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A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith) 21 21 Browse Search
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome 2 2 Browse Search
Sir Richard C. Jebb, Commentary on Sophocles: Oedipus at Colonus 1 1 Browse Search
Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 1 1 Browse Search
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Sir Richard C. Jebb, Commentary on Sophocles: Oedipus at Colonus, section 11 (search)
e temenos of Poseidon having been chosen as the place for the ecclesia, the peri/stia would be carried round its boundary; after which no person outside of that lustral line would be considered as participating in the assembly. A choice of place which necessarily restricted the numbers might properly be described by cune/klh|san.—Cp. n. on 1491.. The altar of Poseidon in this precinct is not visible to the spectators of our play, but is supposed to be near. When Pausanias visited Colonus (c. 180 A.D.), he saw an altar of Poseidon Hippius and Athene Hippia. A grove and a temple of Poseidon had formerly existed there, but had perished long before the date of his visit. He found, too, that divine honours were paid at Colonus to Peirithous and Theseus, to Oedipus and Adrastus: there were perhaps two shrines or chapels (h(rw=|a), one for each pair of heroesHis use of the singular is ambiguous, owing to its place in the sentence: h(rw=|on de\ *peiri/qou kai\ *qhse/ws *oi)di/podo/s te kai\ *
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, BRUTTIUS PRAESENS, DOMUS (search)
BRUTTIUS PRAESENS, DOMUS mentioned in the Notitia in Region III, apparently for some special reason. It probably was situated near the baths of Trajan. This Bruttius may have been the consul of 180 A.D. or a descendant of his (Pros. i. p. 241, n. 136-143; ii. p. 91, n. 355).
Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome, INDULGENTIA (search)
INDULGENTIA (?): a temple (nao/s) of Euepyeola on the Capitoline, built by M. Aurelius in 180 A.D. (Cass. Dio lxxi. 34. 3: plei=ston do\ e)n eu)ergesti/a| dih=gen, o(/qen pou kai\ new\n au)th=s e)n tw=| kapitwliw/| I(dru/sato, o)no/mati/ tini I)diwta/tw| kai\ mh/pw a)kousqe/nti proskale/sas au)th/n ).*eu)ergesi/a is probably to be identified with Indulgentia, i.e. Indulgentia Augusti, whose name appears on coins, and to whom at least one shrine in Africa (Cirta) was dedicated (Jord. i. 2. 47; WR 336; Rosch. ii. 233; CIL viii. 7095, 8813-8814).
Apronia'nus 2. Cassius Apronianus, the father of Dio Cassius, the historian, was governor of Dalmatia and Cilicia at different periods. Dio Cassius was with his father in Cilicia. (D. C. 49.36, 69.1, 72.7.) Reinar (de Vita Cassii Dionis § 6. p. 1535) supposes, that Apronianus was admitted into the senate about A. D. 180
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), or Aelius Theodorus (search)
s moved to tears, and generously assisted the Smyrnaeans in rebuilding their town. The Smyrnaeans shewed their gratitude to Aristeides by erecting to him a brazen statue in their agora, and by calling him the founder of their town. (Philostr. Vit. Solp. 2.9.2; Aristeid. Epist. ad M. Aurel. et Commod. i. p. 512.) Various other honours and distinctions were offered to him at Smyrna, but he refused them, and accepted only the office of priest of Asclepius, which he held until his death, about A. D. 180, according to some, at the age of 60, and according to others of 70. The circumstance of his living for so many years at Smyrna, and enjoying such great honours there, is probably the reason that in an epigram still extant (Anthol. Planud. p. 376) he is regarded as a native of Smyrna. The memory of Aristeides was honoured in several ancient towns by statues. (Liban. Epist. 1551.) One of these representing the rhetorician in a sitting attitude, was discovered in the 16th century, and is at
Aspa'sius (*)Aspa/sios). 1. Of BYBLUS, a Greek sophist, who according to Suidas (s. v. *)Aspa/sios) was a contemporary of the sophists Adrianus and Aristeides, and who consequently lived in the reign of M. Antoninus and Commodus, about A. D. 180. He is mentioned among the commentators on Demosthenes and Aeschines; and Suidas ascribes to him a work on Byblus, meditations, theoretical works on rhetoric, declamations, an encomium on the emperor Hadrian, and some other writings. All these are lost with the exception of a few extracts from his commentaries. (Ulpian, ad Demosth. Leptin. p. 11; Phot. Bibl. p. 492a., ed. Bekk.; Schol. ad Hermog. p. 260, &c.; Schol. ad Aeschin. c. Tim. p. 105
