Chap. 84,] STJMMAET. 357 



tander " of Athens, Bacchius " of Miletua, Bion " of Soli, 

 Chsereas '* the Athenian, Diodorus " of Priene, Dion " the 

 Colophonian, Epigenes ^ the Ehodian, Euagon " of Thasos, 

 Euphronius ^ of Athens, Hegesias *' of Maronea, the Me- 

 nanders " of Priene and of Heraclea, Menecrates '"' the poet, 

 Androtioi; ^ who wrote on Agriculture, iEschrion ^° who wrote 

 on Agriculture, Lysimachus *° who wrote on Agriculture, 

 Dionysius ^ who translated Mago, Diophanes '' who made an 

 epitome of the work of Dionysius, King Arohelaus,'" Meander.'" 



'^ The most famous among the soothsayers of Alexander the Great. He 

 prohably wrote the work on Prodigies, which is referred to by Pliny in 

 B. xYii. c. 38, and elsewhere, as also by Lucian the satirist. 

 '^ A writer on Agriculture, mentioned also by Varro and Columella. 



" See end of B. vi. 



1° A writer on Agriculture, mentioned also by Varro and Columella. 



'^ A writer on Agriculture, mentioned also by Varro and Columella. ' 



" A writer on Agriculture, mentioned also by Varro and Columella. 



18 See end of B. ii. 



'' A writer on Agriculture, mentioned also by Varro and Columella. 



'" Or Euphonius, a writer on Agriculture, also mentioned by Varro and 

 Columella. Nothing further is known relative tp him. 



^^ See end of B. vii. 



** Menander of Priene was a writer on Agriculture, mentioned also by 

 Varro and Columella. Menander of Heraclea was a writer on Agricul- 

 ture, mentioned also by Varro. 



23 A poet who wrote on Agriculture, mentioned also by Varro. It is 

 not improbable that he is the same person with the Menecrates of Smyrna, 

 the author of two epigrams in the Greek Anthology. 



2' A Greek writer on Agriculture, who wrote before the time of Theo- 

 phrastus, by whom he is mentioned, as also by Athenseus and Varro. 



"^ He is mentioned also by Varro, but nothing is knpwn of him. 



*' He is often referred to by Varro and Columella. He is also sup- 

 posed to have been the writer of a History of Thebes, mentioned by the 

 Scholiast and Apollonius Ehodius, B. iii. 



" Caasius Dionysius of Utica. He translated into Greek the twenty- 

 eight Books on Husbandry written by Mago the Carthaginian, in the 

 Punio language. Of Mago nothing further is known. 



28 Diophanes of Bithynia made an epitome of the same work in Greek, 

 and dedicated it to King Deiotaius. Columella styles Mago the Father of 

 Agriculture. 



^ Made king of Cappadocia by Antony, B.C. 34. He died at Eome, at 

 an advanced age, a.d. 17. Plutarch attributes to King Archelaus — if, in- 

 deed, this was the same — a treatise on Minerals. 



3<i A native of Claros, near Colophon, in Ionia. It is not a matter of 

 certainty, but it is most probable, that he lived in the reign of Ptolemy V., 

 who died B.C. 181. He was a poet, erammarian, and physician. His 

 " Theriaca," a poem on the wounds inflicted by venomous animals, still 

 exists, as also another called " Alexipharmia." 



