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Search results for alpha,3929 in Adler number:
Headword:
Aristotelês
Adler number: alpha,3929
Translated headword: Aristoteles, Aristotle
Vetting Status: high
Translation: Son of
Nikomakhos and Phaistias.
Nikomakhos was a physician in the tradition of the Asklepiads, from
Nikomakhos the son of Makhaon.[1] [
Aristotle came] from Stageira, a city of Thrace;[2] he was a philosopher, a disciple of
Plato, with a stammering voice. He had siblings Arimnestos and Arimneste, and a daughter by Pythias, the daughter of Hermeias the eunuch, who fathered her despite his being castrated.[3] The daughter of
Aristotle married three times and after giving birth predeceased her father
Aristotle. He also had a son
Nikomakhos from Herpyllis his concubine, *whom he took after Pythias the daughter of Hermeias the eunuch, who was a ruler of
Atarneus. This place [is located] in the Troad, and having become a slave of Euboulos the Bithynian, Hermeias received [it from him].[4] And Hermeias himself became the lover of
Aristotle.*[5] He presided for 13 years[6] over the philosophy which was called Peripatetic; it acquired this name because he taught on a walking path [
peripatos] or in a garden after he left the Academy, in which
Plato taught. He was born in the 99th Olympiad[7] and died by drinking aconite in Chalkis [
Myth,
Place], because he was being summoned to receive punishment, since he had written a paean to Hermeias the eunuch;[8] but some say he died of disease when he had lived 70 years.
Greek Original:Aristotelês, huios Nikomachou kai Phaistiados: ho de Nikomachos iatros ên tou tôn Asklêpiadôn genous, apo Nikomachou tou Machaonos. ek Stageirôn, poleôs tês Thraikês, philosophos, mathêtês Platônos, traulos tên phônên. kai adelphous men eschen Arimnêston kai Arimnêstên, thugatera de apo Puthiados, tês thugatros Hermeiou tou eunouchou: hos kai thladias ôn autên espeire. gêmamenê de trisin hê Aristotelous thugatêr teknôsasa proeteleutêsen Aristotelous tou patros. esche de kai huion Nikomachon ex Herpullidos pallakês, hên êgageto meta Puthiada par' Hermeiou tou eunouchou: hostis ên archôn Atarneôs, chôra de hautê Trôiados, Euboulou de tou Bithunou doulos gegonôs elabe: kai autou Hermeiou paidika genomenou Aristotelous. êrxe de etê ig# tês Peripatêtikês klêtheisês philosophias dia to en peripatôi êtoi kêpôi didaxai anachôrêsanta tês Akadêmias, en hêi Platôn edidaxen. egennêthê de en têi #4th# Olumpiadi kai apethanen akoniton piôn en Chalkidi, dioti ekaleito pros euthunas, epeidê egrapse paiana eis Hermeian ton eunouchon: hoi de phasi nosôi auton teleutêsai biôsanta etê o#.
Notes:
Vita Menagiana of
Aristotle; cf.
Diogenes Laertius 5.1,4,9-10;
Dionysius of Halicarnassus
ad Ammaeum 5.
On
Aristotle see also
alpha 3930,
sigma 979, and generally OCD(4) s.v. (pp.159-63).
[1] For whom see
nu 399.
[2]
sigma 977.
[3] Apparently she was his niece and adopted daughter. For Hermeias see
epsilon 3040, where the name is written '
Hermias'.
[4] According to
Strabo, Hermeias shared the tyranny with his master Euboulos and then succeeded him. See
Strabo 13.1.57: web address 1.
[5] Between the asterisks the text is corrupt.
[6] 335-322.
[7] 384/3 - 381/0; in 384, in fact.
[8] The charge made against
Aristotle was impiety. See
Diogenes Laertius 5.5.
Associated internet address:
Web address 1
Keywords: biography; children; chronology; dialects, grammar, and etymology; gender and sexuality; geography; history; medicine; philosophy; women
Translated by: Catharine Roth on 31 March 2002@12:18:59.
Vetted by:
No. of records found: 1
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