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Hipponax





Encyclopedia results for Hipponax

  1. Hipponax

    File Hipponax of Ephesus.jpg thumb 200px Hipponax from Guillaume Rouill s Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum Hipponax of Ephesus and later Clazomenae was an Ancient Greek Iambus genre iambic poet who composed ... have been inspired by the nature of his poetry . ref Christopher G. Brown, Hipponax in A Companion ... Christopher G. Brown, Hipponax in A Companion to Greek Lyric Poets , Douglas E. Gerber ed. , Brill ... subject for verse, as in this epigram by Theocritus Here lies the poet Hipponax. If you are a scoundrel ... exercise even at the best of times . ref Christopher G. Brown, Hipponax , in A Companion to the Greek ..., Bupalus Bupalus and Athenis , had the very greatest fame in that art at the time of the poet Hipponax ... accounts of the dispute with Bupalus, characterized however as a painter in Clazomenae Hipponax ... him as ugly in order to provoke laughter. According to the same scholiast, Hipponax retaliated ... Gerber, Greek Iambic Poetry , Loeb Classical Library 1999 , page 351 ref Hipponax in that case ... G. Brown, Hipponax , in http books.google.com books?id Zzlnqb 64SYC&pg PA50&lpg PA50&dq lycambes&source .... Cf. p.50 ref Such a coincidence invites scepticism. ref B.M.Knox, Elegy and Iambus Hipponax in The Cambridge .... Brown, Hipponax in A Companion to the Greek Lyric Poets , Doeglas E. Gerber ed. , BRILL, 1997. ISBN 9004099441. Cf. p.82 ref The life of Hipponax, as revealed in the poems, resembles a low life saga .... Brown, Hipponax in A Companion to the Greek Lyric Poets , Doeglas E. Gerber ed. , BRILL, 1997. ISBN 9004099441. Cf. p.80 ref In one fragment, Hipponax decries Bupalus, the mother fucker Polytonic ... fellatio on Hipponax in another fragment and, elsewhere, Hipponax complains Why did you go ... and Iambus Hipponax in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Greek Literature , P.Easterling ... , page 453 ref Hipponax s quarrelsome disposition is also illustrated in verses quoted by Tzetzes ... Hipponax in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Greek Literature , P.Easterling and B.Knox ...   more details



  1. Pericleitus

    Pericleitus was a Lesbos Island Lesbian Lyric poetry lyric musician of the school of Terpander , flourished shortly before Hipponax , that is, a little earlier than 550 BC . At the Lacedaemonian festival of the Carneia , there were musical contests with the cithara , in which the Lesbian musicians of Terpander s school had obtained the prize from the time of Terpander himself to that of Pericleitus, with whom the glory of the school ceased. References SmithDGRBM Plut. de Mus. 6. p. 1133, d. Category Ancient Greek musicians Category People from Ancient Lesbos Category 6th century BC Greek people ca Per clit ...   more details



  1. Bupalus

    For the geometer moth genus , see Bupalus moth . leave redlink to prevent erroneous genus File Bupalus and Athenis.jpg thumb 200px Bupalus and Athenis from Guillaume Rouill Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum Bupalus lang el and Athenis lang el , were sons of Archermus , and members of the celebrated school of sculpture in marble which flourished in Chios in the 6th century BC. They were contemporaries of the poet Hipponax , whom they were said to have caricatured. ref See generally Pliny NH XXXVI.11 http www.perseus.tufts.edu hopper text?doc Perseus text 1999.02.0138 book 36 chapter 3 Perseus text Perseus calls this chapter 3 although other sources differ. ref Their works consisted almost entirely of draped female figures, Artemis , Fortuna mythology Fortune , Charites The Graces , when the Chian school has been well called a school of Madonnas. Augustus Caesar Augustus brought many of the works of Bupalus and Athenis to Rome , and placed them on the gable of the temple of Apollo Palatine temple of Apollo Palatinus . They supposedly committed suicide out of shame when Hipponax wrote caustic satirical poetry about them for revenge. Aristophanes refers to Bupalus in The Lysistrata . When the Chorus of Men encounter the Chorus of Women near the north western edge of the Acropolis they ridicule the women, I warrant, now, if twice or thrice we slap their faces neatly, That they will learn, like Bupalus, to hold their tongues discreetly. Benjamin Bickley Rogers translation It is now suggested that the north and perhaps also the east frieze of the Siphnian Treasury in Delphi was the work of Bupalus, based on a partially erased inscription around the circumference of one of the giant s shields, reconstructed as ? Boupalos son of Archermos made these sculptures and those behind. ref SEG LII.538. ref See also Marble sculpture References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Bupalus Category 6th century BC Greek sculptors Category Ancient ...   more details



