Palla'dius
9. Of METHONE, a sophist or rhetorician, was the son of Palladius, and lived in the reign of Constantine the Great.
Works
Definite Works
He wrote,
(Suidas,
s. v. Παλλάδιος ; Eudocia
Ἰωνιά,
Vioetum, s. v. Παλλάδιος ὁ Ῥήτωρ, apud Villoison,
Anecdot, Graec. p. 352).
Other possible works
It is probable that what Suidas and Eudocia describe as
Orationes Diversae are the
Μελέται διάφοροι Exercitationes Diversae, which Photius (
Bibl. codd. 132-135) had read, and which he describes as far superior in every respect to those of the rhetoricians Aphthonius [APHTHONIUS], Eusebius, and Maximus, of Alexandria.
Lambecius ascribed, but without reason, to this Palladius the work
De Gentibus Indiae, &c., published under the name of Palladius of Helenopolis [No. 7].
Confusion with Palladius, the friend of Symmachus
This Palladius of Methone must not be confounded with the Latin rhetorician Palladius, the friend of Symmachus, mentioned by Sidonius Apollinaris.
Further Information
Symmach.
Epistol. passim; Sidon.
Epistol. lib. v. ep. 10). (Fabric.
Bil. Graec. vol. vi. p. 135, vol. x. pp. 113, 716, &c.; Vossius,
De Historicis Graec. lib. 4. c.18.