Asclepiades may refer to Asclepiades of Phlius , 4th 3rd century BC philosopher in the Eretrian school of Philosophy Asclepiades of Samos , 3rd century BC lyric poet Asclepiades of Bithynia , c. 125 40 BC philosopher and physician Asclepiades Pharmacion , 1st 2nd century Greek physician Asclepiades of Antioch , d.217 Patriarch of Antioch, Christian saint and martyr Asclepiades, c. 250 Christian saint and martyr see Pionius Asclepiades the Cynic , 4th century Cynic philosopher hndis DEFAULTSORT Asclepiades ca Asclep ades de Asklepiades fr Ascl piade it Asclepiade la Asclepiades lv Asklepi ds hu Aszkl piad sz egy rtelm s t lap pt Asclep ades ru fi Asklepiades uk ... more details
Asclepiades lang el 4th century was a Cynic philosopher. He is mentioned by the emperor Julian the Apostate Julian whom Asclepiades visited at Antioch in 362. ref Julian, Orations , vii. 224D ref Ammianus Marcellinus describes how Asclepiades accidentally destroyed the temple of Apollo at Daphne in Antioch, when some candles he lit set light to the woodwork, burning down the temple blockquote The philosopher Asclepiades, whom I have mentioned in the history of Magnentius , ref The chapters on Magnentius are lost. ref when he had come to that suburb from abroad to visit Julian, placed before the lofty feet of the statue a little silver image of the Dea Caelestis , which he always carried with him wherever he went, and after lighting some wax tapers as usual, went away. From these tapers after midnight, when no one could be present to render aid, some flying sparks alighted on the woodwork, which was very old, and the fire, fed by the dry fuel, mounted and burned whatever it could reach, at however great a height it was. ref Ammianus Marcellinus, xxii. 13.3. Translated by John Carew Rolfe , Loeb Classical Library. ref blockquote The Dea Caelestis Heavenly Goddess figurine, which Asclepiades always carried with him, was the Roman name for Tanit , the patron goddess of Carthage . Asclepiades was apparently still alive around 390, when a female relative of his was commended to Magnillus by Quintus Aurelius Symmachus Symmachus . ref Symmachus, Epistles , v. 31 ref Another Cynic called Asclepiades, who must have lived at least two centuries earlier, is mentioned by Tertullian . ref Tertullian, http www.tertullian.org anf anf03 anf03 16.htm Ad Nationes , 2.14 ref He tells us that this Asclepiades inspected the world riding on the back of a cow , occasionally drawing milk from her udder . Notes reflist Cynics DEFAULTSORT Asclepiades the Cynic Category 4th century philosophers Category Roman era Cynic philosophers ca Asclep ades fil sof fi Asklepiades Kyynikko ... more details
Asclepiades of Samos was an Ancient Greece ancient Greek epigram matist and Lyric poetry lyric poet . He was a friend of Theocritus , cn date October 2011 who flourished about 270 BC. He was the earliest and most important of the convivial and erotic epigrammists. Only a few of his compositions are actual inscriptions. cn date October 2011 Others sing the praises of the poets whom he especially admired, but the majority of them are love songs. It is doubtful whether he is the author of all the epigrams some 40 in number which bear his name in the Greek Anthology . He possibly gave his name to the Asclepiad poetry Asclepiad metre . Editions Alexander Sens ed , Asclepiades of Samos, Epigrams and Fragments Oxford Oxford University Press, 2010 . Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Asclepiades Of Samos ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Asclepiades Of Samos Category Ancient Samians Category 3rd century BC Greek people Category 3rd century BC poets Category Ancient Greek lyric poets Category Epigrammatists of the Greek Anthology Category Year of birth unknown Category Year of death unknown Ancient Greece writer stub Greece poet stub de Asklepiades von Samos el es Asclep ades de Samos fr Ascl piade de Samos hu Aszkl piad sz k lt it Asclepiade di Samo la Asclepiades Samius lv Asklepi ds dzejnieks pl Asklepiades z Samos ro Asclepiade din Samos ru uk ... more details
