*mnhmei=on: o( ta/fos. e)xrh/santo de\ tw=| o)no/mati oi( r(h/tores kai\ e)pi\ ta/fou kai\ tou= e)/rgou kai\ pra/gmatos ou(= mnhmoneu/oito a)/n tis. *ai)liano/s fhsi: fula/ttesqai/ te e)/ti mnhmei=on th=s timwri/as th=s e)kei/nou, kaqa/per ou)=n kakou= diadoxh/n.
In the Suda the headword noun,
mnhmei=on, is used in the sense of a tomb in
alpha 1935],
sigma 182 (Alexander),
mu 668] (Sulla) and
pi 255 (
Stesichorus); as a memorial of valor in
tau 791. See also
eta 555] and relevant entries in
Hesychius (s.vv.
gw=os, h(rw=|on, tu/mbos), and
Etymologicum Gudianum (s.vv.
ta/fos, tu/mbos). According to Aelius
Dionysius (s.v.
mnh=ma), the noun
mnh=ma is confined to the meaning of tomb, whereas the noun
mnhmei=on denotes more generally the memorial, the reminder, as in
Thucydides (web address 1). See also
Hesychius (s.v.
mnhmei=a) and
Aeschylus,
Seven against Thebes 49 (web address 2).
[1] For the use of the noun
mnhmei=on in oratory see e.g.
Isocrates 5.112 (web address 3),
Demosthenes 45.79 (web address 4) and
Lycurgus,
Against Leocrates 147 (web address 5).
[2] Claudius
Aelianus (c. AD 170-235), Roman author and teacher of rhetoric at Rome (
alphaiota 178). He was born at
Praeneste, offspring of freedmen, and flourished under the reign of Septimius
Severus (AD 192-211). He wrote in Greek and was admired for it; according to
Philostratus, (
Lives of the Sophists 624-5), "he wrote Attic as correctly as the Athenians in the interior of Attica" (trans. Wright: see below).
Aelian's major works are
De natura animalium, a collection, in 17 books, of brief and curious stories of natural history, and
Varia Historia a miscellany of anecdotes, lists, maxims and descriptions, in 14 books.
Aelian is quoted on no fewer than 247 occasions in the Suda; these quotations include references to two other works,
*Peri\ *Pronoi/as and
*Peri\ qei/wn e)nargei/wn. Also attributed to him is a collection of fictitious letters, the so-called
Epistulae Rusticae, supposedly addressed to and by Attic farmers.
[3]
Aelian fr. 40c Domingo-Forasté (37 Hercher). It is an anecdote according to which Artaxerxes III of Persia (reigned 358-338), also known as Ochus, after his conquest of Egypt in 343, demanded to dine off Apis, the bull-deity, the most important of the sacred animals of Egypt (see
alpha 3201). One of Ochus' friends kicked the bull, as a result of which his foot gangrened and he eventually died -- and all his descendants carried on themselves a reminder of this punishment: a swollen foot and a difficulty at walking. For Artaxerxes III, see
Diodorus Siculus 15.93, 16.40-52, 17.5.
No. of records found: 1
Page 1