  1. 6th century BC in poetry

    Unreferenced date December 2006 Bccenturyinbox in? in poetry cpa cpb 7th century BC c 6th century BC cn1 5th century BC Ancient Greece Poets by date of birth Anacreon c. 570 BCE , Teos Xenophanes of Colophon city Colophon c. 570 480 BCE Phocylides b. c. 560 BCE Simonides of Ceos c. 556 469 BCE Hipponax of Ephesus floruit fl. 540 BCE Aeschylus 525 456 BCE Pindar c. 522 518 in Cynoscephalae 443 BCE in Argos Bacchylides born c. 507 BCE Dates unknown Ibycus , flourished in Rhegium Aesop Theognis of Megara Corinna Works Middle East Poets Jeremiah of Anathoth , writing in Hebrew Works Psalms Book of Jeremiah Book of Lamentations China Poets by date of birth Works South Asia Poets Approximate date of Vyasa Works Approximate date of the Mahabharata DEFAULTSORT 6th Century Bc In Poetry Category Years in poetry Category 6th century BC Poetry ...   more details



  1. Iambus (genre)

    Iambus sometimes confusingly referred to as iambic poetry was a genre of ancient Greek poetry that included but was not restricted to the Iamb foot iambic meter and whose origins modern scholars have traced to the cults of Demeter and Dionysus . The genre featured insulting and obscene language. ref Christopher Brown, in A Companion to the Greek Lyric Poets , D.E.Gerber ed , Leiden 1997, pages 13 88 ref ref Douglas E. Gerber, Greek Iambic Poetry , Loeb Classical Library 1999 , Introduction pages i iv ref For Alexandrian period Alexandrian editors, however, iambus signified any poetry of an informal kind that was intended to entertain, and it seems to have been performed on similar occasions as elegy even though lacking elegy s decorum. ref J.P. Barron and P.E. Easterling, Elegy and Iambus in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Greek Literature , P.Easterling and B.Knox eds , Cambridge University Press 1985 , page 120 ref The Archaic Greece Archaic Greek poets Archilochus , Semonides and Hipponax were among the most famous of its early exponents. The contentious Alexandrian period Alexandrian poet, Callimachus , composed iambic poems against contemporary scholars, which were collected in an edition of about a thousand lines, of which only thirteen fragments survive. ref A.W. Bulloch, Hellenistic Poetry , in The Cambridge History of Classical Literature Greek Literature , P.Easterling and B.Knox eds , Cambridge University Press 1985 , pages 556 57, 569 ref He in turn influenced Roman poets such as Catullus , who composed satirical epigrams that popularized Hipponax s choliamb . ref Peter Green, The Poems of Catullus , University of California Press 2005 , pages 10, 33 ref Horace s Epodes on the other hand were imitations of Archilochus and, as with the Greek poet, his invectives took the forms both of private revenge and denunciation of social offenders. ref J.P. Clancy, The Odes and Epodes of Horace , Chicago 1960 , page 196 ref ref V.G. Kiernan, Horace Poe ...   more details



