The young king was ried to Iphthima, the
daughter
of Icarius.
William Smith - 1844 - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities - b
7), from which it
been published. A list of them is given by Fabri- would appear either that some of bis works were
cius. (Bill. Graec. vol. xi. p. 670, &c. ; comp. Cave, extant in the eleventh century, or that some sources
Hist. Lit. vol. i. Appendix, p. 111, &c. ) [L. S. } of information concerning him were then to be had
EUGENIUS, an African confessor, not less which do not now exist.
(W. A. G. )
celebrated for his learning and sanctity than for EU'GEON (Evyew or Evyalwv), of Samos, one
the courage with which he advocated the doctrines of the earliest Greek historians mentioned by Dia
of the orthodox faith during the persecution of nysius of Halicarnassus. (Jud. de Thucyd. 5; comp.
the Arian Vandals towards the close of the fifth Suid. s. v. )
(L. S. )
century. At first tolerated by Hunneric, who ac- EUGEŠIPPUS (Ein noinnos), the author of a
quiesced in his elevation to the see of Carthage in work on the distances of places in the Holy Land,
A. D. 480, he was subsequently transported by of which a Latin translation is printed in Leo Al-
that prince, after the stormy council held in latius' Lvumintá. He lived about a. D. 1040, but
February A. D. 484, to the deserts of Tripoli, no particulars are known about him. (L. S. ]
from whence he was recalled by the tardy cle EUGRAMMUS. [EUCH EIR, No. 2. )
mency of Gundamund, but eight years afterwards EUGRA'PHIUS, a Latin grammarian, who is
was arrested, tried and condemned to death by believed to have flourished as late as the end of the
Thrasimund, who, however, commuted the sen- tenth century, is the author of a few unimportant
tence to banishment. The place fixed upon was notes upon Terence, referring chiefly to the pro-
Vienne in Languedoc, where Alaric at that period logues. They were first published by Faernus
held sway. Here Eugenius founded a monastery (Florent. 8vo. 1565), were subsequently improved
near the tomb of St. Amaranthus, where he and enlarged by Lindenbrogius (4to. Paris, 1502,
passed his time in devout tranquillity until his Francf. 1623) and Westerhovius (Hag. Com. 4to.
death on the 13th of July A. D. 505.
1726), and are given in all the more complete edi-
Under the name of Eugenius we possess a con- tions of the dramatist. We hear also of a MS. in
fession of faith drawn up in accordance with the the Bibliothèque du Roi at Paris, intitled Commen-
doctrines recognised by the council of Nicaea, and tum in Terentium, bearing the name of Eugraphius,
presented on the part of the orthodox African pre- which Lindenbrogius did not think worth publish-
lates to Hunneric, under the title, Professio fidei ing.
(W. R. ]
Catholicorum episcoporum Hunerico regi oblata. It EU'HODUS, a freedman of the emperor Septi-
will be found in the Bibl. Max. Patr. Lugdun. mius Severus and tutor to Caracalla, who was
1677, vol. viii. p. 683, and an account of its con- nursed by his wife Euhodia. At the instigation of
tents in Schröck, Kirchengeschichte, vol. xviii. p. 97. the young prince he contrived the ruin of the too
Gennadius mentions several other works by this powerful Plautianus (PLAUTIANLS); but although
author, but they no longer exist. For the original loaded with honours on account of this good ser-
documents connected with the Vandal persecution vice, he was put to death in A. D. 211, almost im-
see " Victor Vitensis de persecutione Vandalica mediately after the accession of his foster-son, from
with the notes of Ruinart, Paris, 1694; the “* Vita a suspicion, probably, that he entertained friendly
S. Fulgentii ” in the Bibl. Mut. Putr. Lugdun. feelings towards the hated Geta. When Tertulliar.
a
99
## p. 87 (#103) #############################################
EUHODUS.
87
EUMARIDAS.
EUMELUS.
1. ix. , p. 4; and Procopius, De Bella
7. &c.
