BOOK XXXIV. XIX. 49-52 



flourished in the 83rd Olympiad, about ^ the 300th 448-145 b.c. 



year of our city, at which same period his rivals ^ 454 b.c. 



were Alcamenes, Critias, Nesiotes and Hegias ; and 



hiter, in the 87th Olympiad there were Hagelades,*' 432-429 b.c. 



Callon and the Spartan Gorgias, and again in the 



90th Olympiad Polycleitus, Phradmon, Myron, 420-417 b.c. 



Pythagoras,^ Scopas ^ and Perellus. Of these 



Polycleitus had as pupils Argius, Asopodorus, Alexis, 



Aristides, Phryno, Dino, Athenodorus, and Demeas 



of Clitor; and Myron had Lycius. In the 95th 400-397 b.u 



Olympiad flourished Naucydes, Dinomenes, Cana- 



chus and Patroclus ; and in the 102nd Polycles, Cephi- 372-369 b.c 



sodotus, Leochares and Hypatodorus ; in the 104-th 364-3G1 b.c. 



Praxiteles and Euphranor ; in the lOTth Aetion 352-349 b.c. 



and Therimachus. Lysippus / was in the 113th, the 327-324 b.c. 



period of Alexander the Great, and hkewise his 



brother Lysistratus, Sthennis, Euphron, Sophocles, 



Sostratus, lon and Silanion — a remarkable fact in 



the case of the last named being that he became 



famous without having had any teacher ; he him- 



self had Zeuxiades as his pupil — and in the 121st 295-292 b.c. 



Eutychides, Euthycrates, Laippus,^ Cephisodotus, 



Timarchus and Pyromachus. After that the art 



languished, and it revived again in the 156th 156-153 b.o. 



Olympiad, when there were the following, far 



inferior it is true to those mentioned above, but 



'^ The Greek form is Hagelaidas. He really flouxished 

 c. 515-485 B.c. 



^ In fact MjTon^s best work was done before 450 b.c, 

 Pythagoras' before 475 B.c. 



• In fact Scopas was stiU working in 350 b.c. unless we have 

 here an ekier Scopas. 



f He was apparently working soon after 369 b.c. 



9 Probably this should be Daippus as in § 87, cf. Paus. VI. 

 12, 6; 16, 35, AaiTTTTo?. 



165 



