitation of its tresses, and though void of life's vitality it was vital withal.
Indeed you might say that art has harnessed the impulses of growth, so unbelievable is what you see, so visible is what you do not believe. It actually even showed hands in motion -- for it was not waving the Bacchic thyrsos, but carried a victim as if crying "Euoi"! -- sign of a more poignant madness. And the figure of the kid was livid in color, and the stone took on the appearance of dead flesh; and though the material was one and the same, it severally imitated life and death . . (Kallistratos, Descriptions 2.1-4)
  Finally, as well as (19), (1) and perhaps (5) are pictured on coins. . .
Yet it is here if anywhere that the heroic manner of the extant marbles would be most muted and his rivalry with Praxiteles would be most intense. Together, Pliny N.H. 36.25-6 and the copies of the Pothos might confirm this if only we could be sure that his work in this most Praxitelean of subjects was typical. His major concerns -- and with them, his relationship to the great Athenian -- still remain tantalizingly beyond our grasp.

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited July 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


   Scopas (Skopas). A distinguished sculptor, a native of Paros, who appears to have belonged to a family of artists in that island. He flourished from B.C. 395 to 350. He was probably somewhat older than Praxiteles, with whom he stands at the head of that second period of perfected art which is called the Later Attic School (in contradistinction to the Earlier Attic School of Phidias), and which arose at Athens after the Peloponnesian War. Scopas was an architect and a statuary as well as a sculptor. He was the architect of the Temple of Athene Alea at Tegea, in Arcadia, which was commenced soon after B.C. 394. He was one of the artists employed in executing the bas-reliefs that decorated the frieze of the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus in Caria. A portion of these bas-reliefs are now deposited in the British Museum. Among the single statues and groups of Scopas, the best known in modern times is his group of figures representing the destruction of the sons and daughters of Niobe. In Pliny's time the statues stood in the Temple of Apollo Sosianus. The remaining statues of this group, or copies of them, are all in the Florence Gallery, with the exception of the so-called Ilioneus at Munich, which some suppose to have belonged to the group. There is a head of Niobe in the collection of Lord Yarborough, which has some claim to be considered as the original. But the most esteemed of all the works of Scopas, in antiquity, was his group which stood in the shrine of Cn. Domitius in the Flaminian Circus, representing Achilles conducted to the island of Leuce by the divinities of the sea. It consisted of figures of Poseidon, Thetis, and Achilles, surrounded by Nereids, and attended by Tritons, and by an assemblage of sea monsters.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Αγοράκριτος

  No absolute dates are available for Agorakritos, but his career evidently coincided roughly with Alkamenes'. Furthermore, only three works of his are recorded in the sources, as follows:
1. Nemesis at Rhamnous in Attica, of Parian marble
2. Mother of the Gods, in the Metroon at Athens, of marble
3. Athena Itonia and Zeus/Hades at Koroneia in Boiotia, of bronze
   Of these, the first two were regularly attributed to Pheidias. Pliny attempts to explain why:
"Another of [Phidias'] pupils was Agoracritus of Paros, who pleased him also because of his youth and beauty, so that Phidias is said to have allowed him to put his name to several of his, the master's, own works. In any case, the two pupils [Alcamenes and Agoracritus] competed with each other in making a Venus, and Alcamenes won the contest not through superior skill but through the votes of the citizenry, who favored one of their own against a foreigner. So Agoracritus is said to have sold his statue on condition that it should not remain in Athens, and that it should be named "Nemesis". It was set up at Rhamnus, a deme of Attica, and Marcus Varro preferred it above all other statues"(Pliny, N.H. 36.16-17).
  This passage is richer and more revealing of the strengths and weaknesses of Greek and Roman connoisseurship than first appears, though only with Despinis's recent rediscovery of the statue's fragments (Despinis1971) has its full significance become clear. To help demonstrate this, two second-century A.D. accounts of the piece (much renowned in antiquity) must be quoted first:
  "About 60 stades from Marathon as you go along the coast-road to Oropos is Rhamnous. The inhabitants live by the sea, but a little way inland is the sanctuary of Nemesis, the most implacable of the gods towards hybristai . It seems that the wrath of this goddess descended upon the barbarians who landed at Marathon [490]; for thinking in their pride that no obstacle stood in the way of their taking Athens, they brought a piece of Parian marble to make a trophy, as if their task were already finished. It was this stone that Pheidias made into a statue of Nemesis; on her head she wears a crown with deer and some small images of Nike; in her left hand she holds an apple branch, and in her right an offering dish, embellished with Ethiopians. [Pausanias now expresses puzzlement over their presence, noting that they dwell "near Ocean" at the ends of the earth, and remarks upon Ethiopian geography.] I must now resume. Neither this nor any of the old statues of Nemesis have wings, not even the holiest xoana of the Smyrnaeans, but later artists, maintaining that the goddess is wont to appear most of all after a love-affair, gave wings to Nemesis as they do to Eros. Now I will describe the scene on the base of the image, having made this preface for clarity's sake. The Greeks say that Nemesis was the mother of Helen, but that Leda suckled and nursed her; as to Helen's father, the Greeks like everyone else think it was Zeus, not Tyndareus. Having heard this legend Pheidias represented Helen being led to Nemesis by Leda, Tyndareus and his children, and a man called Hippeus standing by with a horse. There are Agamemnon, Menelaos, and Pyrrhos the son of Achilles and first husband of Helen's daughter Hermione. Orestes was omitted because of his crimes against his mother, yet Hermione stood by him through it all and even bore him a child. Next on the base is a man called Epochos and another youth; all I heard about them was that they were the brothers of Oinoe, from whom the name of the deme comes" (Pausanias 1.33).
"The Nemesis at Rhamnous. In Rhamnous there stands an image of Nemesis, ten cubits [15 feet] in height, stone throughout, the work of Pheidias; she holds an apple branch in her hand. Antigonos of Karystos claims that a little tablet hangs from this, and is inscribed as follows: "Agorakritos of Paros made [me]." Yet this is no wonder, for many others have inscribed someone else's name upon their own work. It is likely that Pheidias conceded this to Agorakritos because he was his lover, and was generally much excited over boys" (Zenobios 5.82).
  Antigonos' careful epigraphical researches, accepted by Varro and then Pliny must have been undertaken to counter the very tendency to give works by Pheidias' pupils to the master himself that surfaces in Pausanias and a host of other writers. The fact that even the normally acute Pausanias made this mistake only reinforces one's suspicion about such attributions in genera.
  The feeble rebuttal of Antigonos' conclusions may derive from the antiquary Polemon of Ilion, who wrote a six-book polemic against him around 130 B.C. The story that Pheidias was Agorakritos' lover was either invented by Polemon or (perhaps more likely) was already current, and he simply recognized its utility as ammunition for his feud. Typically, Varro's synthesis of the two authors was evidently accepted wholesale by the uncritical Pliny, who cites neither Antigonos nor Polemon in his source-list for book 36 (N.H. 1.36) but (in N.H. 36.16-17) repeats the gist of the rebuttal in his first sentence.
  What then of the contest and the claim that the Nemesis was originally an Aphrodite? To begin with the later point, Wilamowitz-Moellendorf 1881, was the first to realize that this story was coined to explain the fact that Agorakritos' statue differed from the winged type in use by the Hellenistic period (with an even wilder account of the statue's origins); indeed, not only did the sculptor employ the same generic schema used for Aphrodite, Kore, and other goddesses in the fifth century, but Nemesis' apple branch was also an attribute of Aphrodite. Antigonos, an iconographical specialist too thereby becomes this anecdote's probable source as well.
  As for the contest, though any such event would have involved maquettes (paradeigmata), not finished statues, Paionios' inscription on his Nike (Nike of Paionios; Olympia Museum) certifies that sculptors' competitions were held in the fifth century. This leaves two possibilities: either that the contest is basically historical, and only its association with the supposed "Venus"/Nemesis was Antigonos' doing, or that he actually invented the entire affair, perhaps working up a tradition of rivalry between the two star pupils, in order to explain the statue's otherwise puzzling iconography. The first seems altogether more credible, for while Antigonos was certainly apt to rationalize, outright fabrication seems alien to his personality, at least as reconstructed by Wilamowitz and others.
  Also accepting the story's basic historicity, Schlorb 1964, 14-15 further suggests that it reflects a supposed political (as well as stylistic) polarization among Pheidias' followers, whereby Alkamenes aligned himself with Athenian "conservatives" and Agorakritos with "radicals". Yet as argued concerning Alkamenes this not only oversimplifies the politics but also finds no clear support in the testimonia; indeed Pliny explicitly attributes Agorakritos' defeat to chauvinism, not to politics.
  As to the Nemesis herself (Copenhagen, Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek 304a; Stewart 1990, figs. 403-07), the base is not yet fully reconstructed (relief with figures excerpted from the base of the Nemesis: Stockholm, Nationalmuseum Sk 150), and new fragments are appearing occasionally in the excavations: fragment from right side of the chiton overfold of the Nemesis (Athens, NM), corresponding area of another reduced copy of the Nemesis (Athens, NM 3949). Preliminary reports (B. Petrakos 1981, V. Petrakos 1986) suggest that at the least, Pausanias' account is incomplete; see Shapiro-Lapatin 1992 for a thorough discussion and convincing reinterpretation of the iconography. Despinis 1971 dates the statue to ca. 430, the base ten years later, though the rather small discrepancies between them may reflect differences in quality rather than chronology. The drapery style is certainly novel, but Pausanias' acceptance of Pheidias as author should be a further caution against labeling Agorakritos a "radical", rebelling against Pheidian and Alkamenean "orthodoxy". . .

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited Mar 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Agoracritus (Agorakritos), a famous statuary and sculptor, born in the island of Paros, who flourished from about Ol. 85 to Ol. 88 (Plin. H. N. xxxvi. 5. s. 4). He was the favourite pupil of Phidias (Paus. ix. 34.1), who is even said by Pliny to have inscribed some of his own works with the name of his disciple. Only four of his productions are mentioned, viz. a statue of Zeus and one of the Itonian Athene in the temple of that goddess at Athens; a statue, probably of Cybele, in the temple of the Great Goddess at Athens (Plin. l. c.); and the Rhamnusian Nemesis. Respecting this last work there has been a great deal of discussion. The account which Pliny gives of it is, that Agoracritus contended with Alcamenes (another distinguished disciple of Phidias) in making a statue of Venus ; and that the Athenians, through an undue partiality towards their countryman, awarded the victory to Alcamenes. Agoracritus, indignant at his defeat, made some slight alterations so as to change his Venus into a Nemesis, and sold it to the people of Rhammus, on condition that it should not be set up in Athens. Pausanias (i. 33.2), without saying a word about Agoracritus, says that the Rhamnusian Nemesis was the work of Phidias, and was made out of the block of Parian marble which the Persians under Datis and Artaphernes brought with then for the purpose of setting up a trophy. This account however has been rejected as involving a confusion of the ideas connected by the Greeks with the goddess Nemesis. The statue moreover was not of Parian, but of Pentelic marble. Strabo (ix.), Tzetzes (Chiliad. vii. 154), Suidas and Photius give other variations in speaking of this statue. It seems generally agreed that Pliny's account of the matter is right in the main; and there have been various dissertations on the way in which a statue of Venus could have been changed into one of Nemesis.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Θρασυμήδης ο Πάριος, 4ος αι., π.Χ.

The sculptors of the temple of Asklepios at Epidauros:
. . .Thrasymedes took up the contract for the ceiling, the cella door, and the gates between the columns, for 9,800 drs.; his guarantors were Pythokles, Theopheides, and Hagemon. . .
Thrasymedes son of Arignotos of Paros is slightly better documented, for he made the temple's chryselephantine cult statue (elsewhere inevitably attributed to Pheidias):
" The image of Asklepios is half the size of that of the Olympian Zeus at Athens, and is made of ivory and gold. An inscription says that it was made by Thrasymedes son of Arignotos of Paros. The god is seated on a throne and holds a staff in one hand; his other hand is above the head of the serpent, and a dog lies by his side. On the throne are wrought the exploits of Argive heroes: Bellerophon against the Chimaira, and Perseus carrying off the head of Medusa" (Pausanias 2.27.2).
A new fragment of an inscription hitherto identified as the accounts for this statue now shows that it actually refers to the incubation-building or enkoimaterion of the sanctuary: Here Thrasymedes appears only as a hardware-supplier, but elsewhere he emerges as an extremely versatile carpenter and metalworker, able to turn his hand to a ceiling, a grille, a bronze statue or a chryselephantine one, as required. Krause 1972 has identified a replica of this cult image in Copenhagen from representations on Epidaurian coins.

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited Mar 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Colotes

Colotes A sculptor from the island of Paros, who assisted Phidias in executing the colossus of Zeus at Olympia, and left several beautiful works, principally in gold and ivory, in Elis, where he seems to have lived in banishment. He appears to belong to Ol. 84, &c. (B. C. 444), and is praised for his statues of philosophers. (Strab. viii.; Plin. H. N. xxxiv. 19, xxxv. 34; Paus. v. 20.1; Eustath. ad Il. ii. 603)

Χαλεπάς Γιαννούλης

ΠΥΡΓΟΣ (Οικισμός) ΤΗΝΟΣ
1851 - 1938
Γεννήθηκε στον Πύργο από πατέρα μαρμαρογλύπτη. Σπούδασε γλυπτική στη Σχολή Καλών Τεχνών του Πολυτεχνείου Αθηνών και στην Ακαδημία Καλών Τεχνών του Μονάχου. Αναδείχθηκε στον κορυφαίο των Τηνίων γλυπτών, ενώ θεωρείται ο σύγχρονος Φειδίας.

Φιλιππότης Δημήτριος

1839 - 1919
Γεννήθηκε στον Πύργο από πατέρα μαρμαρογλύπτη. Σπούδασε στη Ρώμη και στη συνέχεια άνοιξε μαρμαρογλυφείο στην Αθήνα. Συνέβαλε σημαντικά στην προαγωγή της γλυπτικής στη χώρα μας.

Αρίστων, 3ος αιώνας π.Χ.

ΡΟΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ

Hagesandros, Apollonios & Tauriskos

Hagesandros son of Paionios, Polydoros son of Polydoros, and Athanodoros son of Hagesandros, of Rhodes.
These three men are the first Rhodians since Chares to emerge in any sense as personalities, though the Apollonios and Tauriskos apparently adopted by Menekrates of Rhodes attain a sort of twilight existence through the recovery of a -- now much restored -- copy of their Dirke group. As to Hagesandros and his collaborators, controversy still rages concerning the date of their Laokoon and Sperlonga groups. The former is described by Pliny as follows:
T171. Pliny, N.H. 36.37-8
   Furthermore, many have little fame, because despite the distinction of their work, the number of artists involved becomes a barrier to recognition, since no single man monopolizes the credit, nor can several of them be recognized on equal terms. Such is the case with the Laocoon in the palace of the emperor Titus, a work to be preferred to any other painting or sculpture. From one stone the eminent craftsmen Hagesander, Polydorus, and Athenodorus of Rhodes made him [Laocoon] and the extraordinary intertwining coils of the snakes, following a plan agreed in advance.
The arguments are far too complicated to address here. Suffice it to say, though, that T 171 and the section following specifically examine the advantages and disadvantages of collaboration; thus, to translate the words de consilii sententia (here, "by common agreement") as "by edict of the [Emperor's] council" and to interpret the similiter ("likewise") that begins the next section as confirming that Titus (or Nero) actually hired the three "in the same way" as earlier emperors had hired other Greeks to embellish the Palatine palaces, is to strain the Latin and ignore the context. Pliny's point remains the simple one that they are all examples of successful collaboration, but for that very reason have slipped from memory, too many names being involved for comfort; he gives no chronological hints whatsoever.
Ostensibly more promising is the epigraphical evidence, recently reexamined by Rice 1986. Identifying Athanodoros with the recipient of an important commission on Rhodes in 42, and Hagesandros with one of the dedicants of a Rhodian family monument ca. 50, she revives an old opinion that the Sperlonga sculptures were carved between 40 and 10, the workshop having migrated to Italy in the meantime. Though this is plausible, and can even be reconciled with the presumed patronage of Tiberius, it rests on "one crucial assumption ... [that] there is only one Rhodian sculptor by the name of Athanodoros; he is the one Athanodoros listed in Blinkenberg's catalogue of sculptors working in Rhodes". Yet since the Athanodoros family, like other Rhodians, habitually alternated names over the generations, a homonymous grandson of Athanodoros, working between A.D. 21 (when Tiberius virtually retired to Sperlonga) and 26 (when the cave roof partially collapsed, nearly killing him) cannot be ruled out. Preoccupied with arguing her own case for a Neronian date, Simon 1984 overlooks all these issues entirely.
As to an initial date, the Sperlonga marbles were surely designed for the grotto: a duplicate arrangement on Rhodes or elsewhere, plundered by some unknown Roman, strains all credulity. This in turn excludes a mid Hellenistic date, indeed any period before the Augustan, when the cave's circular basin was built. "On the cusp" of Greco-Roman sculpture, the three Rhodians' pivotal position has been neatly characterized by Simon:
This region, comprising Rhodes, Tralleis, and Aphrodisias must be regarded as the center of marble sculpture in the imperial period, surpassing even Attica in quality. The Vatican Laokoon group stands not at the end of the Hellenistic, but at the beginning of the neo-Hellenistic, a movement in which Rhodes and Caria were to play a special part. [Simon 1984, 672]
Together with the continued impact of their work through Michelangelo and the Baroque even into the modern world (where "punk" versions have already appeared) this makes them worthy candidates with which to terminate this survey.

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited Feb 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Agesander

Agesander, a sculptor, a native of the island of Rhodes. His name occurs in no author except Pliny (H. N. xxxvi. 5. s. 4), and we know but of one work which he executed; it is a work however which bears the most decisive testimony to his surpassing genius. In conjunction with Polydorus and Athenodorus he sculptured the group of Laocoon, a work which is ranked by all competent judges among the most perfect specimens of art, especially on account of the admirable manner in which amidst the intense suffering portrayed in every feature, limb, and muscle, there is still preserved that air of sublime repose, which characterised the best productions of Grecian genius. This celebrated group was discovered in the year 1506, near the baths of Titus on the Esquiline hill : it is now preserved in the museum of the Vatican. Pliny does not hesitate to pronounce it superior to all other works both of statuary and painting. A great deal has been written respecting the age when Agesander flourished, and various opinions have been held on the subject. Winckelmann and Muller, forming their judgment from the style of art displayed in [p. 69] the work itself, assign it to the age of Lysippus. Miller thinks the intensity of suffering depicted, and the somewhat theatrical air which pervades the group, shews that it belongs to a later age than that of Phidias. Lessing and Thiersch on the other hand, after subjecting the passage of Pliny to an accurate examination, have come to the conclusion, that Agesander and the other two artists lived in the reign of Titus, and sculptured the group expressly for that emperor ; and this opinion is pretty generally acquiesced in. In addition to many other reasons that might be mentioned, if space permitted, if the Laocoon had been a work of antiquity, we can hardly understand how Pliny should have ranked it above all the works of Phidias, Polycletus, Praxiteles, and Lysippus. But we can account for his exaggerated praise, if the group was modern and the admiration excited by its execution in Rome still fresh. Thiersch has written a great deal to shew that the plastic art did not decline so early as is generally supposed, but continued to flourish in full vigour from the time of Phidias uninterruptedly down to the reign of Titus. Pliny was deceived in saying that the group was sculptured out of one block, as the lapse of time has discovered a join in it. It appears from an inscription on the pedestal of a statue found at Nettuno (the ancient Antium) that Athenodorus was the son of Agesander. This makes it not unlikely that Polydorus also was his son, and that the father executed the figure of Laocoon himself, his two sons the remaining two figures.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Athenodorus

Athenodorus, a sculptor, the son and pupil of Agesander of Rhodes, whom he assisted in executing the group of Laocoon.

