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Search results for sigma,431 in Adler number:
Headword:
*simmi/as
Adler number: sigma,431
Translated headword: Simmias
Vetting Status: high
Translation: of
Rhodes. Grammarian. He wrote
Rare Words (3 books);
various poems (4 books). He was from
Samos originally, but in the colonisation of
Amorgos the people of
Samos sent him as leader. He settled
Amorgos into three cities:
Minoa, Aegialos, Arcesime.[1] He lived 406 years after the Trojan War. He wrote (and according to some was the first to write)
iambi; and various other works, and an
Archaeology[2] of Samos.
Greek Original:*simmi/as, *(ro/dios, grammatiko/s. e)/graye *glw/ssas bibli/a g#: poih/mata dia/fora bibli/a d#. h)=n de\ to\ e)carxh=s *sa/mios: e)n de\ tw=| a)poikismw=| th=s *)amorgou= e)sta/lh kai\ au)to\s h(gemw\n u(po\ *sami/wn. e)/ktise de\ *)amorgo\n ei)s trei=s po/leis, *minw/|an, *ai)gialo/n, *)arkesi/mhn. ge/gone de\ meta\ u#2# e)/th tw=n *trwi+kw=n: kai\ e)/graye kata/ tinas prw=tos i)a/mbous, kai\ a)/lla dia/fora, *)arxaiologi/an te tw=n *sami/wn.
Notes:
Early C3 BC. RE
Simmias(6); OCD4
Simmias(2). But in this entry
Simmias (third century BC) has been conflated with the the seventh-century poet (
sigma 446)
Semonides of
Amorgos.
[1] The second of these names should more properly be Aigiale (so
Stephanus of
Byzantium), and 'Arcesime' seems simply to be Adler's misprint for Arcesine. See in any event, for these Samian settlements on
Amorgos c.620-600, Graham Shipley,
A History of Samos 800-188 BC (Oxford 1987) 51.
[2] In the sense of early history; cf.
epsilon 3755,
iota 53.
Keywords: biography; chronology; dialects, grammar, and etymology; epic; geography; historiography; history; military affairs; meter and music; mythology; poetry
Translated by: Malcolm Heath on 9 September 2003@01:17:54.
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