*NIUS, who was bishop of Toledo
to 657, is mentioned under Dress
je editor and enlarger of the verken
upon the Creation. He is known as
hor of thirty-two short original pas
B a great variety of subjects
, but
ral and religious
, in berie, elepe
sapphic measures. These wet pube
rmond at Paris, 8vo. 1619, 17
I the collected works of a
id V'cnice 1728), in the Bale Pata
1077, vol. xii
. p. 345, and in te
contius by Rivinus
, Lips
. 1652
y Eugenius–one on the breast
other on the names of briand
uined in the Anthologia Land
4, v. 164, or n. 386, 287,
(W. R
praefectus praetorio Orientasi
He was the author of a fire
punts of publicans, which is
on of the Edicta przetetara
Geschichte der Nordla liste
, Anecdota, p. 261. ) [J. T. G]
reek physician, of plai
he must have ired K
first century after Chris
formulae is quoted by Ar
2. )
de Compos. Medink
· 114. ) He is also quoted
br. c. 7), from stic
I some of his works were
tury, or that some contes
him were then to be had
(W. A. G]
Euryalar), of Sabus, a
ans mentioned ho Das
d. de Tind. 3; CSR
[LS]
Tos), the author o's
es in the Help Land
- printed in less
out A. D. 1014,
him. [LS]
No. 2]
ammarian, சந்தர்
- as ibe end of the
few aniz portas
efiy to the 27
ed by Facts
ent)import
0. Paris, 13
Pag. Conta
complex tá
of a US i
led Costa
Eugh
th pubb
IR)
eror
sho 738
(ad Scap. c. 4) says that young Antoninus was to read Thymaridas, who is known as a celebrated
reared upon Christian milk, he refers to Proculus, Pythagorean. (lambl. h c. 23, with Kiessling's
the steward of Euhodus, for there is no reason to note. )
(L. S. )
believe that either Euhodus or his wife professed EU'MARUS, a very ancient Greek painter of
the true faith, as some have imagined. (Dion Cass. monochromes, was the first, according to Pliny,
lxxvi. 3, 6, lxxvii. 1. )
(W. R. ] who distinguished, in painting, the male from the
EVIPPE (Evimin), the name of five mytholo female, and who “ dared to imitate all figures. "
gical personages, concerning whom nothing of in- His invention was improved upon by Simon of
terest is related. (Apollod. ii. 1. & 5; Paus. ir. Cleonae. (xxxv. 8. B. 34. ) Müller (Arch. d. Kunst,
34. & 5; Parthen. Erol. 3; Eratosth. Catast. 18; $74) supposes that the distinction was made by a
(v. Met. v. 303. )
(L. S. ) difference of colouring; but Pliny's words seem
EVIPPUS (
EOS). 1. A son of Thestius and rather to refer to the drawing of the figure. (P. S. )
Eurythemis, who, together with his brothers, was EUMA'THIUS. (Eustathius, No. 5. ]
killed by Meleager. (Apollod. i. 7. § 10, 8. $ 3. ) EUMEʻLUS (EŬunaos), a son of Admetus and
2. A son of Megareus, who was killed by the Alcestis, who went with eleven ships and warriors
Cithaeronean lion. (Paus. i. 41. $ 4. ) There are from Pherae, Boebe, Glaphyrae, and laolcus to
two other mythical personages of this name. (Hom. Troy. He was distinguished for his excellent
Il. xvi. 417; Steph. Byz. s. v. 'Arábavda. ) (L. S. ) horses, which had once been under the care of
EULAEUS (Eủaios), an eunuch, became one Apollo, and with which Eumelus would have
of the regents of Egypt and guardians of Ptolemy gained the prize at the funeral games of Patroclus,
Philometor on the death of Cleopatra, the mother if his chariot had not been broken. He was mar-
of the latter, in B. C. 173.
The young king was ried to Iphthima, the daughter of Icarius. (Hom.
then 13 years old, and he is said to have been Il. ii. 711, &c. 764, xxiii. 375, 536, Od. iv. 798;
brought up in the greatest luxury and effeminacy Strab. ix. p. 436. ) There are three other mytho-
by Eulaeus, who hoped to render his own influence logical personages of this name. (Anton. Lib. 15,
permanent by the corruption and consequent weak- 18 ; Paus, vii. 18. & 2. )
(L. S. ]
ness of Ptolemy. It was Eulaeus who, by refusing EUMEʼLUS (EŬunaos), one of the three sons
the claims of Antiochus IV. (Epiphanes) to the of Parysades, King of Bosporus. After his father's .
provinces of Coele-Syria and Palestine, involved death he engaged in a war for the crown with his
Egypt in the disastrous war with Syria in B. c. 171. brothers Satyrus and Prytanis, who were succes-
(Polyb. xxvii, 16; Diod. Fragm, lib. xxx. Exc. de sively killed in battle. Eumelus reigned most
Leg. xviii. p. 624, de Virt. et Vit. p. 579 ; Liv. prosperously for five years and five months, B. C.
xlii
. 29, xlv. 11, 12; App. Syr. 66; Just. xxxiv. 309—304. (Diod. xx. 22—26; Clinton, F. H. vol.