Menekrates

Asinius Pollio, an ardent enthusiast, naturally wanted his art collection to be seen. In it are the Centaurs carrying Nymphs by Arcesilaus, the Heliconian Muses of Cleomenes, the Oceanus and Jupiter of Heniochus, the Appian Nymphs by Stephanus, the Hermerotes by Tauriscus (not the well-known engraver but the native of Tralles), the Jupiter Hospitalis by Papylus, Praxiteles' pupil, and the group by Apollonius and Tauriscus that was brought from Rhodes: Zethus and Amphion, along with Dirce, the bull, and the rope, all carved from one block. These two artists started a dispute about their parentage, alleging that though Menecrates appeared to be their father, their real father was Artemidorus. In the same collection there is a praiseworthy Liber Pater [Bacchus] by Eutychides. Pliny, N.H.36.33-4

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited Feb 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Philiscus

In this temple (the first temple of Apollo in Rome, in the campus Martius) were some famous works of art, brought probably for the most part to Rome by C. Sosius-paintings by Aristides of Thebes(Plin. NH xxxv. 99), several statues by Philiscus of Rhodes (ib. xxxvi. 34). . .

By the Porticus Octaviae an Apollo made by the Rhodian Philiscus stands in his own shrine, together with a Leto, a Diana, the nine Muses, and another, nude Apollo. Timarchides made Apollo who holds a cithara in the same temple, and in the temple of Juno that stands with the Porticus the goddess herself, while Dionysius and Polycles made another, Philiscus the Venus in the same place, and Praxiteles [or Pasiteles] the rest of the statues. The same Polycles and Dionysus, the sons of Timarchides, made the Jupiter in the shrine next door. . . Pliny, N.H. 36.34-35

This extract is from: Andrew Stewart, One Hundred Greek Sculptors: Their Careers and Extant Works. Cited Feb 2003 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains extracts from the ancient literature, bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


Krito & Timarista

Polydoros

A Greek sculptor of the school of Rhodes, author (in conjunction with Agesander and Athenodorus) of the celebrated group of Laocoon.

Athanodoros, Athenodorus

A Rhodian sculptor associated with Agesander and Polydorus in producing the famous group of Laocoon

Hermocles

Hermocles, (Hermokles), of Rhodes, a statuary, who made the bronze statue of Combabus in the temple of Hera at Hierapolis in Syria. He lived, therefore, in the reign of Antiochus II. (Soter), about B. C. 280, and belonged, no doubt, like Chares, to the Rhodian school of artists, who were the followers of Lysippus. (Lucian, de Dea Syria, 26.)

Γεώργιος Βιτάλης

ΥΣΤΕΡΝΙΑ (Χωριό) ΤΗΝΟΣ
1840 - 1901
Γεννήθηκε στα Υστέρνια. Σπούδασε στην Αθήνα και στην Ακαδημία Καλών Τεχνών του Μονάχου. Τιμήθηκε με πολλά βραβεία και χρυσά μετάλλια στην Ελλάδα και στο εξωτερικό.

Σώχος Λάζαρος

1862 - 1911
Γεννήθηκε στα Υστέρνια. Σπούδασε στην Αθήνα και το Παρίσι. Το 1908 έγινε καθηγητής στη Σχολή Καλών Τεχνών Αθηνών.

Σώχος Αντώνιος

1888 - 1975
Γεννήθηκε στα Υστέρνια από οικογένεια μαρμαρογλυπτών.

Γεώργιος, Μάρκος , Λάζαρος & Ιωάννης Φυτάλης

Γλύπτες που γεννήθηκαν στα Υστέρνια γύρω στα 1821 και μετά . Ίδρυσαν εργαστήριο μαρμαρογλυπτικής στην Αθήνα, το οποίο υπήρξε φυτώριο των Ελλήνων καλλιτεχνών για 40 χρόνια.

Επτά Σοφοί

Κλεόβουλος

ΛΙΝΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΛΙΝΔΟΣ
Cleobulus (Kleoboulos), one of the Seven Sages, was son of Evagoras and a citizen of Lindus in Rhodes, for Duris seems to stand alone in stating that he was a Carian (Diog. Laert. i. 89; Strab. xiv.). He was a contemporary of Solon's, and must have lived at least as late as B. C. 560 (the date of the usurpation of Peisistratus), if the letter preserved in Diogenes Laertius is genuine, which purports to have been written by Cleobulus to Solon, inviting him to Lindus, as a place of refuge from the tyrant. In the same letter Lindus is mentioned as being under democratic government; but Clement of Alexandria (Strom. iv. 19) calls Cleobulus king of the Lindians, and Plutarch (de Ei ap. Delph. 3) speaks of him as a tyrant. These statements may, however, be reconciled, by supposing him to have held, as aisumnetes, an authority delegated by the people through election (Arist. Polit. iii. 14, 15). Much of the philosophy of Cleobulus is said to have been derived from Egypt. He wrote also lyric poems, as well as riddles (griphous) in verse. Diogenes Laertius also ascribes to him the inscription on the tomb of Midas, of which Homer was considered by others to have been the author (comp. Plat. Phaedr.), and the riddle on the year (els ho patep, paides de duodeka, k. t. l.), generally attributed to his daughter Cleobuline. He is said to have lived to the age of sixty, and to have been greatly distinguished for strength and beauty of person. Many of his sayings are on record, and one of them at least -dein sunoikizein tas Dugateras, parthenous men ten helikian, toi de phronein gunaikas- shews him to have had worthier views of female education than were generally prevalent; while that he acted on them is clear from the character of his daughter (Diog. Laert. i. 89-93; Suid. s. v. Kleoboulos; Clem. Alex. Strom. i. 14; comp. Dict. of Ant. s. v. Chelidonia.)

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Cleobulus (Kleoboulos). One of the Seven Sages, of Lindus in Rhodes, son of Evagoras, lived about B.C. 580. He and his daughter, Cleobuline or Cleobule, were celebrated for their skill in riddles. To the latter is ascribed a well-known one on the subject of the year: "A father has twelve children, and each of these thirty daughters, on one side white, and on the other side black, and, though immortal, they all died".

This is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Ζωγράφοι

Cydias

ΚΥΘΝΟΣ (Νησί) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
Cydias (Kudias). A painter, born in the island of Cythnus, one of the Cyclades, and who flourished B.C. 360. Hortensius, the orator, purchased his painting of the Argonauts for 144,000 sesterces (nearly $5800). This same work was afterwards transferred by Agrippa to the portico of Neptune.

Apelles (c 352 - 308 BC)

ΚΩΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
Apelles, the most celebrated of Grecian painters, was born, most probably, at Colophon in Ionia (Suidas, s. v.), though Pliny (xxxv. 36.10) and Ovid (Art. Am. iii. 401; Pont. iv. 1. 29) call him a Coan. The account of Strabo (xiv.) and Lucian (De Calumn. lix.2, 6), that he was an Ephesian, may be explained from the statements of Suidas, that he was made a citizen at Ephesus, and that he studied painting there under Ephorus. He afterwards studied under Pamphilus of Amphipolis, to whom he paid the fee of a talent for a ten-years' course of instruction (Suidas, s. v.; Plin. xxxv. 36.8). At a later period, when he had already gained a high reputation, he went to Sicyon, and again paid a talent for admission into the school of Melanthius, whom he assisted in his portrait of the tyrant Aristratus (Plut. Arat. 13). By this course of study he acquired the scientific accuracy of the Sicyonian school, as well as the elegance of the Ionic...
GTP-remarks:
More about Apelles at Ancient Colophon

Aphrodite Anadyomene

Anadyomene (Anaduomene), the goddess rising out of the sea, a surname given to Aphrodite, in allusion to the story of her being born from the foam of the sea. This surname had not much celebrity previous to the time of Apelles, but his famous painting of Aphrodite Anadyomene, in which the goddess was represented as rising from the sea and drying her hair with her hands, at once drew great attention to this poetical idea, and excited the emulation of other artists, painters as well as sculptors. The painting of Apelles was made for the inhabitants of the island of Cos, who set it up in their temple of Asclepius. Its beauty induced Augustus to have it removed to Rome, and the Coans were indemnified by a reduction in their taxes of 100 talents. In the time of Nero the greater part of the picture had become effaced, and it was replaced by the work of another artist. (Strab. xiv.; Plin. H. N. xxxv. 36.12. and 15; Auson. Ep. 106; Paus. ii. 1.7)

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Pythagoras

ΠΑΡΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
At Pergamus likewise, in the chamber of Attalus, are other images of Graces made by Bupalus;and near what is called the Pythium there is a portrait of Graces, painted by Pythagoras the Parian.

Arcesilaus

Arcesilaus of Paros, was, according to Pliny (xxxv. 39), one of the first encaustic painters, and a contemporary of Polygnotus (about 460 B. C.).

Λύτρας Νικηφόρος

ΠΥΡΓΟΣ (Οικισμός) ΤΗΝΟΣ
1832 - 1904
Γεννήθηκε στον Πύργο από πατέρα μαρμαρογλύπτη. Μετά από σπουδές στην Αθήνα και στο Μόναχο διορίστηκε καθηγητής στη Σχολή Καλών Τεχνών του Πολυτεχνείου Αθηνών, όπου δίδαξε 37 χρόνια. Ασχολήθηκε με όλα τα είδη της ζωγραφικής και δημιούργησε μνημειώδες έργο, που το διακρίνει η ελληνικότητα και η εξαιρετική ευαισθησία. Υπήρξε κορυφαίος Έλληνας καλλιτέχνης, ακαδημαϊκός , διδάσκαλος. Θεωρείται ο σπουδαιότερος Έλληνας ζωγράφος του 19ου αιώνα.

Γύζης Νικόλαος

ΣΚΛΑΒΟΧΩΡΙ (Οικισμός) ΤΗΝΟΣ
1842 - 1901
Γεννήθηκε στο Σκλαβοχώρι όπου και πέρασε τα παιδικά του χρόνια. Μετά από σπουδές στην Αθήνα και το Μόναχο εξελέγη το 1888 τακτικός καθηγητής της Ακαδημίας Καλών Τεχνών του Μονάχου. Τα έργα του αποπνέουν νατουραλισμό, κλασικισμό και ελληνικότητα. Θεωρείται ο πρωτεργάτης της νεοελληνικής τέχνης μαζί με το φίλο του Νικηφόρο Λύτρα. Ασχολήθηκε με όλα τα είδη της ζωγραφικής και κατατάχθηκε από τους ξένους, στους μεγαλύτερους ζωγράφους της εποχής του.

Θεατρικοί συγγραφείς

Καμπανέλλης Ιάκωβος

ΝΑΞΟΣ (Νησί) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
1922: Γεννιέται στη Νάξο το έκτο παιδί του Στέφανου Καμπανέλλη και της γυναίκας του Αικατερίνης, το γένος Λάσκαρη.
1935: Η οικογένειά του αφήνει τη Νάξο και εγκαθίσταται στην Αθήνα. Λόγω οικονομικών δυσχερειών αναγκάζεται να δουλέψει την ημέρα, ενώ το βράδυ μαθητεύει στη Σιβιτανίδειο Σχολή.
1940: Με την έναρξη του πολέμου, επιχειρεί να φύγει στη Μέση Ανατολή. Η απόπειρα αποτυχαίνει. Περνά στη Βιέννη, συλλαμβάνεται από τους Γερμανούς, οι οποίοι τον στέλνουν στο Ματχάουζεν.
1945: Το Ματχάουζεν απελευθερώνεται από τον αμερικανικό στρατό. Ο Καμπανέλλης εκλέγεται αντιπρόσωπος των συνκρατουμένων του στη Διεθνή Επιτροπή που φροντίζει για την επιστροφή στην πατρίδα. Γυρίζει και ο ίδιος στην Ελλάδα. Τυχαία βλέπει μια παράσταση του Θεάτρου Τέχνης, σε σκηνοθεσία Καρόλου Κουν και με ηθοποιούς την Έλλη Λαμπέτη , το Βασίλη Διαμαντόπουλο , το Λυκούργο Καλλέργη κ.α. Αποφασίζει να γίνει ηθοποιός, δίνει εξετάσεις σε δραματικές σχολές, αλλά αποκλείεται απ' όλες, καθώς δεν έχει απολυτήριο Γυμνασίου.
1947: Δίνει εξετάσεις στη Δραματική Σχολή του Εθνικού, πετυχαίνει αλλά σε επανεξέταση που ζητά ο Δ. Ροντήρης, αποκλείεται. Αναζητά σαν δίοδο προς το θέατρο το γράψιμο.
1950: Ο Αδαμάντιος Λεμός ανεβάζει το "Χορός πάνω στα στάχυα" στο πρωτοποριακό Θεατράκι στην Καλλιθέα.
1951-54: Γράφει τα έργα "Ο μπαμπάς ο πόλεμος", "Οδυσσέα γύρισε σπίτι" και τα μονόπρακτα "Η οδός", "Ο γορίλας και η Ορτανσία", 'Ό κρυφός ήλιος". Γνωρίζει τη Μελίνα Μερκούρη και γράφει τη "Στέλλα με τα κόκκινα γάντια", η οποία γνωρίζει επιτυχία ως ταινία σε σκηνοθεσία Μιχάλη Κακογιάννη.
1955: Ανεβαίνει από τη Νέα Σκηνή του Εθνικού Θεάτρου η "έβδομη μέρα της δημιουργίας" με την Τζένη Καρέζη σε πρωταγωνιστικό ρόλο.
1957: Γράφει το "Αυτός και το παντελόνι του" που ανεβαίνει στην αίθουσα του Θεάτρου Τέχνης από το Βασίλη Διαμαντόπουλο. Στο τέλος του ίδιου χρόνου ανεβαίνει η "Αυλή των Θαυμάτων" από το Θέατρο Τέχνης.
1959: Στο Θέατρο Τέχνης ο Κουν ανεβάζει την "Ηλικία της Νύχτας"
1959-60: Διασκευάζει το έργο "Παραμύθι χωρίς όνομα" της Πηνελόπης Δέλτα για το Θέατρο του Β. Διαμαντόπουλου και της Μ. Αλκαίου.
1961-63: Φεύγει στο Λονδίνο, ύστερα πηγαίνει στην Κύπρο και επιστρέφει στην Αθήνα την άνοιξη του 1963.
1963: Στο θέατρο Ρεξ ανεβαίνει η "Γειτονιά των Αγγέλων" από το θίασο της Τζένης Καρέζη και με τη συνεργασία του Μίκη Θεοδωράκη.
1964: Γράφει το σενάριο της ταινίας "Η Ελλάδα της Μελίνας" .
1965: Η Τζένη Καρέζη παρουσιάζει Το "Βίβα Ασπασία". Το Δεκέμβριο κυκλοφορεί σε βιβλίο το Ματχάουζεν και μαζί του ο ομώνυμος δίσκος του Μ. Θεοδωράκη που έχει επιλέξει ως ερμηνεύτρια τη Μαρία Φαραντούρη.
1966: Ο Κάρολος Κουν παρουσιάζει το 'Όδυσσέα γύρισε σπίτι".
1969: Γράφει και σκηνοθετεί, μαζί με τον αδερφό του, την ταινία "Το κανόνι και τ' αηδόνι" (βραβείο σεναρίου στο Φεστιβάλ Θεσ/νίκης).
1971: Διασκευάζει το διήγημα του Κάφκα "Η αποικία των τιμωρημένων" και το παρουσιάζει στο Πειραματικό Θέατρο της Μαριέττας Ριάλδη.
1973: Ο θίασος Καρέζη-Καζάκου ανεβάζει στο θέατρο Αθήναιον το "Μεγάλο μας τσίρκο" σε μουσική Στ. Ξαρχάκου
1976: Ο Κάρολος Κουν σκηνοθετεί το τετράπτυχο "Πρόσωπα για βιολί και ορχήστρα".
1978. Τα "Τέσσερα πόδια του τραπεζιού" ανεβαίνουν στο Θέατρο Τέχνης.
1980. Σε σκηνοθεσία Γιώργου Λαζάνη ανεβαίνει 'Ό μπαμπάς ο πόλεμος".
1989: Παρουσιάζεται στο Εθνικό Θέατρο σε σκηνοθεσία Γιώργου Μιχαηλίδη "Ο αόρατος θίασος".
1990: Το Θέατρο Τέχνης τιμά το συγγραφέα παρουσιάζοντας στο Ηρώδειο, σε σκηνοθεσία Μίμη Κουγιουμτζή το "Οδυσσέα γύρισε σπίτι".
1991: Παρουσιάζει σε δική του σκηνοθεσία το έργο 'Ό δρόμος περνά από μέσα".
1992: Ο Θανάσης Παπαγεωργίου στο θέατρο Στοά ερμηνεύει τρεις μονολόγους του Καμπανέλλη.
1993: Στη Νέα Σκηνή του Εθνικού Θεάτρου παρουσιάζονται τρία μονόπρακτα με τίτλο 'Ό Δείπνος". Γράμμα στον Ορέστη, ο Δείπνος, Πάροδος Θηβών.
1995: Στο Εθνικό Θέατρο παρουσιάζεται "Το Παραμύθι χωρίς όνομα".
1996: Στην Πειραματική Σκηνή της Τέχνης - Θεσσαλονίκη, παρουσιάζεται το έργο "Στη χώρα Ίψεν".

Το κείμενο παρατίθεται τον Απρίλιο 2003 από την ακόλουθη ιστοσελίδα, με φωτογραφίες, των Αρσάκειων - Τοσίτσειων Σχολείων


Ιατροί

ΔΗΛΟΣ (Νησί) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
Antiphanes, a Physician of Delos, who is quoted by Caelius Aurelianus (De Morb. Chron. iv. 8, p. 537), and Galen (De Compos. Medicam. sec. Locos, v. 5, vol. xii. p. 877), and must therefore have lived some time in or before the second century after Christ. He is mentioned by St. Clement of Alexandria (Paedag. ii. 1, p. 140) as having said, that the sole cause of diseases in man was the too great variety of his food.

Ερασίστρατος ο Κείος

ΙΟΥΛΙΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΚΕΑ
304 - 250
Σημαντικός ανατόμος και παθολόγος και συγγραφέας θεμάτων ιατρικής, άσκησε μεγάλη επίδραση και είχε μεγάλο πλήθος οπαδών που ονομάστηκαν Ερασιστράτειοι. Ακόμα μνημονεύεται ότι σχεδόν ανακάλυψε την κυκλοφορία του αίματος.