Asclepiades lang el c. 350 c. 270 BC of Phlius was a Greek philosophy Greek philosopher in the Eretrian school of philosophy. He was the friend of Menedemus of Eretria , and they both went to live in Megara and studied under Stilpo , before sailing to Elis to join Phaedo of Elis Phaedo s school. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 126 ref His friendship with Menedemus was said to have been hardly inferior to the friendship of Pylades and Orestes mythology Orestes . ref name diog137 Diogenes La rtius, ii. 137 ref As impoverished young men living in Athens , they were one day summoned before the Areopagus , to explain how they could spend all day with the philosophers if they had no visible means of support. They summoned a miller to the court to explain that they Threshing threshed Cereal grain at night for 2 drachma s, whereupon the Areopagites were so astonished that they awarded the two men 200 drachmas as a reward. ref Athenaeus, iv. 168 ref They eventually settled in Eretria , having transferred Phaedo s school there. It was said that they were both married and that Asclepiades was married to the mother, and Menedemus to the daughter and when Asclepiades s wife died, he took the wife of Menedemus and Menedemus went on to marry a rich woman. ref name diog137 They all lived in one house, and Menedemus entrusted the whole management of it to his former wife. ref name diog137 Asclepiades died before Menedemus, at Eretria, at a great age. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 138 ref Notes reflist DEFAULTSORT Asclepiades of Phlius Category 3rd century BC Greek people Category 4th century BC Greek people Category 4th century BC philosophers Category Ancient Greek philosophers Category Eretrian philosophers Category Ancient Phliasians ca Asclep ades de Flios ru fi Asklepiades Fleiuslainen ... more details
Infobox saint name Saint Asclepiades birth date death date 217 feast day 18 October venerated in Roman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church image imagesize 250px caption birth place death place titles List of Patriarchs of Antioch Patriarch of Antioch , Confessor and Martyr beatified date beatified place beatified by canonized date Pre congregation canonized place canonized by attributes patronage major shrine suppressed date issues Asclepiades of Antioch was Patriarch of Antioch and martyr . He succeeded Serapion of Antioch Serapion as Patriarch of Antioch , in 211. Given the title of martyr , due to the trials he endured, during Roman persecution ref http www.catholic.org saints saint.php?saint id 1571 St. Asclepiades Catholic Online ref . References Reflist S start Succession box before Serapion of Antioch Serapion title List of Patriarchs of Antioch Patriarch of Antioch years 211 217 after Philetus of Antioch Philetus s end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Asclepiades Of Antioch ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 217 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Asclepiades Of Antioch Category 217 deaths Category Roman Catholic saints Category Eastern Orthodoxy Category 3rd century Christian martyr saints Category 3rd century archbishops Category Patriarchs of Antioch Saint stub de Asklepiades von Antiochia pt Asclep ades de Antioquia ... more details
Asclepiades c. 124 or 129 40 BC was a Ancient Greek medicine Greek physician born at Cius Prusa in Bithynia in Asia Minor and flourished at Rome , where he established Greek medicine near the end of the 2nd century BCE. He attempted to build a new theory of disease , based on the flow of atoms through pores in the body. His treatments sought to restore harmony through the use of Diet nutrition diet , exercise , and bathing . Life Asclepiades was born in Cius Prusa in Bithynia . He travelled much when young, and seems at first to have settled at Rome as a rhetorician . ref Pliny, Hist. Nat. xxvi. 7 ref In that profession he did not succeed, but he acquired great reputation as a physician. His pupils were very numerous, and his most distinguished pupil, Themison of Laodicea , founded the Methodic ... an accident. Nothing remains of his writings but a few fragments. Medicine Asclepiades began by vilifying ... morbid action was reduced to the obstruction of pores and irregular distribution of atoms. Asclepiades ... Galen and Aretaeus , both of whom lived in the 2nd century, credit Asclepiades with being the first ... Medicine, and Asclepiades of Bithynia, the