[E. E. ] ii. pp. 282, 285. )
{P. S. ]
EULO'GIUS. [ECLOGIUS. ]
EUME'LUS (Etunhos). 1. Of Corinth, the
EULO'GIUS, FAVO'NIUS, a rhetorician of son of Amphilytus, a very ancient Epic poet, be-
Carthage, and a contemporary and disciple of St. longed, according to some, to the Epic cycle. His
Augustin. (August. de Cur. pro Mort. 11. ) Under name, like Eucheir, Eugranimus, &c. , is significant,
his name we possess a disputation on Cicero's referring to his skill in poetry. He was of the
Somnium Scipionis, which contains various discus-noble house of the Bacchiadae, and flourished about
sions on points of the Pythagorean doctrine the 5th Olympiad, according to Eusebius (Chron. *),
of numbers. The treatise was first printed by who makes him contemporary with Arctinus.
A. Schott at the end of his Quaestiones Tullianae (Comp. Cyril, c. Julian. i. p. 13; Clem. Alex.
(Antwerp, 1613, 8vo. ), and afterwards in the Strom. i. p. 144. )
edition of Cicero's de Officiis, by Graevius (1688), Those of the poems ascribed to him, which ap-
from which it is reprinted with some improvements pear pretty certainly genuine, were genealogical and
in Orelli's edition of Cicero, vol. v. part. 1, pp. 397 historical legends. To this class belonged his co-
-413.
[L. S. ) rinthian History (Paus. ii. 1. $ 1, 2, ý 2, 3. ; 8;
EU'MACHUS (EŬuaxos). 1. A Corinthian, Schol. ad Apoll. Rhod. i. 148; Tzetz. Schol. ad
son of Chrysis, was one of the generals sent by Lycophr. 1024, comp. 174, 480), his ipoo ódiovés
the Corinthians in the winter of B. C. 431 in Anaov, from which some lines are quoted by Pau-
command of an armament to restore Evarchus, sanias, who considered it the only genuine work of
tyrant of Astacus, who had been recently expelled Eumelus (iv. 4. 1, 33. SS 2, 3, v. 19. & 2), and
by the Athenians. (Thuc. ii. 33. )
the Europia (Euseb. l. c. ; Clem. Alex. Strom. i. p.
2. A native of Neapolis, who, according to 151 ; Schol. ad Hom. N. ii. p. 121. ) He also wrote
Athenaeus (xiii. p. 577), wrote a work entitled Bougonia, a poem on bees, which the Greeks called
“Ιστορίαι των περί 'Αννίβαν. It is perhaps the | βουγόναι and βουγενείς. (Euseb. I. C. ; Varro. R. R.
same Eumachus of whose work entitled niepiñynois ii. 5. & 5, ed. Schneid. ) Some writers ascribed to
a fragment is still extant in Phlegon. (Mirab. him a Titavouaxia, which also was attributed to
c. 18. )
[C. P. M. ] Arctinus. (Athen. vii. p. 277, d. , comp. i. p. 22,
EUMAEUS (EŬmalos), the famous and faithful c. ; Schol. ad Apoll. Rhod. i. 1165. )
swineherd of Odysseus, was a son of Ctesius, king The cyclic poem on the return of the Greeks from
of the island of Syrie; he had been carried away Troy (vớotos) is ascribed to Eumelus by a Scho-
from his father's house by a Phoenician slave, and liast on Pindar (Ol. xiii
. 31), who writes the name
Phoenician sailors sold him to Laërtes, the father wrongly, Eumolpus. The lines quoted by this Scho-
of Odysseus. (Hom. Od. xv. 403, &c. ; comp. liast are also given by Pausanias, under the name
ODYSSEUS. )
(L. S. ] of Eumelus. (Vossius, de Hist. Graec. pp. 5, 6, ed.
EUMA'RIDAS (Evuapíðas), of Paros, a Py- Westermann; Welcker, die Epische Cyclus, p. 274. )
thagorean philosopher, who is mentioned by Iam.
blichus (Vit. Pyth. 36); but it is uncertain whether • A little lower, Eusebius places him again at
the reading is correct, and whether we ought not ol. 9, but the former date seems the more correct.
tée en
في حلو
## p. 88 (#104) #############################################
88
EUMENES.