Erasistratus, (Erasistratos), one of the most celebrated physicians and anatomists of antiquity, is generally supposed to have been born at Iulis in the island of Ceos (Suidas, s. v. Eradistr.; Strab. x. 5, ed. Tauchn.), though Stephanus Byzantinus (s. v. Kos) calls him a native of Cos, Galen of Chios (Introd. c. 4, vol. xiv.), and the emperor Julian of Samos. (Misopog.) Pliny says he was the grandson of Aristotle by his daughter Pythias (H. N. xxix. 3), but this is not confirmed by any other ancient writer; and according to Suidas, he was the son of Cretoxena, the sister of the physician Medius, and Cleombrotus ; from which expression it is not quite clear whether Cleombrotus was his father or his uncle. He was a pupil of Chrysippus of Cnidos (Diog. Laert. vii. 7.10, Plin. H. N. xxix. 3 ; Galen, de Ven. Sect. adv. Erasistr. c. 7, vol. xi.), Metrodorus (Sext. Empir. c. Mathem. i. 12, ed. Fabric.) and apparently Theophrastus. (Galen, de Sang. in Arter. c. 7, vol. iv.) He lived for some time at the court of Seleucus Nicator, king of Syria, where lie acquired great reputation by discovering the disease of Antiochus, the king's eldest son, probably B. C. 294. Seleucus in his old age had lately married Stratonice, the young and beautiful daughter of Demetrius Poliorcetes, and she had already borne him one child. (Plut. Demtetr. c. 38; Appian, de Rebus Syr. c. 59.) Antiochus fell violently in love with his mother-in-law, but did not disclose his passion, and chose rather to pine away in silence. The physicians were quite unable to discover the cause and nature of his disease, and Erasistratus himself was at a loss at first, till, finding nothing amiss about his body, he began to suspect that it must be his mind which was diseased, and that he might perhaps be in love. This conjecture was confirmed when he observed his skin to be hotter, his colour to be heightened, and his pulse quickened, whenever Stratonice came near him, while none of these symptoms occurred on any other occasion; and accordingly he told Seleucus that his son's disease was incurable, for that he was in love, and that it was impossible that his passion could be gratified. The king wondered what the difficulty could be, and asked who the lady was. " My wife," replied Erasistratus; upon which Seleucus began to persuade him to give her up to his son. The physician asked him if he would do so himself if it were his wife that the prince was in love with. The king protested that lie would most gladly; upon which Erasistratus told him that it was indeed his own wife who had inspired his passion, and that he chose rather to die than to disclose his secret. Seleucus was as good as his word, and not only gave up Stratonice, but also resigned to his son several provinces of his empire. This celebrated story is told with more or less variation by many ancient authors, (Appian, de Rebus Syr. c. 59-61; Galen, de Praenot. ad Epig. c. 6. vol. xiv.; Julian, Misopog., ed. Spanheim; Lucian, de Syria Dea; Plin. H. N. xxix. 3; Plut. Demetr. c. 38; Suidas, s. v. Erasistr.; Jo. Tzetz. Chil. vii. Hist. 118; Valer. Max. v. 7), and a similar anecdote has been told of Hippocrates (Soranus, Vita Hippocr. in Hippocr. Opera, vol. iii.), Galen (de Praenot. ad Epig. c. 6. vol. xiv.), Avicenna, and (if the names be not fictitious) Panacius (Aristaen. Epist. i. 13) and Acestinus. (Heliod. Aethiop. iv. 7.) If this is the anecdote referred to by Pliny (l. c.), as is probably the case, Erasistratus is said to have received one hundred talents for being the means of restoring the prince to health, which (supposing the Attic standard to be meant, and to be equal to 243l. 15s.) would amount to 24,375l.--one of the largest medical fees upon record.
  Very little more is known of the personal history of Erasistratus : he lived for some time at Alexandria, which was at that time beginning to be a celebrated medical school, and gave up practice in his old age, that he might pursue his anatomical studies without interruption. (Galen, de Hippocr. et Plat. Deer. vii. 3, vol. v.) He prosecuted his experiments and researches in this branch of medical science with great success, and with such ardour that he is said to have dissected criminals alive. (Cels. de Medic. i. praef.) He appears to have died in Asia Minor, as Suidas mentions that lie was buried by mount Mycale in Ionia. The exact date of his death is not known, but he probably lived to a good old age, as, according to Eusebius, he was alive B. C. 258, about forty years after the marriage of Antiochus and Stratonice. He had numerous pupils and followers, and a medical school bearing his name continued to exist at Smyrna in Ionia nearly till the time of Strabo, about the beginning of the Christian era. (Strab. xii. 8, sub fin.) The following are the names of the most celebrated physicians belonging to the sect founded by him : Apoemantes (Galen, de Venae Sect. adv. Erasistr. c. 2, vol. xi.), Apollonius Memphites, Apollophanes (Cael. Aurel. de Morb. Acut. ii. 33) Artemidorus, Charidemus, Chrysippus, Heraclides, Hermogenes, Hicesius, Martialis, Menodorus, Ptolemaeus, Strato, Xenophon. He wrote several works on anatomy, practical medicine, and pharmacy, of which only the titles remain, together with a great number of short fragments preserved by Galen, Caelius Aurelianus, and other ancient writers: these, however, are sufficient to enable us to form a tolerably correct idea of his opinions both as a physician and an anatomist. It is in the latter character that he is most celebrated, and perhaps there is no one of the ancient physicians that did more to promote that branch of medical science. He appears to have been very near the discovery of the circulation of the blood, for in a passage preserved by Galen (de Usu Part. vi. 12, vol. iii.) he expresses himself as follows :--" The vein (1) arises from the part where the arteries, that are distributed to the whole body, have their origin, and penetrates to the sanguineous [or right] ventricle; and the artery [or pulmonary vein] arises from the part where the veins have their origin, and penetrates to the pneumatic [or left] ventricle of the heart." The description is not very clear, but seems to shew that he supposed the venous and arterial systems to be more intimately connected than was generally believed; which is confirmed by another passage in which he is said to have differed from the other ancient anatomists, who supposed the veins to arise from the liver, and the arteries from the heart, and to have contended that the heart was the origin both of the veins and the arteries. (Galen, de Hippocr. et Plat. Decr. vi. 6, vol. v.) With these ideas, it can have been only his belief that the arteries contained air, and not blood, that hindered his anticipating Harvey's celebrated discovery. The tricuspid valves of the heart are generally said to have derived their name from Erasistratus ; but this appears to be an oversight, as Galen attributes it not to him, but to one of his followers. (De Hippocr. et Plat. Deer. vi. 6, vol. v.) He appears to have paid particular attention to the anatomy of the brain, and in a passage out of one of his works preserved by Galen (ibid. vii. 3, vol.) speaks as if he had himself dissected a human brain. Galen says (ibid.) that before Erasistratus had more closely examined into the origin of the nerves, he imagined that they arose from the dura mater and not from the substance of the brain; and that it was not till he was advanced in life that he satisfied himself by actual inspection that such was not the case. According to Rufus Ephesius, he divided the nerves into those of sensation and those of motion, of which the former he considered to be hollow and to arise from the membranes of the brain, the latter from the substance of the brain itself and of the cerebellum. (De Appell. Part. &c.) It is a remarkable instance at once of blindness and presumption, to find this acute physiologist venturing to assert, that the spleen (Galen, de Atra Bile, c. 7. vol. v.), the bile (id. de Facult. Natur. ii. 2, vol. ii.), and several other parts of the body (id. Comment. in Hippocr. " CDe Alim." iii. 14. vol. xv.), were entirely useless to animals. In the controversy that was carried on among the ancients as to whether fluids when drunk passed through the trachea into the lungs, or through the oesophagus into the stomach, Erasistratus maintained the latter opinion. (Plut. Sympos. vii. 1; Gell. xvii. 11, Macrob. Saturn. vii. 15.) He is also supposed to have been the first person who added to the word arteria, which had hitherto designated the canal leading from the mouth to the lungs, the epithet tracheia, to distinguish it from the arteries, and hence to have been the originator of the modern name trachea. He attributed the sensation of hunger to vacuity of the stomach, and said that the Scythians were accustomed to tie a belt tightly round their middle, to enable them to abstain from food for a longer time without suffering inconvenience. (Gell. xvi. 3.) The pneuma, or spiritual substance, played a very important part both in his system of physiology and pathology: he supposed it to enter the lungs by the trachea, thence to pass by the pulmonary veins into the heart, and thence to be diffused throughout the whole body by means of the arteries (Galen, de Differ. Puls. iv. 2, vol. viii., et alibi); that the use of respiration was to fill the arteries with air (id. de Usu Respir. c. l. vol. iv.); and that the pulsation of the arteries was caused by the movements of the pneuma. He accounted for diseases in the same way, and supposed that as long as the pneuma continued to fill the arteries and the blood was confined to the veins, the individual was in good health; but that when the blood from some cause or other got forced into the arteries, inflammation and fever was the consequence. (Galen, de Venae Sect. adv. Erasistr. c. 2. vol. xi., &c.; Plut. de Philosoph. Plac. v. 29.) Of his mode of cure the most remarkable peculiarity was his aversion to bloodletting and purgative medicines : he seems to have relied chiefly on diet and regimen, bathing, exercise, friction, and the most simple articles of the vegetable kingdom. In surgery he was celebrated for the invention of a catheter that bore his name, and was of the shape of a Roman S. (Galen, Introd. c. 13. vol. xiv.)
(1) He is speaking of the pulmonary artery, which received the name phleps arteriodes from Herophilus. See Ruf. Ephes. de Appell. Part. Corp. Hum.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Erasistratus, (Erasistratos). A physician of Iulis, in the island of Ceos, and grandson of Aristotle by a daughter of this philosopher. After having frequented the schools of Chrysippus, Metrodorus, and Theophrastus, he passed some time at the court of Seleucus Nicator, where he gained great reputation by discovering the secret malady which preyed upon the young Antiochus, the son of the king, who was in love with his stepmother, Queen Stratonice . It was at Alexandria, however, that he principally practised. At last he refused altogether to visit the sick, and devoted himself entirely to the study of anatomy. The branches of this study which are indebted to him for new discoveries are, among others, the doctrine of the functions of the brain and that of the nervous system. He immortalized himself by the discovery of the viae lacteae; and he would seem to have come very near to that of the circulation of the blood. Comparative anatomy furnished him with the means of describing the brain much better than had ever been done before him. He also distinguished and gave names to the auricles of the heart. A singular doctrine of Erasistratus is that of the pneuma, or the spiritual substance which, according to him, fills the arteries, which we inhale in respiration, which from the lungs makes its way into the arteries, and then becomes the vital principle of the human system. As long as this spirit moves about in the arteries, and the blood in the veins, man enjoys health; but when, from some cause or other, the veins become contracted, the blood then spreads into the arteries and becomes the source of maladies; it produces fever when it enters into some noble part or into the great artery, and inflammations when it is found in the less noble parts or in the extremities of the arteries. Erasistratus rejected entirely blood-letting, as well as cathartics; he supplied their place with dieting, tepid bathing, vomiting, and exercise. In general, he was attached to simple remedies; he recognized what was subsequently termed idiosyncrasy, or the peculiar constitution of different individuals, which makes the same remedy act differently on different persons. A few fragments of the writings of Erasistratus have been preserved by Galen.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Ιπποκράτης