Father of Molecular Medicine journal In Vivo volume 23 ... accessdate 8 August 2010 pmid 19567383 ref Asclepiades advocated humane treatment of mental disorder ... and massages. His teachings are surprisingly modern, therefore Asclepiades is considered to be a pioneer ... Asclepiades, His Life and Writings A Translation of Cocchi s Life of Asclepiades Gumpert s Fragments of Asclepiades location New Haven, CT publisher Elizabeth Licht year 1955 cite journal last Rawson first Elizabeth title The Life and Death of Asclepiades of Bithynia journal Classical Quarterly volume ... first J.T. title The Lost Theory of Asclepiades of Bithynia location Oxford publisher Clarendon Press year 1990 1911 SmithDGRBM History of medicine DEFAULTSORT Asclepiades Of Bithynia Category 120s ... di Bitinia he hu Aszkl piad sz orvos nl Asclepiades van Bithyni pl Asklepiades ... more details
Asclepiades Pharmacion or Asclepiades Junior 1st 2nd century , a Ancient Greek medicine Greek physician who must have lived at the end of the 1st or the beginning of the 2nd century, as he quotes Andromachus physician Andromachus , Pedanius Dioscorides Dioscorides , and Scribonius Largus , ref Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Locos , vii. 2, x. 2, vol. xiii. pp. 51, 53, 342 De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. vii. 6, vol. xiii. p. 968 ref and is himself quoted by Galen . He derived his surname of Pharmacion from his skill and knowledge of pharmacy , on which subject he wrote a work in ten books, five on external remedies, and five on internal. ref Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. vol. xiii. p. 442 ref Galen quotes this work very frequently, and generally with approbation. Notes reflist SmithDGRBM Category 2nd century Greek people Category Ancient Greek physicians ca Asclep ades Farmaci ... more details
Empiric can refer to Asclepiades of Bithynia Empiricism Empirical Empirical research Empirical formula disambig Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Longcomment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. ... more details
For the author of the gynecological treatise Gynaecia Muscio Moschion , lang el , a physician quoted by Soranus of Ephesus Soranus , ref ap. Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Loc. , i. 2, vol. xii. ref Andromachus physician Andromachus , ref ap. Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Loc. , vii. 2, vol. xiii. ref and Asclepiades Pharmacion , ref ap. Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. , iii. 9, vol. xiii. ref and who lived, therefore, in or before the 1st century. He may be the same person who was called the Corrector lang el , because though he was one of the followers of Asclepiades of Bithynia , he ventured to controvert his opinions on some points. ref Galen, De Differ. Puls. , iv. 16, vol. viii. ref A physician of the same name is mentioned also by Soranus, ref Soranus, De Arte Obstetr. ref Plutarch , ref Plutarch, Sympos. , iii. 10.2 ref Alexander of Tralles , ref Alexander of Tralles, i. 15 ref A tius Amidenus A tius ref A tius, iv. 3.13 ref Pliny the Elder Pliny , ref Pliny, H. N. , xix. 26.4 ref and Tertullian . ref Tertullian, De Anima , c. 15 ref In Byzantine times, a Latin treatise on gynecology by an otherwise unknown Muscio was translated into Greek this author came to be wrongly identified with Moschion. ref Owsei Temkin, 1991 , Soranus Gynecology , page xlv. JHU Press ref Notes reflist SmithDGRBM DEFAULTSORT Moschion Category Ancient Greek physicians ca Mosqui metge hu Moszkhi n orvos ... more details
It is uncertain as to who an Asclepiad was. Some theories hold that they were priest s of an Asclepieion Asclepion in ancient Greece . ref name rutkow21 Harvnb Rutkow 1993 p 21 ref The Asclepiadae could also have been a guild in honour of Asclepius , the Greek god of healing, separate from the healing temples and closely related to Hippocratic tradition. Plato gives Hippocrates this title in his Protagoras , referring to him as Hippocrates of Cos, the Asclepiad . ref name Plat citation author Jowett 1927, p.43 ref It may also be a group of people who claimed to be descended from Asclepius. ref name jones39 Harvnb Jones 1868 p 39 ref Asclepiades was the name of several physicians, some of