EUMENES.
2.
been published. A list of them is given by Fabri- would appear either that some of bis works were
cius. (Bill. Graec. vol. xi. p. 670, &c. ; comp. Cave, extant in the eleventh century, or that some sources
Hist. Lit. vol. i. Appendix, p. 111, &c. ) [L. S. } of information concerning him were then to be had
EUGENIUS, an African confessor, not less which do not now exist.
(W. A. G. )
celebrated for his learning and sanctity than for EU'GEON (Evyew or Evyalwv), of Samos, one
the courage with which he advocated the doctrines of the earliest Greek historians mentioned by Dia
of the orthodox faith during the persecution of nysius of Halicarnassus. (Jud. de Thucyd. 5; comp.
the Arian Vandals towards the close of the fifth Suid. s. v. )
(L. S. )
century. At first tolerated by Hunneric, who ac- EUGEŠIPPUS (Ein noinnos), the author of a
quiesced in his elevation to the see of Carthage in work on the distances of places in the Holy Land,
A. D. 480, he was subsequently transported by of which a Latin translation is printed in Leo Al-
that prince, after the stormy council held in latius' Lvumintá. He lived about a. D. 1040, but
February A. D. 484, to the deserts of Tripoli, no particulars are known about him. (L. S. ]
from whence he was recalled by the tardy cle EUGRAMMUS. [EUCH EIR, No. 2. )
mency of Gundamund, but eight years afterwards EUGRA'PHIUS, a Latin grammarian, who is
was arrested, tried and condemned to death by believed to have flourished as late as the end of the
Thrasimund, who, however, commuted the sen- tenth century, is the author of a few unimportant
tence to banishment. The place fixed upon was notes upon Terence, referring chiefly to the pro-
Vienne in Languedoc, where Alaric at that period logues. They were first published by Faernus
held sway. Here Eugenius founded a monastery (Florent. 8vo. 1565), were subsequently improved
near the tomb of St. Amaranthus, where he and enlarged by Lindenbrogius (4to. Paris, 1502,
passed his time in devout tranquillity until his Francf. 1623) and Westerhovius (Hag. Com. 4to.
death on the 13th of July A. D. 505.
1726), and are given in all the more complete edi-
Under the name of Eugenius we possess a con- tions of the dramatist. We hear also of a MS. in
fession of faith drawn up in accordance with the the Bibliothèque du Roi at Paris, intitled Commen-
doctrines recognised by the council of Nicaea, and tum in Terentium, bearing the name of Eugraphius,
presented on the part of the orthodox African pre- which Lindenbrogius did not think worth publish-
lates to Hunneric, under the title, Professio fidei ing.
(W. R. ]
Catholicorum episcoporum Hunerico regi oblata. It EU'HODUS, a freedman of the emperor Septi-
will be found in the Bibl. Max. Patr. Lugdun. mius Severus and tutor to Caracalla, who was
1677, vol. viii. p. 683, and an account of its con- nursed by his wife Euhodia. At the instigation of
tents in Schröck, Kirchengeschichte, vol. xviii. p. 97. the young prince he contrived the ruin of the too
Gennadius mentions several other works by this powerful Plautianus (PLAUTIANLS); but although
author, but they no longer exist. For the original loaded with honours on account of this good ser-
documents connected with the Vandal persecution vice, he was put to death in A. D. 211, almost im-
see " Victor Vitensis de persecutione Vandalica mediately after the accession of his foster-son, from
with the notes of Ruinart, Paris, 1694; the “* Vita a suspicion, probably, that he entertained friendly
S. Fulgentii ” in the Bibl. Mut. Putr. Lugdun. feelings towards the hated Geta. When Tertulliar.
a
99
## p. 87 (#103) #############################################
EUHODUS.
87
EUMARIDAS.
EUMELUS.
1. ix. , p. 4; and Procopius, De Bella
7. &c.