ΚΩΣ (Νησί) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
   A famous Greek physician, was born in the island of Cos, about B.C. 460. He was the son of Heraclides and of Phaenarete, and sprang from the race of the Asclepiadae, a priestly family, who in the course of time had gathered and preserved medical traditions, which were secretly handed down from father to son. Like many of the Asclepiadae, he practised his art while travelling in different parts of Greece. He is said to have been at Athens at the time of the Peloponnesian War, and to have taken advantage of the instructions of the sophists Gorgias and Prodicus; Democritus of Abdera is also named as one of his teachers. The value he himself set upon philosophic education is proved by his remark that "a philosophic physician resembles a god". Towards the end of his life he lived chiefly in Thessaly and on the island of Thasos. He died about B.C. 377 (or later) in the Thessalian Larissa, where his tomb was to be seen as late as the second century A.D.
   All through his long life his activity was unceasing in its efforts to increase the amount of his knowledge on all subjects, by both practical and theoretical investigations, and his practical knowledge was as great as his theoretical. Some of his fragments and epigrammatic dicta have passed into the literature of all time, as, for instance, the famous saying, "Life is short, and Art is long." He was the founder of the school of a scientific art of healing, and, as in the case of Homer, numerous writings of unknown authorship, proceeding from the school which followed his system, were attributed to him. Seventy-two works, great and small, in the Ionic and old Attic dialects, bear his name, and, apparently, formed a single collection, even before they came under the consideration of the critics of Alexandria. But it is clear that, as the ancients themselves were aware, only a small portion, which can no longer be precisely defined, really belongs to him.
   It is highly probable that his nearest relations, who were also distinguished physicians, contributed their share to the collection, and that it contains works by his sons Thessalus and Dracon, his sonin-law Polybus, and his two grandsons, the sons of Thessalus and Dracon, who bore his own name. The best known of these works are the aphorisms (Aphorismoi), which, in antiquity and in mediaeval times, were held in high esteem, and have been freely commented on by Greeks, Romans, and Arabs; they consist of short sentences upon the nature of illnesses, their symptoms and crises, and their final issue.
   One of his treatises (Peri Aeron, Hudaton, Topon), which is of general interest, and is in all respects among the best, is that on the influence of the climate, the water, and the configuration of a country upon the physical and intellectual life of its inhabitants. In the second portion of this work are found the first beginnings of a comparative ethnography, which at once surprise us by the acuteness and intelligence of its observation, and attracts us by the simplicity and clearness of its style. Many ancient physicians wrote commentaries on the works of Hippocrates, the most celebrated being those of Galen. The first edition of the Greek text of Hippocrates is the Aldine.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Hippocrates, the second of that name, and in some respects the most celebrated physician of ancient or modern times; for not only have his writings (or rather those which bear his name) been always held in the highest esteem, but his personal history (so far as it is known), and the literary criticism relating to his works, furnish so much matter for the consideration both of the scholar, the philologist, the philosopher, and the man of letters, that there are few authors of antiquity about whom so much has been written. Probably the readers of this work will care more for the literary than for the medical questions connected with Hippocrates; and accordingly (as it is quite impossible to discuss the whole subject fully in these pages) the strictly scientific portion of this article occupies less space and than the critical; and this arrangement in this place the writer is inclined to adopt the more readily, because, while there are many works which contain a good account of the scientific merits of the Hippocratic writings, he is not aware of one where the many literary problems arising from them have been at once fully discussed and satisfactorily determined. This task he is far from thinking that he has himself accomplished, but it is right to give this reason for treating the scientific part of the subject much less fully than he would have done had he been writing for a professed medical work.
   A parallel has more than once been drawn be tween " the Father of Medicine " and " the Father of Poetry; " and, indeed, the resemblances between the two, both in their personal and literary history, are so evident, that they could hardly fail to strike any one who was even moderately familiar with classical and medical literature. With respect to their personal history, the greatest uncertainty exists, and our real knowledge is next to nothing ; although in the case of both personages, we have professed lives written by ancient authors, which, however, only tend to show still more plainly the ignorance that prevails on the subject. Accordingly, as might be expected, fable has been busy in sup plying the deficiencies of history, and was for a time fully believed; till at length a reaction followed, and an unreasoning credulity was succeeded by an equally unreasonable scepticism, which reached its climax when it was boldly asserted that neither Homer nor Hippocrates had ever existed. (See Houdart, Etudes sur Hippocrate) The few facts respecting him that may be considered as tolerably well ascertained may be told in few words. His father was Heracleides, who was also a physician, and belonged to the family of the Asclepiadae. According to Soranus (Vita Hippocr., in Hippocr. Opera, vol. iii.), he was the nineteenth in descent from Aesculapius, but John Tzetzes, who gives the genealogy of the family, makes him the seventeenth. His mother's name was Phaenarete, who was said to be descended from Hercules. Soranus, on the authority of an old writer who had composed a life of Hippocrates, states that he was born in the island of Cos, in the first year of the eightieth Olympiad, that is. B. C. 460; and this date is generally followed, for want of any more satisfactory information on the subject, though it agrees so ill with some of the anecdotes respecting him, that some persons suppose him to have been born about thirty years sooner. The exact day of his birth was known and celebrated in Cos with sacrifices on the 26th day of the month Agrianus, but it is unknown to what date in any other calendar this month corresponds. He was instructed in medical science by his father and by Herodicus, and is also said to have been a pupil of Gorgias of Leontini. He wrote, taught, and practised his profession at home; travelled in different parts of the continent of Greece; and died at Larissa in Thessaly. His age at the time of his death is uncertain, as it is stated by different ancient authors to have been eighty-five years, ninety, one hundred and four, and one hundred and nine. Mr. Clinton places his death B. C. 357, at the age of one hundred and four. He had two sons, Thessalus and Dracon, and a son-in-law, Polybus, all of whom followed the same profession, and who are supposed to have been the authors of some of the works in the Hippocratic Collection. Such are the few and scanty facts that can be in some degree depended on respecting the personal history of this celebrated man; but though we have not the means of writing an authentic detailed biography, we possess in these few facts, and in the hints and allusions contained in various ancient authors, sufficient data to enable us to appreciate the part he played, and the place he held among his contemporaries. We find that he enjoyed their esteem as a practitioner, writer, and professor; that he conferred on the ancient and illustrious family to which he belonged more honour than he derived from it; that he rendered the medical school of Cos, to which he was attached, superior to any which had preceded it or immediately followed it; and that his works, soon after their publication, were studid and quoted by Plato. (See Littre's Hippocr. vol. i.; and a review of that work (by the writer of this article) in the Brit. and For. Med. Rev. April, 1844.)
  Upon this slight foundation of historical truth has been built a vast superstructure of fabulous error; and it is curious to observe how all these tales receive a colouring from the times and countries in which they appear to have been fabricated, whether by his own countrymen before the Christian era, or by the Latin or Arabic writers of the middle ages. One of the stories told of him by his Greek biographers. which most modern critics are disposed to regard as fabulous, relates to his being sent for, together with Euryphon, by Perdiccas II., king of Macedonia, and discovering, by certain external symptoms, that his sickness was occasioned by his having fallen in love with his father's concubine. Probably the strongest reason against the truth of this story is the fact that the time of the supposed cure is quite irreconcileable with the commonly received date of the birth of Hippocrates; though M. Littre, the latest and best editor of Hippocrates, while he rejects the story as spurious, finds no difficulty in the dates (vol. i.). Soranus, who tells the anecdote, says that the occurrence took place after the death of Alexander I., the father of Perdiccas; and we may reasonably presume that one or two years would be the longest interval that would elapse. The date of the death of Alexander is not exactly known, and depends upon the length of the reign of his son Perdiccas, who died B. C. 414. The longest period assigned to his reign is fortyone years, the shortest is twenty-three. This latter date would place his accession to the throne on his father's death, at B. C. 437, at which time Hippocrates would be only twenty-three years old, almost too young an age for him to have acquired so great celebrity as to be specially sent for to attend a foreign prince. However, the date of B. C. 437 is the less probable because it would not only extend the reign of his father Alexander to more than sixty years, but would also suppose him to have lived seventy years after a period at which he was already grown up to manhood. For these reasons Mr. Clinton (F. Hell. ii. 222) agrees with Dodwell in supposing the longer periods assigned to his reign to be nearer the truth; and assumes the accession of Perdiccas to have fallen within B. C. 454, at which time Hippocrates was only six years old. This celebrated story has been told, with more or less variation, of Erasistratus and Avicenna, besides being interwoven in the romance of Heliodorus (Aethiop. iv. 7.), and the love-letters of Aristaenetus (Epist. i. 13). Galen also says that a similar circumstance happened to himself. (De Praenot. ad Epig. c. 6. vol. xiv. p. 630.) The story as applied to Avicenna seems to be most probably apocryphal (see Biogr. Dict. of the Usef. Knoul. Soc. vol. iv.); and with respect to the two other claimants, Hippocrates and Erasistratus, if it be true of either, the preponderance of historical testimony is decidedly in favour of the latter. Another old Greek fable relates to his being appointed librarian at Cos, and burning the books there (or, according to another version of the story, at Cnidos,) in order to conceal the use he had made of them in his own writings. This story is also told, with but little variation, of Avicenna, and is repeated of Hippocrates, with some characteristic embellish ments, in the European Legends of the Middle Ages.
  The other fables concerning Hippocrates are to be traced to the collection of Letters, &c. which go under his name, but which are universally rejected as spurious. The most celebrated of these relates to his supposed conduct during the plague of Athens, which he is said to have stopped by burning fires throughout the city, by suspending chaplets of flowers, and by the use of an antidote, the composition of which is preserved by Joannes Actuarius (De Meth. Med. v. 6., ed. H. Steph.) Connected with this, is the pretended letter from Artaxerxes Longimanus, king of Persia, to Hippocrates, inviting him by great offers to come to his assistance during a time of pestilence, and the refusal of Hippocrates, on the ground of his being the enemy of his country.
   Another story, perhaps equally familiar to the readers of Burton's " Anatomy of Melancholy," contains the history of the supposed madness of Democritus, and his interview with Hippocrates, who had been summoned by his countrymen to come to his relief.
  If we turn to the Arabic writers, we find "Bokrat" represented as living at Hems, and studying in a garden near Damascus, the situation of which was still pointed out in the time of Abu/lfaraj in the thirteenth century. (Abu-l-faraj, Hist. Dynast.; Anon. Arab. Philosoph. Bibl. apud Casiri, Biblioth. A rabico-Hisp. Escur. vol. i.) They also tell a story of his pupils taking his portrait to a celebrated physiognomist named Philemon, in order to try his skill; and that upon his saying that it was the portrait of a lascivious old man (which they strenuously denied), Hippocrates said that he was right, for that he was so by nature, but that he had learned to overcome his amorous propensities. The confusion of names that occurs in this last anecdote the writer has never seen explained, though the difficulty admits of an easy and satisfactory solution. It will no doubt have brought to the reader's recollection the similar story told of Socrates by Cicero (Tusc. Disp. iv. 37, De Fato, c. 5), and accordingly he will be quite prepared to hear that the Arabic writers have confounded the word Sokrat, with Bokrat, and have thus applied to Hippocrates an anecdote that in reality belongs to Socrates. The name of the physiognomist in Cicero is Zopyrus, which cannot have been corrupted into Philemon ; but when we remember that the Arabians have no P, and are therefore often obliged to express this letter by an F, it will probably appear not unlikely that either the writers, or their European translators, have confounded Philemon with Polemon. This conjecture is confirmed by the fact that Philemon is said by Abu-l-faraj to have written a work on Physiognomy, which is true of Polemon, whose treatise on that subject is still extant, whereas no person of the name of Philemon (as far as the writer is aware) is mentioned as a physiognomist by any Greek author. (1) The only objection to this conjecture is the anachronism of making Polemon a contemporary of Hippocrates or Socrates ; but this difficulty will not appear very great to any one who is familiar with the extreme ignorance and carelessness displayed by the Arabic writers on all points of Greek history and chronology.
  It is, however, among the European storytellers of the middle ages that the name of "Ypocras" is most celebrated. In one story he is represented as visiting Rome during the reign of Augustus, and restoring to life the emperor's nephew, who was just dead; for which service Augustus erected a statue in his honour as to a divinity. A fair lady resolved to prove that this god was a mere mortal; and, accordingly, having made an assignation with him, she let down for him a basket from her window. When she had raised him half way, she left him suspended in the air all night, till he was found by the emperor in the morning, and thus became the laughing-stock of the court. Another story makes him professor of medicine in Rome, with a nephew of wondrous talents and medical skill, whom he despatched in his own stead to the king of Hungary, who had sent for him to heal his son. The young leech, by his marvellous skill, having discovered that the prince was not the king's own son, directed him to feed on "contrarius drink, contrarius mete, beves flesch, and drink the brotht," and thereby soon restored him to health. Upon his return home laden with presents, "Ypocras" became so jealous of his fame, that he murdered him, and afterwards "he let all his bokes berne." The vengeance of Heaven overtook him, and he died in dreadful torments, confessing his crime, and vainly calling on his murdered nephew for relief.
  If, from the personal history of Hippocrates, we turn to the collection of writings that go under his name, the parallel with Homer will be still more exact and striking. In both cases we find a number of works, the most ancient, and, in some respects, the most excellent of their kind, which, though they have for centuries borne the same name, are discovered, on the most cursory examination, to belong in reality to several different persons. Hence has arisen a question which has for ages exercised the learning and acuteness of scholars and critics, and which is in both cases still far from being satisfactorily settled. With respect to the writings of the Hippocratic Collection "the first glance," says M. Littre (vol. i.), "shows that some are complete in themselves, while others are merely collections of notes, which follow each other without connection, and which are sometimes hardly intelligible. Some are incomplete and fragmentary, others form in the whole Collection particular series, which belong to the same ideas and the same writer. In a word, however little we reflect on the context of these numerous writings, we are led to conclude that they are not the work of one and the same author. This remark has in all ages struck those persons who have given their attention to the works of Hippocrates; and even at the time when men commented on them in the Alexandrian school, they already disputed about their authenticity."
  But it is not merely from internal evidence (though this of itself would be sufficiently convincing) that we find that the Hippocratic Collection is not the work of Hippocrates alone, for it so happens that in two instances we find a passage that has appeared from very early times as forming part of this collection, quoted as belonging to a different person. Indeed if we had nothing but internal evidence to guide us in our task of examining these writings, in order to decide which really belong to Hippocrates, we should come to but few positive results; and therefore it is necessary to collect all the ancient testimonies that can still be found; in doing which, it will appear that the Collection, as a whole, can be traced no higher than the period of the Alexandrian school, in the third century B. C.; but that particular treatises are referred to by the contemporaries of Hippocrates and his immediate successors. (Brit. and For. Med. Rev.)
  We find that Hippocrates is mentioned or referred to by no less than ten persons anterior to the foundation of the Alexandrian school, and among them by Aristotle and Plato. At the time of the formation of the great Alexandrian library, the different treatises which bear the name of Hippocrates were diligently sought for, and formed into a single collection; and about this time commences the series of Commentators, which has continued through a period of more than two thousand years to the present day. The first person who is known to have commented on any of the works of the Hippocratic Collection is Herophilus. The most ancient commentary still in existence is that on the treatise " De Articulis," by Apollonius Citiensis. By far the most voluminous, and at the same time by far the most valuable commentaries that remain, are those of Galen, who wrote several works in illustration of the writings of Hippocrates, besides those which we now possess. His Commentaries, which are still extant, are those on the " De Natura Hominis," " De Salubri Victus Ratione," " De Ratione Victus in Morbis Acutis," " Praenotiones," Praedictiones I.," "Aphorismi," " De Morbis Vulgaribus I. II. III. VI," " De Fracturis," " De Articulis," "De Officina Medici," and " De Humoribus," with a glossary of difficult and obsolete words, and fragments on the " De Aere, Aquis, et Locis," and " De Alimento." The other ancient commentaries that remain are those of Palladius, Joannes Alexandrinus, Stephanus Atheniensis, Meletius, Theophilus Protospatharius, and Damascius; besides a spurious work attributed to Oribasius, a glossary of obsolete and difficult words by Erotianus, and some Arabic Commentaries that have never been published. (Brit. and For. Filed. Rev.)
  His writings were held in the highest esteem by the ancient Greek and Latin physicians, and most of them were translated into Arabic. (See Wenrich, De Auct. Graec. Vers. et Comment. Syr. Arab., &c.) In the middle ages, however, they were not so much studied as those of some other authors, whose works are of a more practical character, and better fitted for being made a class-book and manual of instruction. In more modern times, on the contrary, the works of the Hippocratic Collection have been valued more according to their real worth, while many of the most popular medical writers of the middle ages have fallen into complete neglect. The number of works written in illustration or explanation of the Collection is very great, as is also that of the editions of the whole or any part ot the treatises composing it. Of these only a very few can be here mentioned: a fuller account may be found in Fabric. Bibl. Gruec.; HIaller, Bibl. Medic. Pract.; the first vol. of Kiihn's edition of Hippocrates; Choulant's Handb. der Bucherkunde fur die Aeltere Medicin; Littre's Hippocrates; and other professed bibliographical works. The works of Hippocrates first appeared in a Latin translation by Fabius Calvus, Rom. 1525, fol. The first Greek edition is the Aldine, Venet. 1526, fol., which was printed from MSS. with hardly any correction of the transcriber's errors. The first edition that had any pretensions to be called a critical edition was that by Hieron. Mercurialis, Venet. 1588, fol., Gr. and Lat.; but this was much surpassed by that of Anut. Foesius, Francof. 1595, fol., Gr. and Lat., which continues to the present day to be the best complete edition. Vander Linden's edition (Lugd. Bat. 1665, 8vo. 2 vols. Gr. and Lat.) is neat and commodious for reference from his having divided the text into short paragraphs. Chartier's edition of the works of Galen and Hippocrates has been noticed under Galen; as has also Kuhn's, of which it may be said that its only advantages are its convenient size, the reprint of Ackermann's Histor. Liter. Hippocr. (from Harless's ed. of Fabr. Bibl. Gr.) in the first vol., and the noticing on each page the corresponding pagination of the editions of Foes, Chartier, and Vander Linden. By far the best edition in every respect is one which is now in the course of publication at Paris, under the superintendence of E. Littre, of which the first vol. appeared in 1839, and the fourth in 1844. It contains a new text, founded upon a collation of the MSS. in the Royal Library at Paris; a French translation; an interesting and learned general Introduction, and a copious argument prefixed to each treatise; and numerous scientific and philological notes. It is a work quite indispensable to every physician, critic, and philologist, who wishes to study in detail the works of the Hippocratic Collection, and it has already done much more towards settling the text than any edition that has preceded it; but at the same time it must not be concealed that the editor does not seem to have always made the best use of the materials that he has had at his command, and that the classical reader cannot help now and then noticing a manifest want of critical (and even at times of grammatical) scholarship.
  The Hippocratic Collection consists of more than sixty works; and the classification of these, and assigning each (as far as possible) to its proper author, constitutes by far the most difficult question connected with the ancient medical writers. Various have been the classifications proposed both in ancient and modern times, and various the rules by which their authors were guided; some contenting themselves with following implicitly the opinions of Galen and Erotianus, others arguing chiefly from peculiarities of style, while a third class distinguished the books according to the medical and philosophical doctrines contained in them. An account of each of these classifications cannot be given here, much less can the objections that may be brought against each be pointed out: upon the whole, the writer is inclined to think M. Littre's superior to any that has preceded it; but by no means so unexceptionable as to do away with the necessity of a new one. The following classification, though far enough from supplying the desideratum, differs in several instances from any former one: it is impossible here for the writer to give more than the results of his investigation, referring for the data on which his opinion in each particular case is founded to the works of Gruner, Ackermann, and Littre/, of which he has, of course, made free use. (2) Perhaps a tabular or genealogical view of the different divisions and subdivisions of the Collection will be the best calculated to put the reader at once in possession of the whole bearings of the subject.
Class I., containing Prognostikon Praenotiones or Prognosticon (vol. i., ed. Kuhn); Aphorismoi, Aphorismi (vol. iii.); Epidemion Bibgia A, G, De Morbis Popularibus (or Epidemiorum), lib. i. and iii. (vol. i.); Peri Diaites Oxeon, De Ratione Victus in Morbis Acutis, or De Diaeta Acntorumn (vol. ii.); Peri Aepon, psdaton, topon, De Aere, Aquis, et Locis (vol. i.); Peri ton en kephale tromaton, De Capitis Vulneribus (vol. iii.).
Class II., containing Peri Apchaies Ietpikes, De Prisca Medicina (vol. i.); Peri axthron, De Articulis (vol. iii.); Peri Agmon, De Fractis (vol. iii.); Mochlikos, Mochlicus or Vectiarius (vol. iii.); Horkos, Jusjurandum (vol. i.); Nomos, Lex (vol. i.); Peri Helkon, De Ulceribus (vol. iii.); Peri Suringon, De Fistulis (vol. iii.); Peri Aimorhro+idon, De Haemorrhoididibus (vol. iii.); Kat ietreion, De Officina Medici (vol. iii.); Peri Ieres nousou, De Morbo Sacro (vol. i.).
Class III., containing Prorhretikon A, Prorrhetica, or Praedictiones i. (vol. i.); Koakai Prognoseis, Coacae Praenotiones (vol. i.).
Class IV., containing Peri Susios Anthropon, De Natura Hominis (vol. i.); Peri Diaites, Hugieines, De Salubri Victus Ratione (?) (vol. i. ); Peri Gunaikeies Phusios, De Natura Muliebri (?) (vol. ii.); Peri nouson *B, *G, De Uorbis, ii. iii (?) (vol. ii.); Peri Epikuesios, De Superfoetatione (?) (vol. i.).
Class V., containing Peri Phuson, De Flatibus (vol. i.); Peri Topon ton kat Anthropon, De Locis in Homine (vol. ii.); Peri technes, De Arte (?) (vol. i.); Peri Diaites, De Diaeta, or De Victts Ratione (vol. i.); Peri enupnion, De Insomniis (vol. ii.); Peri Pathon, De Affectionibus (vol. ii.); Peri ton entos Pathon, De Internis Affectionibus (vol. ii.) ; Peri nouson A, De Morbis i. (vol. ii.); Peri Heptamenou, De Septimestri Partu (vol. i.) ; Peri Oktamenou, De Octinestri Partu (vol. i.); Epidemizu Bibgia B, D, Z, Epidemiorum, or De Morbis Popularibus, ii. iv. vi. (vol. iii.); Peri Chumon, De Humoribus (vol. i.); Peri Hugron Chresios, De Usu Liquidorum (voi. ii.)
Class VI., containing Peri Gones, De Genitura (vol. i.); Peri Phusios Paidiou, De Natura Pueri (vol. i.); Peri Nouszn D, De Morbis in. (vol. ii.); Peri Gunaikeion, De Mulierum Morbis (vol. ii.); Peri Parthenion, De Virginum Morbis (vol. ii.); Peri Aphoron De Sterilibus (vol. iii.).
Class VII., containing Epidemion bibgla E, H, Epidemiorum, or De Morbis Popularibus v. vii. (vol. iii.); Peri kardies, De Corde (vol. i.); *Peri\ *Trofh=s, De Alinmento (vol. ii.); Peri Sarkon, De Carnibus (vol. i.); Peri Hebdomadon, De Septimanis, a work which no longer exists in Greek, but of which M. Littre has found a Latin translation; Pororhretikon B, Prorrhetica (or Praedictiones) ii. (vol. i.) ; Peri Odteon Sutios, De Natura Ossim, a work composed entirely of extracts from other treatises of the Hippocratic Collection, and from other ancient authors, and which therefore M. Littre is going to suppress entirely (vol. i.); Peri Adenon, De Glandulis (vol. i.); Peri Ietrou, De Medico (vol. i.); Peri Eudchemodunes, De Decenti Habitu (vol. i.); Papangegliai, Pracceptiones (vol. i.); Peri Anatomes, De Anatomia (or De Resectione Corporum) (vol. iii.); Peri Odontophuies, De Dentilione (vol. i.); Peri Enkatatomes Embruou, De Resectione Foetus (vol. iii.); Peri Opsios, De Visu (vol. iii.); Peri Krision, De Crisibus (or De Judicationibus) (vol. i.) ; Peri krisimon, De Diebus Criticis (or De Diebus Judicatoriis) (vol. i.); Peri Pharmakon, De Medicamentis Purgatiris (vol. iii.).
Class VIII., containing Epistolai, Epistolae (vol. iii.); Presbeutikos thessagou, Thessali Legati Oratio (vol. iii.; Epibomios Oratio ad Aram (vol. iii.); Dogma Athenaion, Atheniensium Senatus Consultum (vol. iii.).
  Each of these classes requires a few words of explanation. The first class will probably be considered by many persons to be rather small; but it seemed safer and better to include in it only those works of whose genuineness there has never been any doubt. To this there is perhaps one exception, and that relating to the very work whose genuineness one would perhaps least expect to find called in question, as it is certainly that by which Hippocrates is most popularly known. Some doubts as to the origin of the Aphorisms, and indeed the discussion of the genuineness of this work may be said to be an epitome of the questions relating to the whole Hippocratic Collection. We find here a very celebrated work, which has from early times borne the name of Hippocrates, but of which som parts have always been condemned as spurious. Upon examining those portions that are considered to be genuine, we observe that the greater part of the first three sections agrees almost word for word with passages to be found in his acknowledged works; while in the remaining sections we find sentences taken apparently from spurious or doubtful treatises; thus adding greatly to our difficulties, inasmuch as they sometimes contain doctrines and theories opposed to those which we find in the works acknowledged to be genuine. And these facts are (in the opinion of the critics alluded to) to be accounted for in one of two ways: either Hippocrates himself in his old age (for the Aphorisms have always been attributed to this period of his life) put together certain extracts from his own works, to which were afterwards added other sentences taken from later authors; or else the collection was not formed by Hippocrates himself, but by some person or persons after his death, who made aphoristical extracts from his works, and from those of other writers of a later date, and the whole was then attributed to Hippocrates, because he was the author of the sentences that were most valuable, and came first in order. This account of the formation of the Aphorisms appears extremely plausible, nor does it seem to be any decisive objection to say, that we find among them sentences which are not to be met with elsewhere; for, when we recollect how many works of the old medical writers, and perhaps of Hippocrates himself, are lost, it is easy to conceive that these sentences may have been extracted from some treatise that is no longer in existence. It must however be confessed that this conjecture, however plausible and probable, requires further proof and examination before it can be received as true.
  The second class is one of the most unsatisfactory in the writer's own opinion, and affords at the same time a curious instance of the impossibility of satisfying even those few persons in Europe whose opinion on such a matter is really worth asking; for, upon submitting the classification to two friends, one of whom is decidedly the most learned physician in Great Britain, and the other one of the best medical critics on the continent, he was advised by the one to call this class "Works probably written by Hippocrates," and by the other to transfer them (with one exception) to the class of " Works certainly not written by Hippocrates." The amount of probability in favour of the genuineness of all these works is certainly by no means equal; e. g. the two little pieces called the " Oath," and the " Law," though commonly considered to be the work of the same author, and to be intimately connected with each other, seem rather to belong to different periods, the former having all the simplicity, honesty, and religious feeling of antiquity, the latter somewhat of the affectation and declamatory grandiloquence of a sophist. However, as all of these books have been considered to be genuine by some critics of more or less note, it seemed better to defer to their authority at least so far as to allow that they might perhaps have been written by Hippocrates himself.
  The two works which constitute the third class, and which are probably the oldest medical writings that exist, have been supposed with some probability to consist, at least in part, of the inscriptions on the votive tablets placed in the temple of Aesculapius by those who had recovered their health, which certainly constituted one of the sources from which the medical knowledge of Hippocrates was derived.
  In the fourth class are placed those works which were certainly not written by Hippocrates himself, which were probably either contemporary or but little posterior to him, and whose authors have been, with more or less degree of certainty, discovered. The works De Natura Homiinis, and De Salubri Victus Ratione, are supposed by M. Littre to have been written by the same author, because it is said by Galen that in many old editions these two treatises formed but one; and this author he concludes to have been Polybus, the son-in-law of Hippocrates (vol. i.), because a passage is quoted by Aristotle (Hist. Anim. iii 3), and attributed to Polybus, which is found word for word in the work De Natura Hominis (vol . i). For somewhat similar reasons, Euryphon has been supposed to be the author of the second and third books De Morbis, and the work De Natura Muliebri; and also (though with much less show of reason) a certain Leophanes, or Cleophanes (of whom nothing whatever is known), to have written the treatise De Superfoetatione (Littre, vol. i.).
  In the fifth class there is one treatise (De Diaeta) in which an astronomical coincidence with the calendar of Eudoxus has been pointed to the writer by a friend, which (as far as he is aware) has never been noticed by any commentator on Hippocrates, and which seems in some degree to fix the date of the work in question. If the calendar of Eudoxus, as preserved in the Apparentiae of Ptolemy and the calendar of Geminus (see Petav. Uranol.), be compared with part of the third book De Diaela (vol. i.), it will be found that the periods correspond so exactly, that (there being no other solar calendar of antiquity in which these intervals coincide so closely,and all through,but that of Eudoxus), it seems a reasonable inference that the writer of the work De Diaeta took them from the calendar in question. If this be granted, it will follow that the author must have written this work after the year B. C. 381, which is the date of the calendar of Eudoxus; and, as Hippocrates must have been at least eighty years old at that time, this conclusion will agree quite well with the general opinion of ancient and modern critics, that the treatise in question was probably written by one of his immediate followers.
  The sixth class agrees with the sixth class of M. Littre, who, with great appearance of probability, supposes it to form a connected series of works written by the same author, whose name is quite unknown, and of whose date it can only be determined from internal evidence that he must have lived later than Hippocrates, and before the time of Aristotle.
  The works contained in this and the seventh class have for many centuries formed part of the Hippocratic Collection without having any right to such an honour, and therefore are not genuine; but, as it does not appear that their authors were guilty of assuming the name of Hippocrates, or that they have represented the state of medical science as in any respect different from what it really was in the times in which they wrote, there is no reason for denying their authenticity. And in this respect they are to be regarded with a very different eye from the pieces which form the last class, which are neither genuine nor authentic, but mere forgeries; which display indeed here and there some ingenuity and skill, but which are still sufficiently full of difficulties and inconsistencies to betray at once their origin.
  So much space has been taken up with the preliminary, but most indispensable step of determining which are the genuine works of Hippocrates, and which are spurious, that a very slight sketch of his opinions is all that can be now attempted, and for a fuller account the reader must be referred to the works of Le Clerc, Haller, Sprengel, &c., or to some of those which relate especially to Hippocrates. He divides the causes of disease into two principal classes; the one comprehending the influence of seasons, climates, water, situation, &c., and the other consisting of more personal and private causes, such as result from the particular kind and amount of food and exercise in which each separate individual indulges himself. The modifications of the atmosphere dependent on different seasons and climates is a subject which was successfully treated by Hippocrates, and which is still far from exhausted by all the researches of modern science. He considered that while heat and cold, moisture and dryness, succeeded one another throughout the year, the human body underwent certain analogous changes, which influenced the diseases of the period; and on this basis was founded the doctrine of pathological constitutions, corresponding to particular conditions of the atmosphere, so that, whenever the year or the season exhibited a special character in which such or such a temperature prevailed, those persons who were exposed to its influence were affected by a series of disorders, all bearing the same stamp. (How plainly the same idea runs through the Observationes Medicae of Sydenham, our " English Hippocrates " need not be pointed out to those who are at all familiar with his works.) The belief in the influence which different climates exercise on the human frame follows naturally from the theory just mentioned; for, in fact, a climate may be considered as nothing more than a permanent season, whose effects may be expected to be more powerful, inasmuch as the cause is ever at work upon mankind. Accordingly, Hippocrates attributes to climate both the conformation of the body and the disposition of the mind-indeed, almost every thing; and if the Greeks were found to be hardy freemen, and the Asiatics effeminate slaves, he accounts for the difference of their characters by that of the climates in which they lived. With respect to the second class of causes producing disease, he attributed all sorts of disorders to a vicious system of diet, which, whether excessive or defective, he considered to be equally injurious; and in the same way he supposed that, when bodily exercise was either too much indulged in or entirely neglected, the health was equally likely to suffer, though by different forms of disease. Into all the minutiae of the "Humoral Pathology" (as it was called), which kept its ground in Europe as the prevailing doctrine of all the medical sects for more than twenty centuries, it would be out of place to enter here. It will be sufficient to remind the reader that the four fluids or humours of the body (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile) were supposed to be the primary seat of disease; that health was the result of the due combination (or crasis) of these, and that, when this crasis was disturbed, disease was the consequence; that, in the course of a disorder that was proceeding favourably, these humours underwent a certain change in quality (or coction),which was the sign of returning health, as preparing the way for the expulsion of the morbid matter, or crisis;and that these crises had a tendency to occur at certain stated periods, which were hence called "critical days." (Brit. and For. Med. Rev.)
  The medical practice of Hippocrates was cautious and feeble, so much so, that he was in after times reproached with letting his patients die, by doing nothing to keep them alive. It consisted chiefly in watching the operations of nature, and promoting the critical evacuations mentioned above; so that attention to diet and regimen was the principal and often the only remedy that he employed. Several hundred substances have been enumerated which are used medicinally in different parts of the Hippocratic Collection; of these, by far the greater portion belong to the vegetable kingdom, as it would be in vain to look for any traces of chemistry in these early writings. In surgery, he is the author of the frequently quoted maxim, that " what cannot be cured by medicines is cured by the knife; and what cannot be cured by the knife is cured by fire." The anatomical knowledge displayed in different parts of the Hippocratic Collection is scanty and contradictory, so much so, that the discrepancies on this subject constitute an important criterion in deciding the genuineness of the different treatises.
  With regard to the personal character of Hippocrates, though he says little or nothing expressly about himself, yet it is impossible to avoid drawing certain conclusions from the characteristic passages scattered through the pages of his writings. He was evidently a person who not only had had great experience, but who also knew how to turn it to the best account; and the number of moral reflections and apophthegms that we meet with in his writings, some of which (as, for example, " Life is short, and Art is long ") have acquired a sort of proverbial notoriety, show him to have been a profound thinker. He appears to have felt the moral obligations and responsibilities of his profession, and often tries to impress upon his readers the duties of care and attention, and kindness towards the sick, saying that a physician's first and chief consideration ought to be the restoring his patient to health. The style of the Hippocratic writings, which are in the Ionic dialect, is so concise as to be sometimes extremely obscure; though this charge, which is as old as the time of Galen, is often brought too indiscriminately against the whole collection, whereas it applies, in fact especially only to certain treatises, which seem to be merely a collection of notes, such as De Humoribus, De Alimento, De Officina Medici, &c. In those writings, which are universally allowed to be genuine, we do not find this excessive brevity, though even these are in general by no means easy. (Brit. and For. Med. Rev.)
  Of the great number of books published on the subject of the Hippocratic Collection, only a very few of the most modern and most useful can be here enumerated; a fuller list may be found in Choulant's Handb. der Bucherkunde fur die Aeltere Medicin, or his Biblioth. Medico-Histor.; or in Ackermann's Historia Literaria Hippocratis. Foesii Oeconomia Hippocratis is a very copious and learned lexicon, published in fol. Francof. 1588, and Genev. 1662. Sprengel's Apologie des Hippocr. und seiner Grundsatze (Leipz. 1789, 1792, 2 vols. 8vo.), contains, among matter, a German translation of some of the genuine treatises, with a valuable commentary. The treatise by Ermerins, De Hippocr. Doctrine a Proynostice oriunda (Lugd. Bat. 1832, 4to.), deserves to be carefully studied; as also does Link's dissertation, Ueber die Theorien in den Hippocratiscien Schriften, nebst Bemerkungen uber die Echtheit dieser Schriften, in the " Abhandlungen der Berlin. Akadem." 1814, 1815. Gruner's Censura Librorum Hippocrateorum qua veri a falsis, integri a suppositis segregantur, Vratislav. 1772, 8vo., contains a useful account of the amount of evidence in favour of each treatise of the collection, though his conclusions are not always to be depended on. See also Houdart, Etudes Histor. et Crit. sur la Vie et la Doctrine d' Hippocr. Paris, 1836, 8vo.; Petersen, Hippocr. Nomine quae circumferuntur Scripta ad Temporis Rationes dispos. Hamburg, 1839, 4to. ; Meixner, Neue Prufung der Echtheit und Reihefolge Sammtlicher Schriften Hippocr., Munchen, 1836, 1837, 8vo.
1 There is at this present time among the MSS. at Leyden a little Arabic treatise on Physiognomy which bears the name of Philemon, and which (as the writer has been informed by a gentleman who has compared the two works) bears a very great resemblance to the Greek treatise by Polemon. (See Catal. Biblioth. Lugdun. p. 461. § 1286.)
2 Some of the readers of this work may perhaps be interested to hear that a strictly philologicalclassification of the works of the Hippocratic Collection is still a desideratum; and that, as this is in fact almost the only question connected with the subject which has not by this time been thoroughly examined, any scholar who will undertake the work will be doing good service to the cause of ancient medical literature.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