  1. Choliamb

    Choliambic verse also known as limping iambs or scazons or halting iambic ref Gilbert Murray Murray, Gilbert , http books.google.com books?id DW4qAAAAYAAJ&printsec frontcover&dq a history of ancient Greek literature A History of Ancient Greek Literature , 1897. Cf. p.88 ref is a form of meter poetry meter in poetry. It is found in both Ancient Greek literature Greek and Latin literature Latin poetry in the classical antiquity classical period . Choliambic verse is sometimes called scazon , or lame iambic , because it brings the reader down on the wrong foot by reversing the stresses of the last few beats. It was originally pioneered by the Greek lyric poet Hipponax , who wrote lame trochaics as well as lame iambics the Latin poet Catullus provides a further example in wikisource Catullus 8 Poem 8 . The basic structure is much like iambic trimeter , except that the last cretic is made heavy by the insertion of a longum instead of a syllable weight breve . Also, the third anceps of the iambic trimeter line must be short in limping iambs. In other words, the line scans as follows where is a longum, is a breve, and x is an anceps x x As in all classical verse forms, the phenomenon of brevis in longo is observed, so the last syllable can actually be short or long. Notes reflist See also Prosody Latin References Richmond Lattimore, Greek Lyrics 1949 Daniel H. Garrison editor . The Student s Catullus . University of Oklahoma Press Norman, 2004. poetry stub Category Poetic rhythm Category Latin poetry cs Choliambos de Choliambus la Choliambus ru ...   more details



  1. Semonides of Amorgos

    For the lyric poet, see Simonides of Ceos Semonides Greek of Amorgos , was an ancient Greek poet who composed verses in the Iambus genre iambus genre, for which reason he is often associated with two of its other celebrated exponents, Archilochus and Hipponax . The chief information which we have respecting him is contained in two articles of the Suda from which we learn that his father s name was Crines , and that he was originally a native of Samos. Although the Suda makes him a contemporary of Archilochus, modern scholars generally consider his floruit to be somewhat later. ref Oxford Classical Dictionary s.v. Semonides ref The statement of the Suda that he flourished 490 years after the Trojan War, would place him in the seventh century BC. He is best known today for fr. 7, often titled On Women. ref http www.stoa.org diotima anthology sem 7.shtml translation and notes at Diotima ref Footnotes Reflist References Fragments in Theodor Bergk T Bergk , Poetae lyrici Graeci SmithDGRBM External links Audio http poemsoutloud.net audio archive keeley reads the man from chios A poem by Semonides of Amorgos read by poet and translator Edmund Keeley from The Greek Poets Homer to the Present 2010, W. W. Norton Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Semonides Of Amorgos ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Poet DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Semonides Of Amorgos Category 7th century BC Greek people Category 7th century BC poets Category Ancient Greek poets Category Ancient Samians Category People from the Cyclades Category Iambic poets Category Ionic Greek poets AncientGreece bio stub ca Sem nides d Amorg s cs S monid s z Amorgu de Semonides el es Sem nides de Amorgos ext Sem nidi fr S monide d Amorgos hy is Semon des it Semonide lv S mon ds nl Semonides ru fi Semonides Amorgoslainen uk ...   more details



  1. Thargelia

    for renowned hetaera from Ionia Thargelia person Thargelia Greek language Greek was one of the chief Athens Athenian Athenian festivals festivals in honour of the Delian Apollo and Artemis , held on their birthdays, the 6th and 7th of the month Thargelion about May 24 and May 25 . Essentially an agricultural festival, the Thargelia included a purifying and expiatory ceremony. While the people offered the first fruits of the earth to the god in token of thankfulness, it was at the same time necessary to propitiate him, lest he might ruin the harvest by excessive heat, possibly accompanied by pestilence. The purificatory preceded the thanksgiving service. On the 6th a sheep was sacrificed to Demeter Chloe on the Acropolis , and perhaps a swine to the Moirai Fates , but the most important ritual was the following. Two men, the ugliest that could be found the Pharmakos Pharmakoi were chosen to die, one for the men, the other according to some, a woman for the women. Hipponax of Kolophon claims that on the day of the sacrifice they were led round with strings of figs on their necks, and whipped on the genitals with rods of figwood and squills. When they reached the place of sacrifice on the shore, they were stoned to death, their bodies burnt, and the ashes thrown into the sea or over the land, to act as a fertilizing influence . However, it is unclear how accurate Hipponax s sixth century, poetical account of the ceremony is, and there is much scholarly debate as to its reliability. ref Jan Bremmer, Scapegoat Rituals in Ancient Greece, Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 87 1983 299 320. ref It is generally agreed that an actual human sacrifice took place on this occasion, replaced in later times by a milder form of expiation. Thus at Leucas a criminal was annually thrown from a rock into the sea as a scapegoat but his fall was checked by live birds and feathers attached to his person, and men watched below in small boats, who caught him and escorted him bey ...   more details