*NIUS, who was bishop of Toledo
to 657, is mentioned under Dress
je editor and enlarger of the verken
upon the Creation. He is known as
hor of thirty-two short original pas
B a great variety of subjects
, but
ral and religious
, in berie, elepe
sapphic measures. These wet pube
rmond at Paris, 8vo. 1619, 17
I the collected works of a
id V'cnice 1728), in the Bale Pata
1077, vol. xii
. p. 345, and in te
contius by Rivinus
, Lips
. 1652
y Eugenius–one on the breast
other on the names of briand
uined in the Anthologia Land
4, v. 164, or n. 386, 287,
(W. R
praefectus praetorio Orientasi
He was the author of a fire
punts of publicans, which is
on of the Edicta przetetara
Geschichte der Nordla liste
, Anecdota, p. 261. ) [J. T. G]
reek physician, of plai
he must have ired K
first century after Chris
formulae is quoted by Ar
2. )
de Compos. Medink
· 114. ) He is also quoted
br. c. 7), from stic
I some of his works were
tury, or that some contes
him were then to be had
(W. A. G]
Euryalar), of Sabus, a
ans mentioned ho Das
d. de Tind. 3; CSR
[LS]
Tos), the author o's
es in the Help Land
- printed in less
out A. D. 1014,
him. [LS]
No. 2]
ammarian, சந்தர்
- as ibe end of the
few aniz portas
efiy to the 27
ed by Facts
ent)import
0. Paris, 13
Pag. Conta
complex tá
of a US i
led Costa
Eugh
th pubb
IR)
eror
sho 738
(ad Scap. c. 4) says that young Antoninus was to read Thymaridas, who is known as a celebrated
reared upon Christian milk, he refers to Proculus, Pythagorean. (lambl. h c. 23, with Kiessling's
the steward of Euhodus, for there is no reason to note. )
(L. S. )
believe that either Euhodus or his wife professed EU'MARUS, a very ancient Greek painter of
the true faith, as some have imagined. (Dion Cass. monochromes, was the first, according to Pliny,
lxxvi. 3, 6, lxxvii. 1. )
(W. R. ] who distinguished, in painting, the male from the
EVIPPE (Evimin), the name of five mytholo female, and who “ dared to imitate all figures. "
gical personages, concerning whom nothing of in- His invention was improved upon by Simon of
terest is related. (Apollod. ii. 1. & 5; Paus. ir. Cleonae. (xxxv. 8. B. 34. ) Müller (Arch. d. Kunst,
34. & 5; Parthen. Erol. 3; Eratosth. Catast. 18; $74) supposes that the distinction was made by a
(v. Met. v. 303. )
(L. S. ) difference of colouring; but Pliny's words seem
EVIPPUS (
EOS). 1. A son of Thestius and rather to refer to the drawing of the figure. (P. S. )
Eurythemis, who, together with his brothers, was EUMA'THIUS. (Eustathius, No. 5. ]
killed by Meleager. (Apollod. i. 7. § 10, 8. $ 3. ) EUMEʻLUS (EŬunaos), a son of Admetus and
2. A son of Megareus, who was killed by the Alcestis, who went with eleven ships and warriors
Cithaeronean lion. (Paus. i. 41. $ 4. ) There are from Pherae, Boebe, Glaphyrae, and laolcus to
two other mythical personages of this name. (Hom. Troy. He was distinguished for his excellent
Il. xvi. 417; Steph. Byz. s. v. 'Arábavda. ) (L. S. ) horses, which had once been under the care of
EULAEUS (Eủaios), an eunuch, became one Apollo, and with which Eumelus would have
of the regents of Egypt and guardians of Ptolemy gained the prize at the funeral games of Patroclus,
Philometor on the death of Cleopatra, the mother if his chariot had not been broken. He was mar-
of the latter, in B. C. 173.
The young king was ried to Iphthima, the daughter of Icarius. (Hom.
then 13 years old, and he is said to have been Il. ii. 711, &c. 764, xxiii. 375, 536, Od. iv. 798;
brought up in the greatest luxury and effeminacy Strab. ix. p. 436. ) There are three other mytho-
by Eulaeus, who hoped to render his own influence logical personages of this name. (Anton. Lib. 15,
permanent by the corruption and consequent weak- 18 ; Paus, vii. 18. & 2. )
(L. S. ]
ness of Ptolemy. It was Eulaeus who, by refusing EUMEʼLUS (EŬunaos), one of the three sons
the claims of Antiochus IV. (Epiphanes) to the of Parysades, King of Bosporus. After his father's .
provinces of Coele-Syria and Palestine, involved death he engaged in a war for the crown with his
Egypt in the disastrous war with Syria in B. c. 171. brothers Satyrus and Prytanis, who were succes-
(Polyb. xxvii, 16; Diod. Fragm, lib. xxx. Exc. de sively killed in battle. Eumelus reigned most
Leg. xviii. p. 624, de Virt. et Vit. p. 579 ; Liv. prosperously for five years and five months, B. C.
xlii
. 29, xlv. 11, 12; App. Syr. 66; Just. xxxiv. 309—304. (Diod. xx. 22—26; Clinton, F. H. vol.