  The central historical figure in Greek medicine is Hippocrates. The events of his life are shrouded in uncertainty, yet tales of his ingenuity, patriotism and compassion made him a legend. He provided an example of the ideal physician after which others centuries after him patterned their existence.
  He was associated with the Asclepium of Cos, an island off the coast of Asia Minor, near Rhodes and with a group of medical treatises known collectively as the Hippocratic Corpus. Celsus says that Hippocrates first gave the physician an independent standing, separating him from the cosmological speculator, or nature philosopher. Hippocrates confined the medical man to medicine. At the same time that he assigned the physician his post, Hippocrates would not let him regard the post as sacrosanct. He set his face against any tendency toward sacerdotalism. He was also opposed to the spirit of trade-unionism in medicine. His concern was rather with the physician’s duties than his “rights”. Hence the greatest legacy of Hippocrates: the Hippocratic Oath.

This extract is cited Sept 2003 from the University of Virginia Historical Collections URL below, which contains image.


  Hippocrates (c. 460 BC-377 BC). Ancient Greek physician, commonly regarded as one of the most outstanding figures in medicine of all times. He is often called “the father of medicine”. He was the leader of a medical school of Cos and the author of most of writings of the school. He had a great impact on succeeding generations of practitioners of medicine and some general rules still apply.
  His work and writings rejected the superstition and magic of primitive “medicine” and laid the foundations of medicine as a branch of science. The whole collection of works of the Hippocratic medical school were gathered as the Hippocratic Corpus.
  The best known of the Hippocratic writings is the Hippocratic Oath.
  “I swear by Apollo the physician, by Aesculapius, Hygeia, and Panacea, and I take to witness all the gods, all the goddesses, to keep according to my ability and my judgement, the following Oath. To consider dear to me as my parents him who taught me this art; to live in common with him and if necessary to share my goods with him; to look upon his children as my own brothers, to teach them this art if they so desire without fee or written promise; to impart to my sons and the sons of the master who taught me and the disciples who have enrolled themselves and have agreed to the rules of the profession, but to these alone the precepts and the instruction. I will prescribe regimen for the good of my patients according to my ability and my judgement and never do harm to anyone.
  To please no one will I prescribe a deadly drug nor give advice which may cause his death. Nor will I give a woman a pessary to procure abortion. But I will preserve the purity of my life and my art. I will not cut for stone, even for patients in whom the disease is manifest; I will leave this operation to be performed by practitioners, specialists in this art. In every house where I come I will enter only for the good of my patients, keeping myself far from all intentional ill-doing and all seduction and especially from the pleasures of love with women or with men, be they free or slaves. All that may come to my knowledge in the exercise of my profession or in daily commerce with men, which ought not to be spread abroad, I will keep secret and will never reveal.
  If I keep this oath faithfully, may I enjoy my life and practice my art, respected by all men and in all times; but if I swerve from it or violate it, may the reverse be my lot.”

This extract is cited July 2003 from the Malaspina Great Books URL below, which contains image.


  Hippocrates (c.460-377). Also called the “Father of Medicine”, Hippocrates was born on the island of Kos.
  Not much of him is known, except that he was exiled from his home, an outstanding physician and that he died in Larissa, where there is a monument of him. An anecdote tells us he was so sharp that once he met a girl in the street, and greeted her saying “good morning, maiden” but when he met her in the afternoon, he said “good evening, woman”.
  Hippocrates was almost free of superstition, and believed disease came from nature as opposed to from the gods. He even stated that epilepsy was caused from a blockage in the brain. He was the first physician to actually examine his patients.
  A revolutionary aspect that was invented by Hippocrates was the concepts of cleanliness. When the plague broke out he recommended that people burn their clothes and boil the water before they drank it. It was to take over 2000 years before this was rediscovered. He wrote about diagnostical methods, diets, the importance of hygiene, how to prevent diseases, surgery, women's diseases, the construction of towns and houses in order for people's environment to be healthy, massage et.c.
  Hippocrates believed the health is good when the four humours, blood, yellow bile, black bile and phlegm, are in balance. When we vomit, cough or sweat for example, the body is trying to get rid of excessive amounts of one or more of these humours.
  The Hippocratic Oath, which he might not have actually written himself, is still sworn by new doctors in many parts of the world. This oath is the basis for the ethics of the World Health Organization (WHO). Hippocrates also introduced the vow of silence that all doctors still take.

This text is cited Sept 2003 from the In2Greece URL below.


  Medicina (iatrike). The ancients ascribed the origin of the medical art to the gods (Pliny , Pliny H. N.xxix. 2), and Prometheus, Chiron, and Asclepius were among those who made it known to men. It was also believed to have been improved by the observation of the remedies instinctively sought out by animals when suffering from injuries or disease (Pliny , Pliny H. N.viii. 97). Thus, dogs taught the Egyptians the use of purgatives, bleeding was learned from the hippopotamus, and enemata from the ibis. Sheep and cattle led men to the use of the natural saline and chalybeate waters. The results of these and various other observations of cures were recorded on tablets, and suspended by the priests in the temples of the gods both in Egypt and in Greece. These tablets were the beginnings of medical literature.
  The Asclepiadae, to which family Hippocrates belonged, were, in a way, hereditary physicians, and founded a number of medical schools, of which the most famous in early times were those of Rhodes, Cnidos, and Cos. From the second came the collection of medical observations called Knidiai Gnomai, "Cnidian Maxims", which long enjoyed a considerable repute. The school of Cos was, however, the best known of the three, and one of its representatives was Hippocrates himself. Herodotus mentions other schools at Crotona in Italy and Cyrene in Africa (iii. 131). Of the different medical sects that sprang up at different times, the following deserve especial mention:
  (1) The Dogmatici or Hippocratici, founded about B.C. 400 by Thessalus, the son, and Polybus, the son-in-law of Hippocrates;
  (2) the Empirici, founded in the third century B.C., and so called because they professed to base their knowledge and practice on experience alone;
  (3) the Methodici, founded in the first century B.C. by Themison, who taught doctrines partly theoretical and partly empirical;
  (4) the Pneumatici, founded by Athenaeus in the first century a.d.; and
  (5) the Eclectici, founded at about the same time by Agathinus of Sparta, or perhaps his pupil Archigenes.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Febr 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


