Suda On Line menu Search

Home
Search results for alpha,3927 in Adler number:
Greek display:    

Headword: Aristoxenos
Adler number: alpha,3927
Translated headword: Aristoxenos, Aristoxenus
Vetting Status: high
Translation:
Son of Mnesias (also known as Spintharos), who was an authority on music, from Taras in Italy. Having taken up residence at Mantinea he became a philosopher, and on applying himself to music showed great talent for it, as a student of his father and of Lampros the Erythraian, then of Xenophilos the Pythagorean[1] and finally of Aristotle. He heaped insults on the lattermost after his death, because he left Theophrastus[2] as head of the school, although Aristoxenos himself had achieved great distinction among the students of Aristotle. And he flourished in the time of Alexander and the years following, so as to be around the 111th Olympiad[3] a contemporary of Dikaiarkhos of Messene.[4] He composed works on music and philosophy and history, and every aspect of culture. His books number[5] 453.
Greek Original:
Aristoxenos, huios Mnêsiou, tou kai Spintharou, mousikou, apo Tarantos tês Italias. diatripsas de en Mantineiai philosophos gegone kai mousikêi epithemenos ouk êstochêsen, akoustês tou te patros kai Lamprou tou Eruthraiou, eita Xenophilou tou Puthagoreiou kai telos Aristotelous: eis hon apothanonta hubrise, dioti katelipe tês scholês diadochon Theophraston, autou doxan megalên en tois akroatais tois Aristotelous echontos. gegone de epi tôn Alexandrou kai tôn metepeita chronôn: hôs einai apo tês ria# Olumpiados, sunchronos Dikaiarchôi tôi Messêniôi. sunetaxato de mousika te kai philosopha, kai historias kai pantos eidous paideias: kai arithmou autou ta biblia eis ung#.
Notes:
b. c.370 BCE. See generally Andrew Barker in OCD(4) s.v. (pp.163-4). Taras (Tarentum, cf. tau 112 and tau 113) is the modern city of Taranto, in Puglia, southern Italy.
[1] Xenophilos of Khalkis, a student of Philolaos of Kroton.
[2] Theophrastus 11 no. 13 FHS&G.
[3] 336-333.
[4] For whom see delta 1062. See also Dicaearchus 3 Mirhady.
[5] The transmitted a)riqmou= has to be expanded, with Pearson, to a)riqmou=ntai.
References:
F. Wehrli, Die Schule des Aristoteles vol. 2 (Basel, 1945) [non-musical fragments]
H.S. Macran, The Harmonics of Aristoxenus (Oxford, 1902)
A. Barker, Greek Musical Writings (Cambridge, 1989)
Keywords: biography; chronology; geography; historiography; meter and music; philosophy
Translated by: Gregory Hays on 20 November 2000@16:10:05.
Vetted by:
William Hutton (Cosmetics, raised status) on 21 November 2000@23:36:23.
David Whitehead (added note and keyword; cosmetics) on 24 August 2002@12:22:28.
David Mirhady (references to Theophrastus) on 25 July 2008@12:01:04.
David Mirhady (updated Dicaearchus ref) on 2 September 2008@19:26:27.
David Whitehead (another keyword; cosmetics) on 12 April 2012@05:38:17.
David Whitehead (another note) on 31 March 2014@05:24:44.
David Whitehead (updated a ref) on 31 July 2014@03:35:25.
Ronald Allen (expanded principal note, added cross-references) on 7 July 2018@14:02:03.
Ronald Allen (tweaked principal note) on 7 July 2018@14:11:35.

Find      

Test Database Real Database

(Try these tips for more productive searches.)

No. of records found: 1    Page 1

End of search