whom probably assumed this appellation either as a sort of honorary title in allusion to the ancient family of the Asclepiadae, or in order to signify that they themselves belonged to it. See also Asclepiades Hippocrates , who was raised as an Asclepiad. References references Bibliography Citation surname1 Jones given1 W. H. S. year 1868 title Hippocrates Collected Works I publisher Cambridge Harvard University Press url http daedalus.umkc.edu hippocrates HippocratesLoeb1 page.ix.php . cite encyclopedia title Protagoras url http classics.mit.edu Plato protagoras.html encyclopedia The Dialogues of Plato publisher Liveright Publishing Corp accessdate July 8, 2011 author Jowett, B. editor William Chase Greene year 1927 location New York Citation surname1 Rutkow given1 Ira M. year 1993 title Surgery An Illustrated History publisher Elsevier Science Health Science div place London and Southampton ISBN 0 801 6 6078 5 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Asclepiad ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Asclepiad Category Ancient Greek religious titles Category Asclepius AncientGreece bio stub ca Asclep ades fam lia de Asklepiaden pl Asklepiadzi ru uk ... more details
Archeanassa or Archaeanassa Greek language Greek Polytonic , Polytonic , a native of Colophon city Colophon , was a hetaera or courtesan living in Athens in the late 5th century BC. According to biographical sources about Plato , the philosopher as a young man was deeply in love with Archeanassa and addressed a four line epigram to her. The poem is quoted in full by Diogenes Laertius in his biography of Plato and by Athenaeus in a survey of famous courtesans. ref Diogenes Laertius, Lives of the Philosophers 3.31 Athenaeus, Deipnosophists 13.589c ref The same poem is also found, in almost identical form, in the Byzantine compilation called Anthologia Palatina . In that source, although it is still addressed to Archeanassa, its authorship is attributed not to Plato but to Asclepiades of Samos Asclepiades . ref Anthologia Graeca 7.217 ref Modern scholars tend to accept the attribution to Plato as valid. ref E.g. Ernest Diehl E. Diehl , Anthologia Lyrica Graeca fasc. 1 1954 p. 104 Plato. 8 D. L. Page , Epigrammata Graeca 1975 p. 49 Plato. IX ref Notes Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Archeanassa ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Archeanassa Category People related to Plato Category Courtesans of antiquity Category Ancient Colophonians Category Metics in Classical Athens AncientGreece bio stub la Archeanassa ... more details
Menedemus lang el 345 4 261 0 BC ref Tiziano Dorandi, Chapter 2 Chronology , in Algra et al. 1999 The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy , page 52. Cambridge. ref of Eretria was a Greece Greek philosopher and founder of the Eretrian school . He learned philosophy first in Athens , and then, with his friend Asclepiades of Phlius Asclepiades , he subsequently studied under Stilpo and Phaedo of Elis . Nothing survives of his philosophical views apart from a few scattered remarks recorded by later writers. Life Menedemus was born at Eretria . Though of noble birth, he worked as builder and tentmaker until he was sent with a military expedition to Megara , from where he travelled to the Platonic Academy in Athens and resolved to devote himself to philosophy. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 126. La rtius says he was charmed by Plato himself, but Plato was dead by the time Menedemus was born ref At Megara he formed a life long friendship with Asclepiades of Phlius , with whom he toiled in the night that he might study philosophy by day. ref Athenaeus, iv. 168 ref He was subsequently a pupil first of Stilpo and then of Phaedo of Elis , whose school he transferred to Eretria, by which name it was afterwards known. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 126 ref In addition to his philosophical work, he took a leading part in the political affairs of his city from the time of the Diadochi until his death, and obtained a remission of the tribute to Demetrius. His friendship with Antigonus II Gonatas seems to have roused suspicion as to his loyalty, and he sought safety first in the temple of Amphiaraus at Oropus , and later with Antigonus, at whose court he is said to have died of grief. Other accounts say that he starved himself to death on failing to induce Antigonus to free his native city. Philosophy His philosophical views are known only in part. Athenaeus quotes Epicrates of Ambracia Epicrates as stating that he was a Platonist , but other accounts credit him with havin ... more details