  1. Achermus

    mergeto Archermus discuss Talk Archermus Merger proposal date December 2011 Achermus of Chios was a sculptor alive in the 6th century B.C., ref http www.chioslife.gr en general information famous chians chioslife.gr website Retrieved 2011 09 15 ref and was the son of Micciades Mikkiades , and grandson of Melas . ref http www.1902encyclopedia.com S SCI scio asia minor.html 1902encyclopedia.com Retrieved 2011 09 15 ref Findings Aristphones statement that the sculptor was the first person to make a likeness of the god Nike mythology Nike in which the statue showed Nike having wings. ref H. B.Cotterill 1913 http www.ebooksread.com authors eng h b henry bernard cotterill ancient greece a sketch of its art literature philosophy viewed in connexio tto page 22 ancient greece a sketch of its art literature philosophy viewed in connexio tto.shtml ebooksread.com Ancient Greece a sketch of its art, literature & philosophy viewed in connexion with its external history from earliest times to the age of Alexander the Great Retrieved 2011 09 15 http www.worldcat.org title ancient greece a sketch of its art literature philosophy viewed in connexion with its external history from earliest times to the age of alexander the great oclc 869590 worldcat.org Retrieved 2011 12 05 ref ref K.Sheedy http www.jstor.org pss 504203 jstor.org Retrieved 2011 09 15 ref and running. ref http www.classics.cam.ac.uk 8080 collections casts nike delos classics.cam.ac.uk 8080 referencing nine sources Retrieved 2011 12 05 ref Having had two sons who also were sculptors they are known to perhaps have hung themselves. Bupalus and Athenis had made statues of a very ugly person named Hipponax, for the purpose of his public shame and mockery. Because of these statues Hipponax did respond with abuse and insulting ref http www.merriam webster.com dictionary invective merriam webster.com ref invective , as to cause the pair to commit suicide. ref M.W.Ritter http etd.fcla.edu UF UFE0015774 ritter m.pdf page 22 of e ...   more details



  1. Diphilus

    one source date February 2012 no footnotes date February 2012 Diphilus , of Sinop, Turkey Sinope , was a poet of the new Attic Ancient Greek comedy comedy and contemporary of Menander 342 BC 342 291 BC . Most of his plays were written and acted at Athens , but he led a wandering life, and died at Smyrna . He was on intimate terms with the famous courtesan Gnathaena Athenaeus xiii. pp. 579, 583 . He is said to have written 100 comedies, the titles of fifty of which are preserved. He sometimes acted himself. To judge from the imitations of Plautus Casina from the , Asinaria from the , Rudens from some other play , he was very skilful in the construction of his plots. Terence also tells us that he introduced into the Adelphi ii. I a scene from the , which had been omitted by Plautus in his adaptation Commorientes of the same play. The style of Diphilus was simple and natural, and his language on the whole good Attic Greek Attic he paid great attention to versification, and was supposed to have invented a peculiar kind of metre. The ancients were undecided whether to class him among the writers of the New or Middle comedy. In his fondness for mythological subjects Hercules , Theseus and his introduction on the stage by a bold anachronism of the poets Archilochus and Hipponax as rivals of Sappho , he approximates to the spirit of the latter. Surviving Titles and Fragments Adelphoi Brothers Agnoia Ignorance, possibly written by Calliades Airesiteiches Aleiptria Amastris , or Athenaeus Anagyros Anasozomenoi The Rescued Men Aplestos Insatiable Apobates Apolipousa The Woman Who Leaves Balaneion The Bath house Boiotios Chrysochoos The Goldsmith Gamos Marriage Danaides Diamartanousa Emporos The Merchant Enagizontes Enkalountes Accusers Epidikazomenos The Claimant Epikleros The Heiress Epitrope , or Epitropeus Hecate Helenephorountes Helleborizomenoi Herakles Hercules Heros The Hero Kitharodos Kleroumenoi Lemniai Women from Lemnos Mainomenos Mad ...   more details