  Medicus (iatros). A physician or surgeon, the name being indiscriminately used of either. In Greece and Asia Minor, physicians were held in higher repute than at Rome, probably because of the traditional association of medicine with religion. A law of the Locrians quoted by Aelian (Var. Hist. ii. 37), punished with death the patient who disobeyed the orders of his physician. Hippocrates was treated as a demigod by the Athenians, if the account of Soranus be true.
  The Greek physician compounded his own medicines, and either sat in his consulting-room (iatreion) or visited his patients, in the latter duty being often accompanied by his pupils or assistants. There is only one mention of a Greek hospital prior to the Roman period. State physicians were employed in Greece, receiving a salary and their expenses, but no fees. Thus Democedes received from the public treasury of Aegina about $1400 per annum, and from Athens afterwards a salary of some $2000 ( Herod.iii. 131). A physician who cured King Antiochus received from him a fee of over $100,000 (Pliny , Pliny H. N.vii. 123; xxix. 5). State physicians attended gratis any one who called for them.
  In the early days of the Republic, Rome had no regular physicians. The haruspices and augurs pretended to some knowledge of medicine; but when a man fell ill, he was usually treated by the old women with their simples; or if the disease was a very serious one, he trusted to religious rites, vows, and sacrifices for his recovery. The various deities of disease were propitiated by temples and altars. In Varro's time there were in Rome three temples to the goddess of Fever; in the Esquiline quarter, an altar to Mefitis, the goddess Malaria; in the centre of the Forum Romanum, an altar to Cloacina, "the goddess of typhoid" (so Lanciani), and near the Praetorian Camp, an altar to Verminus, the god of diseasegerms.
  At a later period, among the Greeks who first came in numbers to Rome in the second century B.C., were many professed physicians; and from that time the practice of medicine became a lucrative profession among the Romans, though the chief practitioners remained Greeks, a fact to which the Latin vocabulary bears witness in that its medical terms are nearly all of Greek origin. The elder Pliny gives some interesting details regarding the fees received by the leading doctors. The native physicians of celebrity, Cassius, Calpetanus, and Arruntius, received, he estimates, an income of not less than 250,000 sesterces ($10,000) a year. Quintus Stertinius, a fashionable physician, was asked by the emperor to give up his private practice and devote himself to the imperial family alone. Stertinius said that, as an especial favour, he would do it if he could receive a salary of 500,000 sesterces ($20,000). This struck the emperor as an exorbitant demand, but Stertinius showed from his books that his private practice was worth to him at least 600,000 sesterces per annum. The brother of this Stertinius had a sort of partnership with him, and when they died, which they did at about the same time, they left a property of 30,000,000 sesterces ($1,200,000), though they had lived very expensively, and given large sums to public objects. The Greek physicians at Rome probably earned still larger sums. An ex-praetor paid 200,000 sesterces ($8000) as a single fee to the practitioner who treated him for leprosy. Pliny mentions one Thessalus, of whom he says: "No popular actor, no famous jockey, had a greater throng attending him when he appeared in public".
  Nothing is known of the course of study necessary to qualify a man for medical practice. That there were medical students and clinical lectures is seen from Martial. It is probable that the profession was open to all kinds of quacks and impostors, for we read of men taking up medicine as they would any form of trade, with no mention of any special qualification. It is, in fact, likely that, in the main, ancient medicine was little better than quackery, and that the best physicians were men like Crinas who made a careful study of dietetics, and like Asclepiades, who said "Nature is the true physician". How absurd much of the treatment must have been is shown in the list of remedies given by Pliny in his Historia Naturalis. The patent medicines of to-day sink into insignificance beside them. Thus, we read of a mysterious preparation called Theriaca with 600 ingredients, and of another known as "the Mithridatic antidote" with 450. Pliny mentions 35 nostrums prepared from wool, 22 from eggs, and also several pastes of which the principal constituent was pounded bugs. The notion, which is still largely prevalent among the laity, that the efficacy of a drug is in direct proportion to its nastiness seems to have had a strong hold on the minds of the ancients. Dog's blood was given for narcotic poisons; urine for gout; goat's gall for ophthalmia; bull's gall and garlic for ear-ache. Superstition entered largely into the treatment. A person afflicted with hiccoughing was gravely advised to touch his lips to a mule's nostrils and be cured. Hydrophobia was treated by applying to the bite the ashes of the dead dog's hair. A still more effectual remedy for the same disease was to cut out the liver of the dog and to eat it raw, applying at the same time to the wound, horse-dung sprinkled with vinegar.
  All these prescriptions are the serious advice of men of reputation. It is not surprising if, on the whole, the profession was less esteemed than others. Pliny the Elder sums up the matter in the following sentences: "There is no doubt that physicians in pursuit of celebrity, by the introduction of some novelty or other, purchase it at the cost of human life. Hence these woful discussions, these consultations at the bedside of the patient; hence, too, the ominous inscription to be read upon a tomb--'I perished by the multitude of physicians' . . . And there is, moreover, no law to punish the mistakes of a physician, and no instance before us of any punishment so inflicted. They acquire skill at our risk, and put us to death for the sake of making an experiment; for a physician is the only person who is licensed to kill".
  Other scandals besides those due to ignorance were not unknown. So many unprincipled persons entered the profession that it is not surprising to find complaints made of their conduct. Even the palace of the Caesars was the scene of strange occurrences, for it is recorded that both Livia, the wife of Drusus, and the empress Messalina were criminally intimate with their medical attendants. It is not remarkable, therefore, to find a Roman writer concluding a discussion of the subject with the words: "Medicine is the only one of the arts of Greece that, lucrative though it be, Roman dignity still refuses to cultivate".
  Nevertheless, medicine flourished, and its followers kept increasing in number. We hear of the practice of specialties. General practitioners were known as medici; surgeons as chirurgi and vulnerarii. There were also oculists (ocularii) and dentists (medici a dentibus). We even read of female physicians (Orell. Inscript. 4320-31), and, of course, of numerous midwives (obstetrices). Pharmacies existed, their sign being the Aesculapian snake; and though physicians usually furnished their own drugs, they also gave signed prescriptions (Duruy). The physicians attached to the imperial household were under the direction of a chief styled archiater (archiatros), or in pure Latin dominus medicorum. The name archiater was also applied to the dispensary-physicians who gave their services to the people (archiatri populares).
  Surgery was the branch of medicine most scientifically pursued, and successful operations were performed by the ancient surgeons for stone and cataract, while trephining was not unknown.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Febr 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


  Diaetetica (diaitetike). One of the principal branches into which the ancients divided the art and science of medicine. The word is derived from diaita, which meant much the same as our word diet. It is defined by Celsus (De Medic. Praef.lib. i.) to signify that part of medicine which cures diseases by means of regimen and diet. Taken strictly in this sense, it would correspond very nearly with the modern "dietetics", and this is the meaning which it always bears in the earlier medical writers.
  In later times the comic poet Nicomachus introduces a cook who, among his other qualifications, implies that he is a physician; but no attention seems to have been paid to eating as a branch of medicine before the date of Hippocrates. Homer represents Machaon, who had been wounded in the shoulder by an arrow ( Il.xi. 507) and forced to quit the field, as taking a draught composed of wine, goat's-milk cheese, and flour, which probably no surgeon in later times would have prescribed in such a case. Hippocrates seems to claim for himself the credit of being the first person who had studied this subject, and says that "the ancients had written nothing on it worth mentioning". Among the works forming the Hippocratic collection, there are four that bear upon this subject, of which, however, only one (viz. that just quoted) is considered to be undoubtedly genuine. It would be out of place here to attempt anything like a complete account of the opinions of the ancients on this point, so that in this article only such particulars are mentioned as may be supposed to have some interest for the classical reader.
  In the works of Hippocrates and his successors almost all the articles of food used by the ancients are mentioned, and their real or supposed properties discussed, sometimes quite as fancifully as by Burton in his Anatomy of Melancholy. In some respects they appear to have been much less delicate than the moderns, as we find the flesh of the fox, the dog, the horse, and the ass spoken of as common articles of food. Beef and mutton were of course eaten, but the meat most generally esteemed was pork. A morbid taste for human flesh appears to have been secretly indulged in the time of Xenocrates (first century A.D.); so that the unnatural practice was forbidden by an imperial edict, which decree serves to illustrate the "strange and revolting anecdote", as Milman calls it, of the wild cry that, in a time of scarcity amounting to famine, assailed the ears of the emperor Attalus, "Fix the tariff for human flesh" (pone pretium carni humanae, Zosim. vi. 11).
  With regard to the strength or quality of the wine drunk by the ancients, we may arrive at something like certainty from the fact that Coelius Aurelianus mentions it as something extraordinary that Asclepiades at Rome in the first century B.C. sometimes ordered his patients to double and treble the quantity of wine, till at last they drank half wine and half water. From this it appears that wine was commonly diluted with five or six times its quantity of water. Hippocrates also in particular cases recommends wine to be mixed with an equal quantity of water, and Galen approves of the proportion. According to Hippocrates, the proportions in which wine and water should be mixed together vary according to the season of the year; for instance, in summer the wine should be most diluted, in winter the least so. In one place the patient after great fatigue is recommended to get himself drunk once or twice, in which passage it has been doubted whether actual intoxication is meant or only the "drinking freely and to cheerfulness", in which sense the same word is used by St. John and the Septuagint.
  Exercises of various kinds and bathing are also much insisted on by the writers on diet and regimen, but for further particulars on these subjects the articles Balneae and Gymnasium must be consulted. It may, however, be added that the bath could not have been very common, at least in private families, in the time of Hippocrates, as he says that "there are few houses in which the necessary conveniences are to be found". Another very favourite practice with the ancients, both as a preventive of sickness and as a remedy, was the taking of an emetic from time to time. In one of the treatises of the Hippocratic collection the unknown author recommends it two or three times a month. Celsus considers it more beneficial in the winter than in the summer, and says that those who take an emetic twice a month had better do so on two successive days than once a fortnight. In the first century B.C. this practice was so commonly abused that Asclepiades rejected the use of emetics altogether.
  It was the custom among the Romans to take an emetic immediately before their meals, in order to prepare themselves to eat more plentifully; and again soon after, so as to avoid any injury from repletion. Cicero, in his account of the day that Caesar spent with him at his house in the country, says, "Accubuit, emetiken agebat (he was meditating an emetic), itaque et edit et bibit adeos et iucunde"; and this has by some persons been considered a sort of compliment paid by Caesar to his host, as it intimated a resolution to pass the day cheerfully and to eat and drink freely. He is represented as having done the same thing when he was entertained by King Deiotarus. The glutton Vitellius is said to have preserved his own life by constant emetics, while he destroyed all his companions who did not use the same precaution; so that one of them, who was prevented by illness from dining with him for a few days, said, "I should certainly have been dead if I had not fallen sick". It might truly be said, in the strong language of Seneca, Vomunt, ut edant; edunt, ut vomant. By some, the practice was thought so effectual for strengthening the constitution that it was the constant regimen of all the athletae, or professed wrestlers, trained for the public shows, in order to make them more robust. Celsus, however, warns his readers against the too frequent use of emetics without necessity and merely for luxury and gluttony, and says that no one who has any regard for his health and wishes to live to old age ought to make it a daily practice.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Febr 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


  Chirurgia (cheirourgia). Surgery; a word meaning literally "handiwork". The practice of surgery was at first considered by the ancients to be merely a part of a physician's duty; but, as in later times the two branches of the profession were to a great extent separated, it will perhaps be more convenient to treat of it under a separate head. Without touching upon the disputed question, which is the more ancient branch of the profession, or even trying to give such a definition of the word chirurgia as would be likely to satisfy both the physicians and the surgeons of the present day, it will be sufficient to determine the sense in which the word was used by the ancients; and then to give an account of this division of the science and art of medicine as practised among the Greeks and Romans, referring to the article Medicina for further particulars.
  The word chirurgia is derived from cheir, "the hand", and ergon, "a work", and is explained by Celsus to mean that part of medicine quae manu curat, "which treats ailments by means of the hand"; in Diogenes Laertius (iii. 85) it is said to cure dia tou temnein kai kaiein, "by cutting and burning". Omitting the fabulous and mythological personages, Apollo, Aesculapius, Chiron, etc., the only certain traditions respecting the state of surgery before the establishment of the republics of Greece, and even until the time of the Peloponnesian War, are to be found in the Iliad and Odyssey. There it appears that surgery was almost entirely confined to the treatment of wounds, and the imaginary power of enchantment was joined with the use of topical applications ( Il.iii. 218). The Greeks received surgery, together with the other branches of medicine, from the Egyptians; and from some observations made by the archaeologists who accompanied the French expedition to Egypt in 1798, and by subsequent investigators, it appears that there are documents fully proving that in very remote times this extraordinary people had reached a degree of proficiency of which few of the moderns have any conception. Upon the ceilings and walls of the temples at Karnac, Luxor, etc., bas-reliefs are seen, representing limbs that have been cut off with instruments very similar to those which are employed for amputations at the present day. The same instruments are again observed in the hieroglyphics, and vestiges of other surgical operations may be traced, which afford convincing proofs of the skill of the ancient Egyptians in this branch of medical science.
  The earliest remaining surgical writings are those in the Hippocratic Collection, where there are ten treatises on this subject, of which, however, only one is considered undoubtedly genuine. Hippocrates (B.C. 460-357?) far surpassed all his predecessors in the boldness and success of his operations; and though the scanty knowledge of anatomy possessed in those times prevented his attaining any very great perfection, still one should rather admire his genius, which enabled him to do so much, than blame him because, with his imperfect information, he could not accomplish more. The scientific skill in reducing fractures and luxations displayed in his works De Fracturis, De Articulis, excites the admiration of Haller (Biblioth. Chirurg.); and he was most probably the inventor of the ambe, an old surgical machine for dislocations of the shoulder, which, though now fallen into disuse, enjoyed for a long time a great reputation. In his work De Capitis Vulneribus he gives minute directions about the time and mode of using the trephine, and warns the operator against the probability of his being deceived by the sutures of the cranium, as he confesses happened to himself (De Morb. Vulgar. lib. v. tom. iii. p. 561, ed. Kuhn). Amputation, in the modern sense of the word, is not described in the Hippocratic Collection; though mention is made of the removal of a limb at the joint, after the flesh has been completely destroyed by gangrene. The author of the "Oath" commonly attributed to Hippocrates binds his pupils not to perform the operation of lithotomy, but to leave it to persons specially accustomed to it (ergateisi andrasi prexios tesde); from which it would appear as if certain persons confined themselves to particular operations.
  The names of several persons are preserved who practised surgery as well as medicine in the times immediately succeeding those of Hippocrates; but, with the exception of some fragments, inserted in the writings of Galen, Oribasius, Aetius, etc., all their writings have perished. Archagathus deserves to be mentioned, as he is said to have been the first foreign surgeon who settled at Rome, B.C. 219 ( Plin. H. N.xxix. 12). He was at first very well received, the ius Quiritium was conferred upon him, a shop was bought for him at the public expense, and he received the honourable title of Vulnerarius; which, however, on account of his frequent use of the knife and cautery, was soon changed by the Romans, who were unused to such a mode of practice, into that of Carnifex. Asclepiades, who lived at the beginning of the first century B.C., is said to have been the first person who proposed the operation of tracheotomy. Ammonius of Alexandria, surnamed Lithotomos, who is supposed to have lived rather later, is celebrated in the annals of surgery for having been the first to propose and to perform the operation of lithotrity, or breaking a calculus in the bladder when found to be too large for safe extraction. Celsus has minutely described his mode of operating, which in some respects resembles that of Civiale and Heurteloup in the early part of the present century, and proves that, however much credit they may deserve for perfecting the operation and bringing it out of oblivion into public notice, the praise of having originally thought of it belongs to the ancients. "A hook or crotchet", says Celsus, "is fixed upon the stone in such a way as easily to hold it firm, even when shaken, so that it may not revolve backward; then an iron instrument is used, of moderate thickness, thin at the front end, but blunt, which, when applied to the stone and struck at the other end, cleaves it: great care must be taken that the instrument does not come into contact with the bladder itself, and that nothing fall upon it by the breaking of the stone". The next surgical writer after Hippocrates, whose works are still extant, is Celsus, who lived at the beginning of the first century A.D., and who has devoted the four last books of his work De Medicina, and especially the seventh and eighth, entirely to surgical matter. It plainly appears from reading Celsus that since the time of Hippocrates surgery had made very great progress, and had, indeed, reached a high degree of perfection. We find in him the earliest mention of the use of the ligature for the arrest of hemorrhage from wounded bloodvessels; and the Celsian mode of amputation was continued down to comparatively modern times. He is the first author who gives directions for the operation of lithotomy, and the method described by him (called the apparatus minor, or Celsus's method) continued to be practised till the commencement of the sixteenth century. It was performed at Paris, Bordeaux, and other places in France, upon patients of all ages, even as late as the latter part of the seventeenth century; and a modern author (Allan On Lithotomy, p. 12) recommends it always to be preferred for boys under fourteen. He describes the operation of infibulatio, which was so commonly performed by the ancients upon singers, etc., and is often alluded to in classical authors. He also describes the operation of circumcision alluded to by St. Paul. Paulus Aegineta (De Re Med. vi. 53) transcribes from Antyllus a second method of performing the same operation.
  The following description by Celsus of the necessary qualifications of a surgeon deserves to be quoted: "A surgeon ought to be young, or, at any rate, not very old; his hand should be firm and steady, and never shake; he should be able to use his left hand as readily as his right; his eyesight should be clear, and his mind not easily startled; he should be so far subject to pity as to make him desirous of the recovery of his patient, but not so far as to suffer himself to be moved by his cries; he should neither hurry the operation more than the case requires, nor cut less than is necessary, but do everything just as if the other's screams made no impression upon him".
  Omitting Scribonius Largus, Moschion, and Soranus, the next author of importance is Caelius Aurelianus, who is supposed to have lived about the beginning of the second century A.D., and in whose works there is much surgical matter, but nothing that can be called original. He rejected as absurd the operation of tracheotomy. He mentions a case of ascites that was cured by tapping, and also a person who recovered after being shot through the lungs by an arrow.
  Galen, the most voluminous and at the same time the most valuable medical writer of antiquity, is less celebrated as a surgeon than as an anatomist and physician. He appears to have practised surgery at Pergamus, but upon his removal to Rome (A.D. 165) he entirely confined himself to medicine. His writings prove, however, that he did not entirely abandon surgery. His Commentaries on the treatise of Hippocrates De Officina Medici, and his treatise De Fasciis, show that he was well versed even in the minor details of the art. He appears also to have been a skilful operator, though no great surgical inventions are attributed to him.
  Antyllus, who lived some time between Galen and Oribasius, is the earliest writer whose directions for performing tracheotomy are still extant, though the operation (as stated above) was proposed by Asclepiades about three hundred years before. Only a few fragments of the writings of Antyllus remain, and among them the following passage is preserved by Paulus Aegineta: "When we proceed to perform this operation, we must cut through some part of the windpipe, below the larynx, about the third or fourth ring; for to divide the whole would be dangerous. This place is commodious, because it is not covered with any flesh, and because it has no vessels situated near the divided part. Therefore, bending the head of the patient backward, so that the windpipe may come more forward to the view, we make a transverse section between two of the rings, so that in this case not the cartilage, but the membrane which unites the cartilages together, is divided. If the operator be a little timid, he may first stretch the skin with a hook and divide it; then, proceeding to the windpipe, and separating the vessels, if any are in the way, he may make the incision".
  This operation appears to have been very seldom, if ever, performed by the ancients upon a human being. Avenzoar tried it upon a goat, and found it might be done without much danger or difficulty; but he says he should not like to be the first person to try it upon a man.
  Oribasius, physician to the emperor Julian (A.D. 361), professes to be merely a compiler; and though there is in his great work, entitled Sunagogai Iatrikai (Collecta Medicinalia), much surgical matter, there is nothing original. The same may be said of Aetius and Alexander Trallianus, both of whom lived towards the end of the sixth century A.D. Paulus Aegineta has given up the fifth and sixth books of his work De Re Medica entirely to surgery, and has inserted much useful matter, derived in a great measure from his own observation and experience. Albucasis translated into Arabic great part of these two books as the basis of his work on surgery. Paulus was particularly celebrated for his skill in midwifery and female diseases, and was called on that account, by the Arabians, Al-Kawabeli, "the Accoucheur" (Abulfaraj, Hist. Dynast. p. 181, ed. Pococke). He probably lived towards the end of the seventh century A.D., and is the last of the ancient Greek and Latin medical writers whose surgical works remain. The names of several others are recorded, but they are not of sufficient eminence to require any notice here. For further information on the subject both of medicine and surgery, see Medicina; and for the legal qualifications, social rank, etc., both of physicians and surgeons, among the ancient Greeks and Romans, see Medicus.
  The surgical instruments from which the accompanying engravings ... (see more in the URL below)

This extract is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Febr 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


The Hippocratic Oath was unquestionably the exemplar for medical etiquette for centuries, and it endures in modified form to this day. Yet uncertainty still prevails concerning the date the oath was composed, the purpose for which it was intended, and the historical forces which shaped the document. The date of composition in modern debate varies from the sixth century BCE to the fourth century CE.
  In antiquity it was generally not considered a violation of medical ethics to do what the Oath forbade. An ancient doctor who accepted the rules laid down by “Hippocrates” was by no means in agreement with the opinion of all his fellow physicians; on the contrary, he adhered to a dogma which was much stricter than that embraced by many, if not by most, of his colleagues.