In Greek mythology , the name Crete may refer to several figures, all of whom are associated with the homonymous island of Crete , and may have been considered its eponyms Daughter of Asterion , who married Minos . ref Asclepiades in Apollodorus , Bibliotheca , 3. 1. 2. ref Possible mother of Pasiphae by Helios . ref Diodorus Siculus , Library of History , 4. 60. 4 ref Daughter of Deucalion Cretan Deucalion son of Minos , sister of Idomeneus and half sister of Molus mythology Molus . ref Apollodorus , Bibliotheca , 3. 3. 1 ref Daughter of one of the Cretan Curetes , who married Ammon. She was actually said to have given her name to the island of Crete, which had been previously called Idaea. ref Diodorus Siculus , Library of History , 3. 71. 2 ref References reflist Greek myth stub Category Greek mythology Category Women in Greek mythology Category Cretan mythology pt Creta mitologia ... more details
Justa or Justasa ref name Kohen http books.google.co.il books?id r 9qJRP20MIC&pg PA26&lpg PA26&dq justa samaritan&source bl&ots k mpVprjB&sig mkjv yO400 TEUFp4GTx6SuJRTE&hl iw&ei 0vquToXvOI6j gb99vnfDw&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 4&ved 0CD0Q6AEwAw v onepage&q justa 20samaritan&f false ref and Justasus was elected by Samaritans as their king during the 484 CE Samaritan Revolts Samaritan revolt . Following his ascent in Samaria, he moved on Caesarea , where a noteworthy Samaritan community lived. ref name Kohen There, many Christians were killed and the church of St. Procopius was destroyed. ref name Kohen Justa celebrated the victory with games in the circus. ref name Kohen According to John Malalas , the dux Palaestinae Asclepiades, whose troops were reinforced by the Caesarea based Arcadiani of general Rheges, defeated Justa, killed him and sent his head to Zeno. ref name Kohen See also Julianus ben Sabar Baba Rabba References Reflist Category Samaritans Category 5th century Byzantine people Category Byzantine rebels Category People executed by decapitation Category Executed Byzantine people Category People executed by the Byzantine Empire Category 5th century monarchs in the Middle East ... more details
This is an alphabetical list of writers from Ancient Greece and Rome who were doctors, or have left us material that contributes to our knowledge of ancient medicine. In some cases their names look familiar but are not the same as their famous homonym s thus earning them an epithet . Aulus Cornelius Celsus 1st century AD Adamantius Adamantius Judaeus 4th century Aegimus A tius Amidenus 6th century Agathinus 1st century AD Agla s Poet. physician 1st century AD Aias Abas 5th 4th century BC Alexander Trallianus 6th century AD Andromachus physician 1st century AD Antonius Castor 2nd century AD Apollonius of Citium 1st century BC Apollonius physician 3rd century BC Archigenes 2nd century AD Aretaeus 2nd century AD Aristotle 4th century BC Asclepiades Pharmacion 1st 2nd century AD Asclepiades of Bithynia 2nd 1st century BC Athenaeus of Cilicia 1st century BC Aulus Gellius 2nd century AD Bolus of Mende Caelius Aurelianus 5th century Cassius Felix 3rd century Charixenus 2nd century AD Crateuas physician 2nd century BC Criton of Heraclea 1st 2nd century AD Ctesias 5th century BC Damocrates 1st century AD Demetrius of Apamea Dexippus of Cos Dieuches Diocles of Carystus Dioscorides 1st century AD Erasistratus 3rd century BC Erotianus 1st century AD Eudemus physician Euthydemus physician Fronto Galen 2nd century AD Gargilius Martialis 3rd century Harpocratio 1st 2nd century AD Heliodorus 1st 2nd century AD Heraclas Heraclides of Tarentum 1st century BC Herodotus physician 1st century AD Herophilos Herophilus 3rd century BC Hicesius physician 1st century BC Hippocrates Hippocratic Corpus 5th century BC Joannes Actuarius L. Annaeus Seneca Leonidas physician 1st 2nd century AD M. Porcius Cato Marcellinus physician 2nd century? AD Marcellus of Side 2nd century AD Meges of Sidon 1st century AD Meletius Menemachus 1st century AD Mnesitheus Mnesitheus of Athens 3rd century BC Mnesitheus Mnesitheus of Cyzicus Nepualius Neptunalius, Neptunianus Sextius Niger Niger, Sextius Oribasius 4th ... more details