[E. E. ] ii. pp. 282, 285. )
{P. S. ]
EULO'GIUS. [ECLOGIUS. ]
EUME'LUS (Etunhos). 1. Of Corinth, the
EULO'GIUS, FAVO'NIUS, a rhetorician of son of Amphilytus, a very ancient Epic poet, be-
Carthage, and a contemporary and disciple of St. longed, according to some, to the Epic cycle. His
Augustin. (August. de Cur. pro Mort. 11. ) Under name, like Eucheir, Eugranimus, &c. , is significant,
his name we possess a disputation on Cicero's referring to his skill in poetry. He was of the
Somnium Scipionis, which contains various discus-noble house of the Bacchiadae, and flourished about
sions on points of the Pythagorean doctrine the 5th Olympiad, according to Eusebius (Chron. *),
of numbers. The treatise was first printed by who makes him contemporary with Arctinus.
A. Schott at the end of his Quaestiones Tullianae (Comp. Cyril, c. Julian. i. p. 13; Clem. Alex.
(Antwerp, 1613, 8vo. ), and afterwards in the Strom. i. p. 144. )
edition of Cicero's de Officiis, by Graevius (1688), Those of the poems ascribed to him, which ap-
from which it is reprinted with some improvements pear pretty certainly genuine, were genealogical and
in Orelli's edition of Cicero, vol. v. part. 1, pp. 397 historical legends. To this class belonged his co-
-413.
[L. S. ) rinthian History (Paus. ii. 1. $ 1, 2, ý 2, 3. ; 8;
EU'MACHUS (EŬuaxos). 1. A Corinthian, Schol. ad Apoll. Rhod. i. 148; Tzetz. Schol. ad
son of Chrysis, was one of the generals sent by Lycophr. 1024, comp. 174, 480), his ipoo ódiovés
the Corinthians in the winter of B. C. 431 in Anaov, from which some lines are quoted by Pau-
command of an armament to restore Evarchus, sanias, who considered it the only genuine work of
tyrant of Astacus, who had been recently expelled Eumelus (iv. 4. 1, 33. SS 2, 3, v. 19. & 2), and
by the Athenians. (Thuc. ii. 33. )
the Europia (Euseb. l. c. ; Clem. Alex. Strom. i. p.
2. A native of Neapolis, who, according to 151 ; Schol. ad Hom. N. ii. p. 121. ) He also wrote
Athenaeus (xiii. p. 577), wrote a work entitled Bougonia, a poem on bees, which the Greeks called
“Ιστορίαι των περί 'Αννίβαν. It is perhaps the | βουγόναι and βουγενείς. (Euseb. I. C. ; Varro. R. R.
same Eumachus of whose work entitled niepiñynois ii. 5. & 5, ed. Schneid. ) Some writers ascribed to
a fragment is still extant in Phlegon. (Mirab. him a Titavouaxia, which also was attributed to
c. 18. )
[C. P. M. ] Arctinus. (Athen. vii. p. 277, d. , comp. i. p. 22,
EUMAEUS (EŬmalos), the famous and faithful c. ; Schol. ad Apoll. Rhod. i. 1165. )
swineherd of Odysseus, was a son of Ctesius, king The cyclic poem on the return of the Greeks from
of the island of Syrie; he had been carried away Troy (vớotos) is ascribed to Eumelus by a Scho-
from his father's house by a Phoenician slave, and liast on Pindar (Ol. xiii
. 31), who writes the name
Phoenician sailors sold him to Laërtes, the father wrongly, Eumolpus. The lines quoted by this Scho-
of Odysseus. (Hom. Od. xv. 403, &c. ; comp. liast are also given by Pausanias, under the name
ODYSSEUS. )
(L. S. ] of Eumelus. (Vossius, de Hist. Graec. pp. 5, 6, ed.
EUMA'RIDAS (Evuapíðas), of Paros, a Py- Westermann; Welcker, die Epische Cyclus, p. 274. )
thagorean philosopher, who is mentioned by Iam.
blichus (Vit. Pyth. 36); but it is uncertain whether • A little lower, Eusebius places him again at
the reading is correct, and whether we ought not ol. 9, but the former date seems the more correct.
tée en
في حلو
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88
EUMENES.
EUMENES.
2.