I swear by Apollo the Physician and Asclepius and Hygeia and Panaceia and all the gods and goddesses, making them my witnesses, that I will fulfill according to my ability and judgment this oath and this covenant: To hold him who has taught me this art as equal to my parent and to live my life in partnership with him, and if he is in need of money to give him a share of mine, and to regard his offspring as equal to my brothers in male lineage and to teach them this art--if they desire to learn it--without fee and covenant; to give share of precepts and oral instruction and all other learning to my sons and to the sons of him who has instructed me and to pupils who have signed the covenant and have taken an oath according to the medical law, but to no one else. I will apply dietetic measure for the benefit of the sick according to my ability and judgment; I will keep them from harm and injustice. I will neither give a deadly drug to anybody if asked for it, nor will I make a suggestion to this effect. Similarly I will not give a woman an abortive remedy. In purity and in holiness I will guard my life and my art. I will not use the knife, not even on sufferers from stone, but will withdraw in favor of such men as are engaged in this work. Whatever houses I may visit, I will come for the benefit of the sick, remaining free of all intentional injustice, of all mischief and in particular of sexual relations with both female and male persons, be they free or slaves. What I may see or hear in the course of the treatment or even outside of the treatment in regard to the life of men, which on no account one must spread abroad, I will keep to myself holding such things shameful to be spoken about. If I fulfill this oath and do not violate it, may it be granted to me to enjoy life and art, being honored with fame among all men for all time to come; if I transgress it and swear falsely, may the opposite be my lot.
--Translated by Ludwig Edelstein

The organization of the Hippocratic Oath is clearly bipartite. The first half specifies the duties of the pupil toward his teacher and his obligations in transmitting medical knowledge; the second half gives a short summary of medical ethics.
  It is the second half, the ethical half, which is inconsistent with the principles and practices of Hippocrates, thus the manifesto was incorrectly attributed to him. One immediate inconsistency is the Oath’s prohibition against abortion. The Hippocratic Corpus contains a number of allusions to the methods of abortion and the use of pessaries. Apparently the prohibitions found within the Oath did not echo the general feeling of the public. Abortion was practiced in Greek times no less than in the Roman era, and it was resorted to without scruple. In a world in which it was held justifiable to expose children immediately after birth, it would hardly seem objectionable to destroy the embryo.
  A second discrepancy between the Oath and general Hippocratic principles is the ban on suicide. Suicide was not censured in antiquity. Self-murder as a relief from illness was regarded as justifiable, so much so that in some states it was an institution duly legalized by the authorities. Nor did ancient religion proscribe suicide. It did not know of any eternal punishment for those who had ended their own lives. Law and religion then left the physician free to do whatever seemed best to him.
  Pythagoreanism is the only philosophical dogma that can possibly account for the attitude advocated in the Hippocratic Oath. Among all the Greek philosophical schools, the Pythagoreans alone outlawed suicide and abortion and did so without qualification. The Oath also concurs with Pythagorean prohibitions against surgical procedures of all kinds and against the shedding of blood, in which the soul was thought to reside.
  The interdiction in the Oath against the knife is especially out of keeping with the several treatises that deal at length with surgical techniques and operating room procedures. It is little wonder that this Oath, although a non-Hippocratic document, has remained steadfastly the symbol of the physician’s pledge. The prohibition against abortion and suicide were (and remain) in consonance with the principles of the Christian Church. The earliest reference to this Oath is in the first century CE, and it may have been appropriated soon after to fit the religious ideals of the time. The substitution of God, Christ and the saints for the names of Asclepius and his family is easy enough.
  It is ironic that the Hippocratic Oath in its present form with its religious subtext is associated with Hippocrates, the man who first separated medicine from religion and disease from supernatural explanations.

This text is cited Sept 2003 from the University of Virginia Historical Collections URL below, which contains image.


Πληροφορίες Σύνταξης
Τα ηλεκτρονικά κείμενα των έργων του Ιπποκράτη παρατίθενται στην Ελλάδα (αρχαία χώρα) στην κατηγορία Αρχαία Ελληνική Γραμματεία.

Θεσσαλός

Thessalus (Thessalos). A Greek physician, son of Hippocrates. He passed some of his time at the court of Archelaus, king of Macedonia, who reigned B.C. 413-399. He was one of the founders of the sect of the Dogmatici, and is several times highly praised by Galen, who calls him the most eminent of the sons of Hippocrates. He was supposed by some of the ancient writers to be the author of several of the works that form part of the Hippocratic Collection, which he might have compiled from notes left by his father.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Febr 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


  From the death of Hippocrates about the year 375 B.C. till the founding of the Alexandrian School, the physicians were engrossed largely in speculative views, and not much real progress was made, except in the matter of elaborating the humoral pathology. Only three or four men of the first rank stand out in this period: Diocles the Carystian, "both in time and reputation next and second to Hippocrates" (Pliny), a keen anatomist and an encyclopaedic writer; but only scanty fragments of his work remain. In some ways the most important member of this group was Praxagoras, a native of Cos, about 340 B.C. Aristotle, you remember, made no essential distinction between arteries and veins, both of which he held to contain blood: Praxagoras recognized that the pulsation was only in the arteries, and maintained that only the veins contained blood, and the arteries air. As a rule the arteries are empty after death, and Praxagoras believed that they were filled with an aeriform fluid, a sort of pneuma, which was responsible for their pulsation. The word arteria, which had already been applied to the trachea, as an air-containing tube, was then attached to the arteries; on account of the rough and uneven character of its walls the trachea was then called the arteria tracheia, or the rough air-tube.(Galen: De usu partium, VII, Chaps. 8-9)We call it simply the trachea, but in French the word trachee-artere is still used.
  Praxagoras was one of the first to make an exhaustive study of the pulse, and he must have been a man of considerable clinical acumen,as well as boldness, to recommend in obstruction of the bowels the opening of the abdomen, removal of the obstructed portion and uniting the ends of the intestine by sutures.

This text is cited Sept 2003 from the Greek & Roman Science & Technology URL below.


Κατσαράς Μιχάλης

ΣΥΜΗ (Νησί) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
1860 - 1939
Νευρολόγος-ψυχίατρος, πρώτος που εισήγαγε στην Ελλάδα τους κλάδους αυτούς και ίδρυσε αντίστοιχη έδρα στο Πανεπιστήμιο. Ίδρυσε την πρώτη αντίστοιχη κλινική στο Αιγινήτειο Νοσοκομείο, διετέλεσε Πρύτανης Πανεπιστημίου, Διευθυντής Δρομοκαϊτείου, αντιπροσώπευσε την Ελλάδα σε πολλά συνέδρια και έγραψε πολλά συγγράμματα.

Ιστορικές προσωπικότητες

Ptolemaeus Philadelphus, king of Egypt

ΚΩΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
   The son of Ptolemy I. by his wife Berenice, was born in the island of Cos, 309.
His long reign was marked by few events of a striking character. He was engaged in war with his half-brother Magas, who had governed Cyrene as viceroy under Ptolemy Soter, but on the death of that monarch not only asserted his independence, but even attempted to invade Egypt. Magas was supported by Antiochus II., king of Syria; and the war was at length terminated by a treaty, which left Magas in undisputed possession of the Cyrenaica, while his infant daughter Berenice was betrothed to Ptolemy, the son of Philadelphus. Ptolemy also concluded a treaty with the Romans. He was frequently engaged in hostilities with Syria, which were terminated towards the close of his reign by a treaty of peace, by which Ptolemy gave his daughter Berenice in marriage to Antiochus II. Ptolemy's chief care, however, was directed to the internal administration of his kingdom, and to the patronage of literature and science. The institutions of which the foundations had been laid by his father quickly rose under his fostering care to the highest prosperity. The Museum of Alexandria became the resort and abode of all the most distinguished men of letters of the day, and in the library attached to it were accumulated all the treasures of ancient learning. Among the other illustrious names which adorned the reign of Ptolemy may be mentioned those of the poets Philetas and Theocritus, the philosophers Hegesias and Theodorus, the mathematician Euclid, and the astronomers Timocharis, Aristarchus of Samos, and Aratus. Nor was his patronage confined to the ordinary cycle of Hellenic literature. By his interest in natural history he gave a stimulus to the pursuit of that science, which gave birth to many important works, while he himself formed collections of rare animals within the precincts of the royal palace. It was during his reign also, and perhaps at his desire, that Manetho gave to the world in a Greek form the historical records of the Egyptians; and according to a well-known tradition it was by his express command that the Holy Scriptures of the Jews were translated into Greek. The new cities or colonies founded by Philadelphus in different parts of his dominions were extremely numerous. On the Red Sea alone we find at least two bearing the name of Arsinoe, one called after another of his sisters Philotera, and two cities named in honour of his mother Berenice. The same names occur also in Cilicia and Syria: and in the latter country he founded the important fortress of Ptolemais in Palestine. All authorities concur in attesting the great power and wealth to which the Egyptian monarchy was raised under Philadelphus. He possessed at the close of his reign a standing army of 200,000 foot and 40,000 horse, besides war-chariots and elephants, a fleet of 1500 ships, and a sum of 740,000 talents in his treasury; while he derived from Egypt alone an annual revenue of 14,800 talents. His dominions comprised, besides Egypt itself, and portions of Aethiopia, Arabia, and Libya, the important provinces of Ph?nicia and Coele-Syria, together with Cyprus, Lycia, Caria, and the Cyclades, and during a great part at least of his reign Cilicia and Pamphylia also. Before his death Cyrene was reunited to the monarchy by the marriage of his son Ptolemy with Berenice, the daughter of Magas. The private life and relations of Philadelphus do not exhibit his character in as favourable a light as we might have inferred from the splendour of his administration. He put to death two of his brothers; and he banished his first wife Arsinoe, the daughter of Lysimachus, to Coptos in Upper Egypt on a charge of conspiracy. After her removal Ptolemy married his own sister Arsinoe, the widow of Lysimachus, a flagrant violation of the religious notions of the Greeks, but one which was frequently imitated by his successors. He evinced his affection for Arsinoe not only by bestowing her name upon many of his newly-founded colonies, but by assuming himself the surname of Philadelphus, a title which some writers referred in derision to his unnatural treatment of his two brothers. By this second marriage Ptolemy had no issue: but his first wife had borne him two sons--Ptolemy, who succeeded him on the throne, and Lysimachus; and a daughter, Berenice, whose marriage to Antiochus II., king of Syria, has been already mentioned.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Βικέλας Δημήτριος

ΣΥΡΟΣ (Πόλη) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
1835 - 1908
  Ο Δημήτριος Βικέλας γεννήθηκε στις 15 Φεβρουαρίου του 1835, στην Ερμούπολη της Σύρου και ήταν ο πρώτος πρόεδρος της ΔΟΕ.
  Οι κανονισμοί που είχε θεσπίσει ο αναβιωτής των σύγχρονων Ολυμπιακών αγώνων, Pierre de Coubertin, ήθελαν ο πρόεδρος της ΔΟΕ να είναι από τη χώρα, που θα αναλάμβανε τη διεξαγωγή των επόμενων αγώνων, γι' αυτό και ο Βικέλας διετέλεσε μόνο δύο χρόνια πρόεδρος της επιτροπής.
 Οταν το 1894 πήγε στο Παρίσι να εκπροσωπήσει τον Πανελλήνιο Γυμναστικό Σύλλογο, η γνώση του γύρω από τα αθλητικά δεν ήταν πολύ μεγάλη. Παρόλα αυτά κατάφερε να ανατρέψει την πρόταση της επιτροπής, οι αγώνες να γίνουν στο Παρίσι, το 1900 και η διεξαγωγή των πρώτων Ολυμπιακών έγινε στην Ελλάδα, το 1896.
  Το 1894, αμέσως μετά την οριστικοποίηση της χώρας που θα διεξαχθούν οι αγώνες, συστήνεται η πρώτη ολυμπιακή επιτροπή, με πρόεδρο τον Βικέλα και γραμματέα τον Κουμπερτέν και συντάσσεται το πρώτο δελτίο της επιτροπής, κάτι που συνεχίζεται και σήμερα. Εκεί εμφανίζεται και το τρίπτυχο Citius, Altius, Fortius (Πιο γρήγορα, πιο ψηλά, πιο δυνατά).
  Παρά τα προβλήματα που δημιουργούνται, όταν σε σύσκεψη στο Ζάππειο Μέγαρο, ο τότε πρωθυπουργός της χώρας Χαρίλαος Τρικούπης πιστεύει ότι η Ελλάδα δεν έχει τη δυνατότητα να διοργανώσει τους αγώνες, ο Βικέλας εργάζεται σκληρά, για να πείσει τους Ελληνες και την κυβέρνηση, να υποστηρίξουν το φιλόδοξο σχέδιο.
  Οι προσπάθειες του στέφονται με επιτυχία και οι πρώτοι αγώνες γίνονται στην Αθήνα το 1896.

Ιστορικοί

Onesicritus

ΑΣΤΥΠΑΛΑΙΑ (Νησί) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
   (Onesikritos). A Greek historian, of the island of Astypalaea or of Aegina. In mature years he was a pupil of the Cynic Diogenes, and then accompanied Alexander the Great upon his expedition. By order of Alexander he investigated, with Nearchus, the route by sea from India to the mouths of the Euphrates and Tigris. He afterwards lived at the court of Lysimachus, king of Thrace. During Alexander's life he began a comprehensive history of that personage, which fell into disrepute, owing to its exaggerations and its false accounts of distant lands. Only scanty fragments of it are preserved.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Onesicritus

ΑΣΤΥΠΑΛΑΙΑ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ

Αντισθένης ο Ρόδιος, 3ος/2ος π.Χ.

ΡΟΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
Antisthenes, of Rhodes, a Greek historian who lived about the year B. C. 200. He took an active part in the political affairs of his country, and wrote a history of his own time, which, notwithstanding its partiality towards his native island, is spoken of in terms of high praise by Polybius (xvi. 14; comp. Diog. Laert. vi. 19). Plutarch (de Fluv. 22) mentions an Antisthenes who wrote a work called Meleagris, of which the third book is quoted; and Pliny (H. N. xxxvi. 12) speaks of a person of the same name, who wrote on the pyramids; but whether they are the same person as the Rhodian, or two distinct writers, or the Ephesian Antisthenes mentioned by Diogenes Laertius (vi. 19), cannot be decided.

Gorgon

Epimenides

Epimenides. The author of a History of Rhodes, which was written in the Doric dialect. (Diog. Laert. i. 115; Schol. ad Pind. Ol. vii. 24, ad Apollon. Rhod. i. 1125, iii. 241, iv. 57; Eudoc.; Heinrich, Epimenid.)

Eudoxus

Eudoxus. Of Rhodes, an historical writer, whose time is not known. (Diog. Laert. l. c.; Apollon. Hist. Com. 24 Elym Mag. s. v. Adrias: Vossius, de Hist. Graec., ed. Westermann.)

Κωμικοί ποιητές

Αναξανδρίδης, 4ος αιώνας π.Χ.

ΚΑΜΕΙΡΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΡΟΔΟΣ
   A Rhodian Greek poet of the Middle Comedy, who flourished in B.C. 376. He is said to have been the first to make love affairs the theme of comedy. His plays are said to have been characterized by sprightliness and humour, but only fragments of them are now in existence.

Anaxandrides, an Athenian comic poet of the middle comedy, was the son of Anaxander, a native of Cameirus in Rhodes. He began to exhibit comedies in B. C. 376 (Marm. Par. Ep. 34), and 29 years later he was present, and probably exhibited, at the Olympic games celebrated by Philip at Dium. Aristotle held him in high esteem (Rhet. iii. 10-12; Eth. Eud. vi. 10; Nicom. vii. 10). He is said to have been the first poet who made love intrigues a prominent part of comedy. He gained ten prizes, the whole number of his comedies being sixty-five. Though he is said to have destroyed several of his plays in anger at their rejection, we still have the titles of thirty-three.
  Anaxandrides was also a dithyrambic poet, but we have no remains of his dithyrambs (Suidas, s.v.; Athen. ix.)

Epicharmos, Epicharmus

ΚΩΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
550 - 460
   Epicharmus, (Epicharmos). The first Greek comic writer of whom we have any definite account. He was a Syracusan, either by birth or emigration. Some writers make him a native of the island of Cos, but all agree that he passed his life at Syracuse. It was about B.C. 500, thirty-five years after Thespis began to exhibit, eleven years after the commencement of Phrynichus, and just before the appearance of Aeschylus as a tragedian, that Epicharmus produced the first comedy properly so called. Before him, this department of the drama was little more than a series of licentious songs and sarcastic episodes, without plot, connection, or consistency. He gave to each exhibition continuity, and converted the loose interlocutions into regular dialogue. The subjects of his Doric comedies, as we may infer from the extant titles of thirty-five of them, were partly parodies of mythological subjects, and, as such, not very different from the dialogue of the satyric drama, and partly political, and in this respect may have furnished a model for the dialogue of the Athenian comedy. Tragedy had, some years before the era of Epicharmus, begun to assume its dignified character. The woes of heroes and the majesty of the gods had, under Phrynicus, become its favourite themes. The Sicilian poet seems to have been struck with the idea of exciting the mirth of his audience by the exhibition of some ludicrous matter dressed up in all the grave solemnity of the newly invented art. Discarding, therefore, the low drolleries and scurrilous invectives of the ancient komoidia, he opened a novel and less objectionable source of amusement by composing a set of burlesque dramas upon the usual tragic subjects. They succeeded, and the turn thus given to comedy long continued; so that when it once more returned to personality and satire, as it afterwards did, tragedy and tragic poets were the constant objects of its parody and ridicule. The great changes thus effected by Epicharmus justly entitled him to be called the Inventor of Comedy, though it is probable that Phormis or Phormus preceded him by a few Olympiads. But his merits do not rest here: he was distinguished for elegance of composition as well as originality of conception. Demetrius Phalereus says that Epicharmus excelled in the choice and collocation of epithets, on which account the name of Epicharmios was given to his kind of style, making it proverbial for elegance and beauty. So many were his dramatic excellences that Plato terms him the king of comic writers, and in a later age and foreign country Plautus chose him as his model and is thought to have borrowed from him the plot of the Menaechmi. The parasite who figures so greatly in the plays of the New Comedy and in those of Plautus was first brought upon the stage by Epicharmus.
    The plays of Epicharmus, to judge from the fragments still left us, abounded in apophthegms, little consistent with the ideas we might otherwise have entertained of their nature from our knowledge of the buffooneries whence his comedy sprang and of the writings of Aristophanes, his partially extant successor. Epicharmus, however, was a philosopher and a Pythagorean. We find Epicharmus still composing comedies B.C. 485, and again during the reign of Hiero, B.C. 477. He died at the age of ninety or ninety-seven years. Epicharmus is said by some authorities to have added the letters x, e, ps, o to the Greek alphabet, but inscriptions show that these characters were in use at Miletus half a century before his reputed birth.