An Asclepiad is a line of poetry following a particular metrical pattern. The form is attributed to Asclepiades of Samos and is one of the Aeolic verse Aeolic metres . As with other Aeolic metrical lines, the asclepiad is built around a choriamb . The Asclepiad may be described as a glyconic that has been expanded with one Lesser Asclepiad or two Greater Asclepiad further choriambs. The pattern using for a long syllable, u for a short and x for an anceps or free syllable is x x u u u u u Lesser Asclepiad x x u u u u u u u Greater Asclepiad Martin Litchfield West West 1982 designates the Asclepiad as a choriambically expanded glyconic with the notation gl sup c sup lesser or gl sup 2c sup greater . Asclepiads were used in Latin by Horace in three of his odes 1.11, 1.18, 4.10, as well as by Catullus in Poem 30, and Seneca the Younger Seneca . Examples in English verse include parts of Sir Philip Sidney s Countess of Pembroke s Arcadia Arcadia Here wrong s name is unheard, slander a monster is Keep thy sprite from abuse, here no abuse doth haunt. What man grafts in a tree dissimulation? and W. H. Auden s In Due Season Springtime, Summer and Fall days to behold a world . References Printed Sources cite book last West first M. L. title Greek Metre year 1982 publisher Oxford University Press poetry stub Category Poetic rhythm Category Ancient Greek poetry hu Aszkl piad szi sor ru uk ... more details
The Eretrian school of Philosophy was originally the School of Elis where it had been founded by Phaedo of Elis it was later transferred to Eretria by his pupil Menedemus . It can be referred to as the Elis Eretrian School , on the assumption that the views of the two schools were similar. It died out after the time of Menedemus 3rd century BC , and, consequently, very little is known about its tenets. Phaedo had been a pupil of Socrates , and Plato named a dialogue, Phaedo , in his honor, but it is not possible to infer his doctrines from the dialogue. Menedemus was a pupil of Stilpo at Megara before becoming a pupil of Phaedo in later times, the views of his school were often linked with those of the Megarian school . Menedemus friend and colleague in the Eretrian school was Asclepiades of Phlius . Like the Megarians they seem to have believed in the individuality of the Good, the denial of the plurality of virtue , and of any real difference existing between the Good and the True. Cicero tells us that they placed all good in the mind , and in that acuteness of mind by which the truth is discerned. ref Cicero, Academica, ii. 42. ref They denied that truth could be inferred by negative categorical proposition s, and would only allow positive ones, and of these only simple ones. ref Diogenes La rtius, ii, 135. ref Notes reflist Greek schools of philosophy DEFAULTSORT Eretrian School Category Hellenistic philosophy Category Philosophical schools and traditions Category Ancient Elis Category Ancient Eretria School philosophy stub de Eretrische Schule fr cole d lis mk ja ru sk Elidsko eretrijsk kola fi Elisl inen koulukunta tr Elis Eteria okulu uk ... more details
Menodotus lang el 2nd century of Nicomedia in Bithynia , was a physician a pupil of Antiochus of Laodicea and tutor to Herodotus physician Herodotus of Tarsus . He belonged to the Empiric school Empirical school , and lived probably about the beginning of the 2nd century. ref Diogenes La rtius, ix. 116 Galen, De Meth. Med. ii. 7, Introd. c. 4. Sextus Empiricus, Pyrrhon. Hypotyp. i. 222 ref He refuted some of the opinions of Asclepiades of Bithynia , ref Galen, De Nat. Facult. i. 14 ref and was exceedingly severe against the Dogmatic school Dogmatists . ref Galen, De Subfig. Empir. c. 9, 13 ref He enjoyed a considerable reputation in his day, and is several times quoted and mentioned by Galen . ref Galen, De Cur. Rat. per Ven. Sect. c. 9 Comment, in Hippocr. De Artic iii. 62 Comment, in Hippocr. De Rat. Vict. in Morb. Acut. iv. 17 De Libr. Propr. c. 9 De Compos. Medicam. sec. Locos , vi. i. ref He appears to have