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Search results for pi,1617 in Adler number:
Headword:
Pindaros
Adler number: pi,1617
Translated headword: Pindar
Vetting Status: high
Translation: Of
Thebes, son of Skopelinos, but according to some [son] of Daiphantes -- which is more likely true: for the son of Skopelinos is more obscure and a kinsman of
Pindar.[1] Some also have recorded that he is [the son] of Pagonides. He was a pupil of the woman Myrtis.[2] He was born in the 65th Olympiad and was 40 years old at the time of Xerxes' invasion.[3] He had a brother named Erotion and a son Diophantos, as well as daughters Eumetis and Protomache. The end of his life happened as he had prayed: for when he had asked that the best gift in life should be given to him, at once he died in the theater, leaning on the knees of his beloved Theoxenos, at 55 years of age.[4] He wrote 17 books in the Doric dialect as follows:
Olympian Victory Odes,
Pythian Victory Odes,
Prosodia,
Virgins' Songs,
Coronation Songs,
Bacchic Songs,
Songs for Apollo of the Laurel,
Paeans,
Hyporchemes,
Hymns,
Dithyrambs,
Drinking Songs,
Encomia,
Laments, 17 tragic dramas, epigrams in epic meter and praises in prose for the Greeks, and very many other works.
Greek Original:Pindaros, Thêbôn, Skopelinou huios, kata de tinas Daïphantou: ho kai mallon alêthes: ho gar Skopelinou estin aphanesteros kai prosgenês Pindarou. tines de kai Pagônidou historêsan auton. mathêtês de Murtidos gunaikos, gegonôs kata tên xe# olumpiada kai kata tên Xerxou strateian ôn etôn m#. kai adelphos men ên autôi onoma Erôtiôn kai huios Diophantos, thugateres de Eumêtis kai Prôtomachê. kai sunebê autôi tou biou teleutê kat' euchas: aitêsanti gar to kalliston autôi dothênai tôn en tôi biôi athroon auton apothanein en theatrôi, anakeklimenon eis ta tou erômenou Theoxenou autou gonata, etôn ne#. egrapse de en bibliois iz# Dôridi dialektôi tauta: Olumpionikas, Puthionikas, Prosodia, Parthenia, Enthronismous, Bakchika, Daphnêphorika, Paianas, Huporchêmata, Humnous, Dithurambous, Skolia, Enkômia, Thrênous, dramata tragika iz#, epigrammata epika kai katalogadên paraineseis tois Hellêsi, kai alla pleista.
Notes:
See generally C. Carey in OCD4 s.v.; see also
pi 1619.
[1] cf.
pi 1618, and the discussion in M.R. Lefkowitz,
The Lives of Greek Poets (1981) 62.
[2] See
kappa 2087 (
Corinna).
[3] These two dating criteria concur: the 65th Olympiad was 520-517, and Xerxes' invasion of Greece occurred in 481-479.
[4] So the transmitted numeral, but it is too low (
Pythian 8 is datable to c.446); Adler's notes Bernhardy's emendation to '75' and Rohde's to '85'.
Keywords: athletics; biography; chronology; dialects, grammar, and etymology; food; gender and sexuality; geography; military affairs; meter and music; poetry; religion; tragedy; women
Translated by: Catharine Roth on 5 January 2002@22:54:23.
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