This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Epicharmus, (Epicharmos), the chief comic poet among the Dorians, was born in the island of Cos about the 60th Olympiad (B. C. 540). His father, Elothales, was a physician, of the race of the Asclepiads, and the profession of medicine seems to have been followed for some time by Epicharmus himself, as well as by his brother.
  At the age of three months he was carried to Megara, in Sicily; or, according to the account preserved by Suidas, he went thither at a much later period, with Cadmus (B. C. 484). Thence he removed to Syracuse, with the other inhabitants of Megara, when the latter city was destroyed by Gelon (B. C. 484 or 483). Here he spent the remainder of his life, which was prolonged throughout the reign of Hieron, at whose court Epicharmus associated with the other great writers of the time, and among them, with Aeschylus, who seems to have had some influence on his dramatic course. He died at the age of ninety (B. C. 450), or, ac cording to Lucian, ninety-seven (B. C. 443). The city of Syracuse erected a statue to him, the inscription on which is preserved by Diogenes Laertius. (Diog. Laert. viii. 78; Suid. s. v. ; Lucian, Macrob. 25; Aelian, V. H. ii. 34; Plut. Moral.; Marmor Parium, No. 55.)
  In order to understand the relation of Epicharmus to the early comic poetry, it must be remembered that Megara, in Sicily, was a colony from Megara on the Isthmus, the inhabitants of which disputed with the Athenians the invention of comedy, and where, at all events, a kind of comedy was known as early as the beginning of the sixth century B. C. This comedy (whether it was lyric or also dramatic, which is a doubtful point) was of course found by Epicharmus existing at the Sicilian Megara; and he, together with Phonnis, gave it a new form, which Aristotle describes by the words to muthous poiein (Poet. 6 or 5, ed. Ritter), a phrase which some take to mean comedies with a regular plot; and others, comedies on mythological subjects. The latter seems to be the better interpretation; but either explanation establishes a clear distinction between the comedy of Epicharmus and that of Megara, which seems to have been little more than a sort of low buffoonery.
  With respect to the time when Epicharmus began to compose comedies, much confusion has arisen from the statement of Aristotle (or an interpolator), that Epicharmus lived long before Chionides. We have, however, the express and concurrent testimonies of the anonymous writer On Comedy (p. xxviii.), that he flourished about the 73rd Olympiad, and of Suidas (s. v.), that he wrote six years before the Persian war (B. C. 485-4). Thus it appears that, like Cratinus, he was an old man before he began to write comedy; and this agrees well with the fact that his poetry was of a very philosophic character. (Anon. de Com. l. c.) The only one of his plays, the date of which is certainly known, is the Nasoi, B. C. 477. (Schol. Pind. Pyth. i. 98; Clinton, sub ann.) We have also express testimony of the fact that Elothales, the father of Epicharmus, formed an acquaintance with Pythagoras, and that Epicharmus himself was a pupil of that great philosopher. (Diog. Laert. l. c.; Suid. s. v.; Plut. Numa, 8.) We may therefore consider the life of Epicharmus as divisible into two parts, namely, his life at Megara up to B. C. 484, during which he was engaged in the study of philosophy, both physical and metaphysical, and the remainder of his life, which he spent at Syracuse, as a comic poet. The question respecting the identity of Epicharmus the comedian and Epicharmus the Pythagorean philosopher, about which some writers, both ancient and modern, have been in doubt, may now be considered as settled in the affirmative. (Menag. ad Laert. l. c.; Perizon. ad Aelian. V. H. ii. 34; Clinton, Fast. Hell. vol. ii. Introd.)
  The number of the comedies of Epicharmus is differently stated at 52 or at 35. There are still extant 35 titles, of which 26 are preserved by Athenaeus. The majority of them are on mythological subjects, that is, travesties of the heroic myths, and these plays no doubt very much resembled the satyric drama of the Athenians. The following are their titles:--Alkuon, Amukos, Bakchai, Bousiris, Deukalion, Dionusoi, Ebes gamos, Ephaistos e Komastai, Kuklops, Logos kai Logeina, Odusseus automolos, Odusseus nauagos, Seipenes, Skiron, Sphige, Troes, Philoktetes. But besides mythology, Epicharmus wrote on other subjects, political, moral, relating to manners and customs, and, it would seem, even to personal character; those, however, of his comedies which belong to the last lead are rather general than individual, and resembled the subjects treated by the writers of the new comedy, so that when the ancient writers enumerated him among the poets of the old comedy, they must be understood as referring rather to his antiquity in point of time than to any close resemblance between his works and those of the old Attic comedians. In fact, we have a proof in the case of Crates that even among the Athenians, after the establishment of the genuine old comedy by Cratinus, the mythological comedy still maintained its ground. The plays of Epicharmus, which were not on mythological subjects, were the following:--Agrostinos (Sicilian Greek for Alroikos), Harpagai, Ga kai Thalassa, Diphilos, Elpis e Ploutos, Heorta kai Nasoi Epinikios, Herakleitos, Thearoi, Megaris, Menes, Orua, Periallos, Persai, Pithon, Triakades, Choreuontes, Chutrai. A considerable number of fragments of the above plays are preserved, but those of which we can form the clearest notion from the extant fragments are the Marriage of Hebe, and Hephaestus or the Revellers. Miller has observed that the painted vases of lower Italy often enable us to gain a complete and vivid idea of those theatrical representations of which the plays of Epicharmus are the type.
  The style of his plays appears to have been a curious mixture of the broad buffoonery which distinguished the old Megarian comedly, and of the sententious wisdom of the Pythagorean philosopher His language was remarkably elegant: he was celebrated for his choice of epithets: his plays abounded, as the extant fragments prove, with gnomai, or philosophical and moral maxims, and long speculative discourses, on the instinct of animals for example. Muller observes that "if the elements of his drama, which we have discovered singly, were in his plays combined, he must have set out with an elevated and philosophical view, which enabled him to satirize mankind without disturbing the calmness and tranquillity of his thoughts; while at the same time his scenes of common life were marked with the acute and penetrating genius which characterized the Sicilians." In proof of the high estimate in which he was held by the ancients, it may be enough to refer to the notices of him by Plato (Theact.) and Cicero. (Tusc. i. 8, ad Att. i. 19.) It is singular, however, that Epicharmus had no successor in his peculiar style of comedy, except his son or disciple Deinolochus. He had, however, distinguished imitators in other times and countries. Some writers, making too much of a few words of Aristotle, would trace the origin of the Attic comedy to Epicharmus; but it can hardly be doubted that Crates, at least, was his imitator. That Plautus imitated him is expressly stated by Horace (Epist. ii. 1.58),--
"Plautus ad exemplar Siculi properare Epicharmi."
  The parasite, who forms so conspicuous a character in the plays of the new comedy, is first found in Epicharmus.
  The formal peculiarities of the dramas of Epicharmus cannot be noticed here at any length. His ordinary metre was the lively Trochaic Tetrameter, but he also used the Iambie and Anapaestic metres. The questions respecting his scenes, number of actors, and chorus, are fully treated in the work of Grysar.
  Some writers attribute to Epicharmus separate philosophical poems; but there is little doubt that the passages referred to are extracts from his comedies. Some of the ancient writers ascribed to Epicharmus the invention of some or all of those letters of the Greek alphabet, which were usually attributed to Palamedes and Simonides.

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


  In his Lives of the Philosophers Diogenes Laertius has left us a short biography of Epicharmus, but as he treats him purely as one of the 'philosophic family' and disdained to mention his dramatic writings, we would known nothing about the great contributions made to dramatic literature by him were it not for Suidas. From his short bu invaluable notice we learn that Epicharmus was the son of Elotheles, a physician of Cos, in which island his famous son was born in about 540 B.C., and whence when but three months old he passed with his father to Sicilian Megara. But his father belonged to the Asclepiad clan, and as the Asclepiads were certainly not Dorians, neither can that race in general nor the Hyblaean Magarians in particular claim him as their own. When the boy grew to man's estate, he embraced the tenets of Pythagoras and made Syracuse the scene of his life's work. He wrote on Natural Science, Philosophy, and Medicine; he composed gnomes and left also a series of memoirs when he died at the age of ninety. As a dramatist he was no less active, since he wrote fifty-two comedies or according to others thirty-five. In these plays Comedy for the first time took formal shape, since he and his contemporary Phormis were the first to use plots (muthoi) and regular dialogues. His compositions, however, were simply burlesques on the heroic themes which formed the usual subjects of the tragic performances of the time.
  The most famous of his plays was the Marriage of Hebe to Hercules, in which that hero was degraded for the first time by being represented as a glutton. Dr. Mahaffy is probably right in holding that the degradation in Greek literature of Odysseus, Agamemnon and Menelaus may also have been due to Epicharmus. In a certain sense, therefore, he may be regarded as the Cervantes of Greece, for as the latter laughed mediaeval chivalry to death, so Epicharmus was the first to make the great ones of the Heroic Age the butts of popular ridicule. But as Epicharmus is said to have created the character of the conventional parasite in his Elpis, he was also the founder of the comedy of manners as well as of the burlesque. The date of his dramatic activity is well ascertained, for as he was in high favor with Gelon (485-478 B.C.) and with his brother and successor Hieron (478-467 B.C.), there seems no doubt that his dramatic activity should be placed between 485 and 467 B.C. But, as we shall soon find that his fellow dramatist Phormis was at work in the reign of Gelon, we may place the date of the birth of true Comedy in the reign of that monarch (485-478 B.C.). As Epicharmus was born about 540 B.C., and lived to be ninety, his death may be placed about 450 B.C., a date which tallies well with a statement respecting an attack made on him by Magnes the Attic comedian, then a young man.

Alfred Bates, ed.
This text is cited July 2003 from the TheatreHistory URL below.


   Comoedia, (komoidia). The Greek comedy, like the Greek tragedy and satyric drama, had its origin in the festivals of Dionysus. As its name, komoidia, or the song of the komos, implies, it arose from the unrestrained singing and jesting common in the komos, or merry procession of Dionysus. According to the tradition, it was the Doric inhabitants of Megara, well known for their love of fun, who first worked up these jokes into a kind of farce. The inhabitants of Megara accordingly boasted that they were the founders of Greek comedy. From Megara, it was supposed, the popular farce found its way to the other Dorian communities, and one Susarion was said to have transplanted it to the Attic deme of Icaria about B.C. 580. No further information is in existence as to the nature of the Megarian or Dorian popular comedy.    The local Doric farce was developed into literary form in Sicily by Epicharmus of Cos (about B.C. 540-450). This writer gave a comic treatment not only to mythology, but to subjects taken from real life.

This extract is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Nov 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Αριστοφάνης

ΛΙΝΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΛΙΝΔΟΣ
The most distinguished comic poet of Greece, from Lindus, on the island of Rhodes, a contemporary of Socrates

The greatest writer of Greek comedy. He lived at Athens, B.C. 444-388. His father, Philippus, is said to have been not a native Athenian, but a settler from Rhodes or Egypt, who afterwards acquired citizenship. . .

Πληροφορίες Σύνταξης
Βιογραφία, αναφορές και λοιπές εργασίες για τον Αριστοφάνη παρατίθενται στον αρχαίο αττικό δήμο Κυδαθηναίοι , τόπο καταγωγής του.

Πληροφορίες Σύνταξης
Τα ηλεκτρονικά κείμενα των έργων του Αριστοφάνη παρατίθενται στην Ελλάδα (αρχαία χώρα) στην κατηγορία Αρχαία Ελληνική Γραμματεία.

Λόγιοι

Ψελλός Μιχαήλ

ΑΝΔΡΟΣ (Νησί) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
Psellus (Psellos) Michael, a native of Andros in the ninth century A.D. He was probably the author of some of the works which are ascribed to the younger Psellus.

Καϊρης Θεόφιλος

ΑΝΔΡΟΣ (Κωμόπολη) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
1784 - 1853

Μαυρομάτης Νεόφυτος

ΑΝΤΙΠΑΡΟΣ (Νησί) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ
1662 - 1746
Μητροπολίτης Αρτης και Ναυπάκτου , κληρικός και συγγραφέας

Andrew of Rhodes

ΡΟΔΟΣ (Πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
  (Sometimes, of COLOSSUS) Theologian, d. 1440. He was Greek by birth, and born of schismatic parents. In early youth he had no opportunities for education, but afterwards devoted himself to Latin and Greek, and to theology, especially the questions in dispute between the Latin and Greek Churches.
  The study of the early Fathers, both Greek and Latin, convinced him that in the disputed points, truth was on the side of the Latin Church. He therefore solemnly abjured his error, made a profession of faith, and entered the Dominican Order about the time of the Western Schism. He led thenceforth an apostolic life. He was especially earnest in his efforts to induce his fellow-Greeks to follow in his footsteps and reunite with Rome. In 1413 he was made Archbishop of Rhodes.
  The Dominican biographer, Echard, credits him with having taken an active part in the twentieth session of the Council of Constance (1414-18). Others maintain that there is here a confusion with Andrew of Colaczy, in Hungary. At the Council of Basle, he delivered an oration in the name of the Pope. He took part in the Council of Ferrara-Florence, and was one of the six theologians appointed by the Papal Legate, Cardinal Julian, to reply to the objections of the Greeks. He proved that it was fully within the province of the Church to add the Filioque to the Creed, and that the Greek Fathers had been of the same opinion.
  After the close of the Council, trouble arose between the Latins and Greeks in Cyprus; the latter accused the former of refusing to hold communion with them. Andrew was sent thither by Eugene IV, and succeeded in establishing peace. He also succeeded in overcoming the local forms of the Nestorian, Eutychian, and Monothelite heresies. The heretical bishops abjured and made a profession of faith at a synod held at Nicosia; some of the prelates went afterwards to Rome to renew their profession before the Holy See.
  There are preserved in the Vatican manuscript copies of his treatise on the Divine essence and operation, compliled from the commentaries of St. Tomas Aquinas, and addressed to Cardinal Bessarion also a little work in the form of a dialogue in reply to a letter of Mark of Ephesus against the rites and ceremonies of the Roman Church.

J.L. Finnerty, ed.
Transcribed by: Dawn Felton Francis
This text is cited June 2003 from The Catholic Encyclopedia, New Advent online edition URL below.


Λογοτέχνες

Βελισσάριος Φρέρης

ΑΝΩ ΣΥΡΟΣ (Κωμόπολη) ΣΥΡΟΣ

Αξιώτη Μέλπω. Η σημαντική κομμουνίστρια πεζογράφος καταγόταν από τη Μυτιλήνη (Σημ. gtp.gr: καταγόταν από Μύκονο). Μετά από έναν αποτυχημένο γάμο, εγκαταστάθηκε στην Αθήνα το 1929. Εκεί, συνδέθηκε με κύκλους διανοουμένων και το 1936 έγινε μέλος του ΚΚΕ.
  Στην κατοχή, ανέπτυξε πλούσια πατριωτική δράση, μέσα από τις γραμμές του ΕΑΜ, δουλεύοντας στον παράνομο τύπο. Το 1947, αναγκάστηκε να εγκαταλείψει την Ελλάδα. Εγκαταστάθηκε στη Γαλλία, όπου συνέχισε την πολιτική και πνευματική της δραστηριότητα, συνδεόμενη με πολλούς Γάλλους κομμουνιστές διανοούμενους (Λουί Αραγκόν, Πολ Ελυάρ, Πάμπλο Πικάσο).
  Μετά από διάβημα της ελληνικής κυβέρνησης προς τη γαλλική, η Μέλπω Αξιώτη απελάθηκε από τη Γαλλία και εγκαταστάθηκε στην Πολωνία και στη συνέχειαστη Λαϊκή Δημοκρατία της Γερμανίας. Εργάστηκε στη σύνταξη της ελληνικής εκπομπής του Ραδιοφωνικού Σταθμού της Βαρσοβίας και δίδαξε Νέα Ελληνικά και Ιστορία της Νεοελληνικής Λογοτεχνίας στη Φιλοσοφική Σχολή του Πανεπιστημίου Χούμπολτ της ΓΛΔ. Επαναπατρίστηκε το 1965.
  Αφησε ένα πλούσιο συγγραφικό έργο, στο οποίο συνδυάζεται η ηθογραφία με σύγχρονες τεχνικές γραφής, όπως ο "εσωτερικός μονόλογος". Αναφέρουμε τα μυθιστορήματα "Δύσκολες νύχτες", "Το σπίτι μου", "Θέλετε να χορέψομε, Μαρία;", "20ός αιώνας", τη διήγηση "Κάδμω", τις ποιητικές συλλογές "Σύμπτωση", "Κοντραμπάντο", "Θαλασσινά", τέσσερα Χρονικά με πληροφορίες και μαρτυρίες για την αντίσταση κ.ά.

Το κείμενο παρατίθεται τον Νοέμβριο 2004 από την ακόλουθη ιστοσελίδα του Κομμουνιστικού Κόμματος Ελλάδας (ΚΚΕ)


Ανδρέας Εμπειρίκος

ΣΥΡΟΣ (Πόλη) ΚΥΚΛΑΔΕΣ

Ροϊδης Εμμανουήλ

1836 - 1904
Λόγιος , πεζογράφος , σατιρικός , κριτικός και μεταφραστής

Μαθηματικοί

Διονυσόδωρος ο Μήλιος, 3ος αι., π.Χ.

ΜΗΛΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΕΛΛΑΔΑ
Dionysodorus, the mathematicians, bearing the same name as the Melian geometer

Μηχανικοί

Καλλίας ο Ρόδιος, 6ος αι., π.Χ.

ΡΟΔΟΣ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΔΩΔΕΚΑΝΗΣΟΣ
Engineer, Technical Adviser of the Rhodians.
Work: Derrick Crane ( Περιστρεφόμενος γερανός )
  Callias presented to the people of Rhodes in public, a model of a part of the city wall, on which he had placed a derrick crane. This crane could lift the siege machines of the enemies and transport them from the outer part of the wall to the internal one. The Rhodians admired this invention so much that they dismissed Diognetos, the chief engineer and employed Callias in his place. As Demetrios the Besieger sieged Rhodes in 305 BCE, he brought with him his chief engineer Epimachos the Athenian, who constructed a huge siege machine of 180 ton weight, before, the wall of Rhodes. Callias was not able to stand in the way of it with his derrick crane. Therefore Vitruvius was correct in saying : "What is valid for a model is not necessarily valid in the real situation". The Rhodians were desperate and begged Diognetos to help them. He instructed them to perforate the city walls, insert drains and pour through the drains, mud, water and sewage thus causing marshy ground a short distance away from the walls. This prevented the siege machine from approaching the wall. The siegers abandoned the siege machine and went away.

Έχετε τη δυνατότητα να δείτε περισσότερες πληροφορίες για γειτονικές ή/και ευρύτερες περιοχές επιλέγοντας μία από τις παρακάτω κατηγορίες και πατώντας το "περισσότερα":

GTP Headlines

Λάβετε το καθημερινό newsletter με τα πιο σημαντικά νέα της τουριστικής βιομηχανίας.

Εγγραφείτε τώρα!
Greek Travel Pages: Η βίβλος του Τουριστικού επαγγελματία. Αγορά online

Αναχωρησεις πλοιων

Διαφημίσεις

ΕΣΠΑ