  1. Sindi people

    see also Sindhi people File Sindi.Warrior.jpg thumb Sindi warrior statue. Limestone, I A.D. Kerch Arcaeology Museum. Image EtruscanPottery.jpg thumb 250px Ancient terracotta vessels unearthed at the Sindian necropolis near Phanagoria . The photograph by Prokudin Gorskii ca. 1912 . The Sindi Greek language Greek polytonic , Herod. iv. 28 were an ancient people in the Taman Peninsula and the adjacent coast of the Pontus Euxinus Black Sea , in the district called Sindica, which spread between the modern towns of Temryuk and Novorossiysk Herod. l. c. Hipponax. p.  71, ed. Welck. Hellanic. p.  78 Dionys. Per. 681 Stephanus of Byzantium Steph. B. p.  602 Amm. Marc. xxii. 8. 41, &c. . Their name is variously written, and Mela calls them Sindones ii. 19 , Lucian Tox. 55 , Sindianoi . Strabo describes them as living along the Palus Maeotis , and among the Maeotae , Dandarii , Toreatae , Agri people Agri , Arrechi , Tarpetes , Obidiaceni , Sittaceni , Dosci , and Aspurgiani , among others. Strab. xi. 2. 11 . The Great Soviet Encyclopedia classes them as a tribe of the Maeotae . In the 5th century BC, the Sindi were subjugated by the Bosporan Kingdom . They left multiple tumuli which, when excavated by Soviet archaeologists, revealed that their culture was heavily Hellenized. The Sindi were assimilated by the Sarmatians in the first centuries AD. Besides the seaport of Sinda , other towns belonging to the same people were Hermonassa , Gorgippia , and Aborace . Strab. xi. 2, et. seq. They had a monarchical form of government Polyaen, viii. 55 , and Gorgippia was the residence of their kings. Strab. l. c. Nicolaus Damascenus p.  160, ed. Orell. mentions a peculiar custom which they had of throwing upon the grave of a deceased person as many fish as the number of enemies whom he had overcome. References SmithDGRG http www.perseus.tufts.edu cgi bin ptext?doc Perseus 3Atext 3A1999.01.0198&query chapter 3D 2334&chunk book Strabo s book 11 on line fr icon http ...   more details



  1. Kubaba

    Hellenized by Hipponax as Kyb b , daughter of Zeus . ref Bremmer 2004 539 notes Hipponax Fr 125 Degani ...   more details



  1. Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker

    Alcman 1815 , Hipponax 1817 , Theognis of Megara Theognis 1826 and the Theogony of Hesiod 1865 , and published ...   more details



  1. Bias of Priene

    More footnotes date May 2011 Image Bias Pio Clementino Inv279.jpg thumb right 220px Hermaic pillar representing Bias of Priene, Vatican Museums Bias Greek , 6th century BCE , the son of Teutamus and a citizen of Priene was a ancient Greece Greek philosopher. Satyrus the Peripatetic Satyrus puts him as the wisest of all the Seven Sages of Greece . He was renowned for his goodness. One of the examples of his great goodness is the legend that says that he paid a ransom for some women who had been taken prisoner. After educating them as his own daughters, he sent them back to Messina , their homeland, and to their fathers. Honours Also it is said that when some fishermen found The Brazen Tripod on which was inscripted For the Wisest , the fathers of the damsels came into an assembly. They concluded that Bias was the wisest among all men, so the tripod was presented to him as a token of gratitude for all that he had done for the city. Bias refused the honor with the words Apollo is the wisest . Another author notes that he consecrated the tripod at Thebes Greece Thebes to Hercules . Some of his sayings The na ve men are easily fooled. Most people are evil. All men are wicked. It is difficult to bear a change of fortune for the worse with magnanimity . Choose the course which you adopt with deliberation but when you have adopted it, then persevere in it with firmness. Do not speak fast, for that shows folly. Love prudence. Speak of the Gods as they are. Do not praise an undeserving man because of his riches. Accept of things, having procured them by persuasion, not by force. Cherish wisdom as a means of traveling from youth to old age, for it is more lasting than any other possession. Work It is said that he was very energetic and eloquent when pleading causes but that he always reserved his talents for the right side. In reference to which Demodicus of Alerius uttered the following enigmatical saying&mdash If you are a judge, give a Prienian decision. And ...   more details



