Apollonius the Sophist
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apollonius, also called "the Sophist", was a famous grammarian, who probably lived towards the end of the 1st century A.D. and taught in Rome in the time of Tiberius. He was born in Alexandria, the son of another grammarian, Archibius.
He was the author of a Homeric lexicon (Λεξεις Ὁμηρικαι), the only work of this kind existent today. His chief authorities were Aristarchus of Samothrace and Apion's Homeric glossary (although some sources cite Apion as a disciple of Apollonius). The surviving text of this lexicon is an epitome, that is, it is a shortened summary of the original. In the original version, Apollonius apparently supplied at least one quotation in each entry.[1]
It was edited for the first time by Villoison (1773, 2 vol. in-quarto) from a manuscript of Saint Germain, and also by I. Bekker (1833).
[edit] References
- ^ Naoumides M (1962). "Notes on literary papyri". Trans Proc Am Philol Assoc 93: 240–52.
- Leyde, De Apollonii Sophistae Lexico Homerico (1885)
- E. W. B. Nicholson on a newly discovered fragment in Classical Review (Nov. 1897)
- Biographical Dictionary Imago Mundi - Apollonius (in French)
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