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
ided the town of Canusium in Italy with water, and built Triopium on the Appian road. It also deserves to be noticed, that he intended to dig a canal across the isthmus of Corinth, but as the emperor Nero had entertained the same plan without being able to execute it, Atticus gave it up for fear of exciting jealousy and envy. His wealth, generosity, and still more his skill as a rhetorician, spread his fame over the whole of the Roman world. He is believed to have died at the age of 76, in A. D. 180. If we look upon Atticus Herodes as a man, it must be owned that there scarcely ever was a wealthy person who spent his property in a more generous, noble, and disinterested manner. The Athenians appear to have felt at last their own ingratitude; for, after his death, when his freedmen wanted to bury him, according to his own request, at Marathon, the Athenians took away his body, and buried it in the city, where the rhetorician Adrianus delivered the funeral oration over it. Atticus's g
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
o Reimarus, was his grandfather on his mother's side. Dio Cassius Cocceianus, or as he is more commonly called Dio Cassius, was born, about A. D. 155, at Nicaea in Bithynia. He was educated with great care, and was trained in the rhetorical schools of the time, and in the study of the classical writers of ancient Greece. After the completion of his literary studies, he appears to have accompanied his father to Cilicia, of which he had the administration, and after his father's death, about A. D. 180, he went to Rome; so that he arrived there either in the last year of the reign of M. Aurelius, or in the first of that of Commodus. He had then attained the senatorial age of twentyfive, and was raised to the rank of a Roman senator ; but he did not obtain any honours under Commodus, except the aedileship and quaestorship, and it was not till A. D. 193, in the reign of Pertinax, that he gained the office of praetor. During the thirteen years of the reign of Commodus, Dio Cassius remained
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
, 570), and apparently in no other European library. The latter of these hISS. seems to have been copied from the former by Jac. Golius, and contains only the six last books; the other contains the whole work. (See London Medical Gazette for 1844, 1845, p. 329.) There were more than one edition of this treatise; the first was written during Galen's first visit to Rome, soon after the beginning of the reign of M. Aurelius, about A. D. 164; the last some time before the same emperor's death, A. D. 180. (Galen, De Administr. Anat. 1.1, vol. ii. p. 215, &c.) 5. *Peri\ *)Ostw=n toi=s *Ei)sagome/nois, De Ossibus ad Tirones (vol. ii.). The work contains a tolerably accurate account of the bones, though in some parts it appears clearly that he was describing the skeleton of the ape. 6. *Peri\ *Flebw=n kai\ *)Arthriw=n *)Anatomh=s, De Venarum et Arteriarum Dissectione (vol. ii.). 7. *Peri\ *Neu/rwn *)Anatomh=s, De Nervorum Dissectione (vol. ii.). 8. *Peri\ *Muw=n *)Anatomh=s, De Musculorum Dis
rodes Atticus, and Cornelius Fronto; that while yet a youth he had been appointed by the praetor to act as an umpire in civil causes; and that subsequently much of the time which he would gladly have devoted to literary pursuits had been occupied by judicial duties of a similar description. The precise date of his birth, as of his death, is unknown; but from the names of his preceptors and companions we conclude that he must have lived under Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, and M. Aurelius, A. D. 117-180. Works Noctes Atticae, His well-known work entitled Noctes Atticae, because it was composed in a country-house near Athens during the long nights of winter, is a sort of miscellany, containing numerous extracts from Greek and Roman writers, on a great variety of topics connected with history, antiquities, philosophy, and philology, interspersed with original remarks, dissertations, and discussions, the whole thrown together into twenty books, without any attempt at order or arrangement.
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