written some works which are quoted by Diogenes La rtius , but are not now extant. Bibliography Lorenzo Perilli , http books.google.com books?id pHLVfFtZ3wEC&printsec frontcover&dq perilli menodoto&source bl&ots v Cdwh2 Xl&sig H5 sTSDsNFjbAvy9 TlBaUgVEv0&hl en&ei m4BSTfXREImY8QPlpZ2jCw&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 2&ved 0CBYQ6AEwAQ v onepage&q&f false Menodoto di Nicomedia. Contributo a una storia galeniana della medicina empirica , M nchen Leipzig, Saur Verlag, 2004 Notes Reflist Category 2nd century Greek people Category Ancient Greek physicians Category People from Bithynia Category Year of birth unknown Category Year of death unknown Category Date of death unknown Ancient Rome bio stub ca Men dot de Nicom dia de Menodotos von Nikomedeia fr M nodote de Nicom die hu Menodotosz nl Menodotus van Nicomedia pl Menodotos fi Menodotos Nikomedialainen ... more details
Philoxenus lang el , a Greco Egyptian surgeon , who, according to Aulus Cornelius Celsus Celsus , ref Celsus, De Medic. vii. Praef. p. 137 ref wrote several valuable volumes on surgery . He is no doubt the same person whose medical formulae are frequently quoted by Galen , and who is called by him Claudius Philoxenus. ref Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. ii. 17, iii. 9, vol. xiii. pp. 539, 645 ref As he is quoted by Asclepiades Pharmacion , ref ap. Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Loc. iv. 7, vol. xii. p. 731 De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. iii. 9, iv. 13, vol. xiii. pp. 545, 738 ref he must have lived in or before the 1st century. He is quoted also by Soranus of Ephesus Soranus , ref Soranus, De Arte Obstetr. p. 136 ref Paul of Aegina , ref Paul of Aegina, De Med. iii. 32, vii. 11, pp. 453, 658 ref A tius Amidenus A tius , ref A tius, ii. 3. 77, iv. 3. 7, iv. 4. 43, pp. 331, 744, 800 ref and Nicolaus Myrepsus , ref Nicolaus Myrepsus, De Compos. Medicam. i. 239, 240, p. 411 ref and also by Avicenna . ref Avicenna, Canon , v. 2. 2, vol. ii. p. 249 ref Notes reflist SmithDGRBM DEFAULTSORT Philoxenus Category Ancient Greek physicians Category 1st century Greek people ca Filox metge ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Philonides lang el was the name of two physicians in the time of Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome Rome A physician of Catana in Sicily , the tutor of Paccius Antiochus , ref Scribonius Largus , De Compos. Medicam. c. 23. 97. p. 209 Marcellus Empiricus , De Medicam. c. 20, p. 324 ref who lived about the beginning of the 1st century. He is probably the physician who is quoted by Pedanius Dioscorides Dioscorides , and said by him to have been a native of Enna in Sicily ref Dioscorides, De Mat. Med. iv. 148, vol. i. p. 62 ref by Erotianus ref Erotianus, Lex. Hippocr. p. 144 ref and also by Galen , who refers to his eighteenth book, , De Medicina . ref Galen, De Differ. Puls. iv. 10, vol. viii. p. 748. ref A physician of Dyrrachium in Illyricum Roman province Illyricum , who was a pupil of Asclepiades of Bithynia in the 1st century BC, practised in his own country with some reputation, and wrote as many as 45 books. ref Stephanus of Byzantium , Dyrrachion ref One of these physicians wrote a work, , De Unguentis et Coronis , which is quoted by Athenaeus , ref Athenaeus, xv. pp. 675, 676, 691 ref and one on Pharmacy quoted by Andromachus , ref ap. Galen, De Compos. Medicam. sec. Gen. viii. 7, vol. xiii. p. 978 ref and by Marcellus Empiricus . ref Marcellus Empiricus, De Medicam. c. 29, p. 380 ref Notes reflist SmithDGRBM DEFAULTSORT Philonides Category Ancient Greek physicians Category Ancient Roman physicians Category 1st century Greek people hu Phil nid sz orvos ... more details