  1. Anax

    of bread . The word is found as an element in such names as Hipponax , the king of horses . References ...   more details



  1. Pharmakos

    Ancient Greek religion A Pharmak s lang el in Ancient Greek religion was a kind of human scapegoat a slave, a cripple or a criminal who was chosen and expelled from the community at times of disaster famine, invasion or plague or at times of calendrical crisis, when purification was needed. On the first day of the Thargelia , a festival of Apollo at Athens, two men, the Pharmakoi , were led out as if to be sacrificed as an expiation. Some scholia state that pharmakoi were actually sacrificed thrown from a cliff or burned , but many modern scholars reject this, arguing that the earliest source for the pharmakos the iambic satirist Hipponax shows the pharmakos being beaten and stoned, but not executed. Walter Burkert and Ren Girard have written influential modern interpretations of the pharmakos rite. Burkert shows that humans were sacrificed or expelled after being well fed, and, according to some sources, their ashes were scattered to the ocean. This was a purification ritual, a form of societal catharsis. ref Walter Burkert. Greek Religion , p. 82. ref Pharmakos is also used as a vital term in Derridian Deconstruction . In his essay Plato s Pharmacy ref Dissemination, translated by Barbara Johnson, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1981 ref , Derrida deconstructs several texts by Plato , such as Phaedrus dialogue Phaedrus , and reveals the inter connection between the word chain pharmakeia pharmakon pharmakeus and the notably absent word pharmakos . In doing so, he attacks the boundary between inside and outside, declaring that the outside pharmakos, never uttered by Plato is always already present right behind the inside pharmakeia pharmakon pharmakeus . As a concept, Pharmakos can be said to be related to other Derridian terms such as trace . Some scholars have connected the practice of ostracism , in which a prominent politician was exiled from Athens after a vote using pottery pieces, with the pharmakos custom. However, the ostracism exile was onl ...   more details



  1. Pseudo-Seneca

    , Euripides , Hesiod , Hipponax , Lucretius , Philemon poet Philemon , and Philitas of Cos ...   more details



  1. Mimnermus

    E. Gerber, Greek Elegiac Poetry , Loeb 1999 , page 72 ref According to the poet Hipponax , Mimnermus ... musica 8.1133f Hipponax fr. 153 W., cited and annotated by Douglas E. Gerber, Greek Elegiac Poetry ...   more details



  1. Amathus

    partly from its grain ref Strabo 340, quoting the mid sixth century writer Hipponax . ref partly from ...   more details



  1. List of Ancient Greek poets

    . Herodas Hesiod Hipponax Hoganos of Appolonios Homer I Ibycus , lyric poet of Rhegium in Italy ...   more details



  1. Scapegoat

    Hipponax only show the pharmakos being stoned, beaten and driven from the community. ref James ...   more details



  1. Archilochus

    scholars collected the works of the other two major iambographers, Semonides and Hipponax ...   more details



  1. Prosody (Latin)

    iambic poet , Hipponax . The name choliambics means lame iambics and sometimes it is called scazons ... and his friend Calvus but with fewer variations than Hipponax had employed. It is basically an iambic ...   more details



  1. Ionic Greek

    3A1999.04.0057 3Aentry 3D 2371 bd s scourge Hipponax .98 Polytonic http www.perseus.tufts.edu ...   more details



  1. Appendix Vergiliana

    hexameter lines. The tradition of curse poetry goes back to the works of Archilochus and Hipponax . The poem ...   more details




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