Taxobox name Abrostola asclepiadis image Abrostola asclepiadis.jpg image width 204px image caption regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a subphylum Hexapoda classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Noctuidae tribus Abrostolini genus Abrostola species A. asclepiadis binomial Abrostola asclepiadis binomial authority Denis & Schifferm ller, 1775 synonyms Noctua asclepiadis Abrostola asclepiadis var. jagowi Abrostola asclepiades sic pardoi Abrostola asclepiadis is a moth of the Noctuidae family. It is found in South and Central Europe as far north as Finland and Sweden , Asia Minor and the Caucasus . The wingspan is 30 40 mm. Adults are on wing from June to August depending on the location. The larvae feed on Vincetoxicum hirundinaria , which contains toxic alkaloids and is unpalatable to most generalist herbivores. External links http www.leps.it indexjs.htm?SpeciesPages AbrosAscle.htm Moths and Butterflies of Europe and North Africa http www.lepiforum.de cgi bin lepiwiki.pl?Abrostola Asclepiadis lepiforum.de http www.lepidoptera.pl show.php?ID 844&country AT lepidoptera.pl http www.sciencedirect.com science? ob ArticleURL& udi B6VR3 4GMGX73 6& user 10& rdoc 1& fmt & orig search& sort d& docanchor &view c& searchStrId 947111061& rerunOrigin google& acct C000050221& version 1& urlVersion 0& userid 10&md5 6e9c156acb54a8011e58054cf1f6b0d3 Article about food choice by larvae Plusiinae stub Category Plusiinae de Schwalbenwurz H ckereule ru vi Abrostola asclepiadis ... more details
Other persons Philotas Philotas of Amfissa Amphissa was a physician of the 1st century BC . He studied at Alexandria , and was in that city at the same time with the triumvir Mark Antony , of whose profusion and extravagance he was an eye witness. He became acquainted with the triumvir s son Marcus Antonius Antyllus Antyllus , with whom he sometimes supped, about 30 BC. On one occasion, when a certain physician had been annoying the company by his logical sophisms and forward behaviour, Philotas silenced him at last with the following syllogism Cold water is to be given in a certain fever but every one who has a fever has a certain fever therefore cold water is to be given in all fevers which so pleased Antyllus, who was at table, that he pointed to a sideboard covered with large goblets, and said I give you all these, Philotas . As Antyllus was quite a lad at that time, Philotas scrupled to accept such a gift, but was encouraged to do so by one of the attendants, who asked him if he did not know that the giver was a son of the triumvir Antonius, and that he had full power to make such presents. He may perhaps be the same physician, of whose medical formulae one is quoted by Aulus Cornelius Celsus and Asclepiades Pharmacion , and who must have lived in or before the 1st century BC. References SmithDGRBM DEFAULTSORT Philotas Physician Category Ancient Greek physicians Category Locrians Category 1st century Greek people Category Roman era Greeks ... more details
Flavius Asclepiodotus or Asclepiades fl . 423 425 was a politician of the Eastern Roman Empire Biography Asclepiodotus was the brother of the sophist Leontius, and thus of Atenaides, who married in 421 the Emperor Theodosius II taking the name of Aelia Eudocia . Eudocia favoured her family, exercising her influence over her husband to make Asclepiodotus career advance. In 422, Asclepiodotus was comes sacrarum largitionum , while between 14 February 423 year in which Eudocia was appointed Augusta honorific Augusta to 1 February 425 he was Praetorian prefect of the East , and Consul in 423. He was deposed because he was denounced to Theodosius by Simeon Stylites to encourage pagans and Jews and to fight Christians, a charge no doubt reinforced by the fact that his family was pagan, although Atenaides had to convert to Christianity before marriage. Bibliography Arnold Hugh Martin Jones Jones, Arnold Hugh Martin , John Robert Martindale, John Morris historian John Morris , Asclepiodotus 1 , The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire , volume 1, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN 0521072336, p.  160. S start S bef before Honorius emperor Imp. Caesar Honorius Augustus XIII, br Theodosius II Imp. Caesar Flavius Theodosius Augustus X S ttl title List of Roman consuls Consul of the Roman Empire regent1 Fl. Avitus Marinianus years 423 S aft after Castinus Fl. Castinus , br Fl. Victor S bef before Eustathius consul 421 Fl. Eustathius S ttl title Praetorian prefect of the East years 14 February 423 1 February 425 S aft after Aetius praetorian prefect Aetius end DEFAULTSORT Asclepiodotus Consul 423 Category 5th century Byzantine people Category Comites Category Imperial Roman consuls Category Praetorian prefects of the East bg 423 . it Flavio Asclepiodoto ... more details