Wolf's Mulierum Grae-
bycophant and sorry orator, mentioned by Aristo- carum, quae orat.
bycophant and sorry orator, mentioned by Aristo- carum, quae orat.
William Smith - 1844 - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities - b
(Sol.
11.
) There are
viii. 44. & 5; Dionys. l. c. )
several passages in which authors of the name of
2. A son of Priam. (Apollod. iii. 12. & 5; Dict. Evanthes are referred to; but, their native coun-
Cret. iii. 14. )
tries not being stated, it is uncertain whether those
3. A son of the Lycian king Sarpedon, who passages refer to any of the three Evanthes here
took part in the Trojan war. (Diod. v. 79. ) [L. S. ) specified, or to other persons of the same name.
EVANDER (Eŭavopos), a Phocian, was the Thus Pliny (H. N. viii. 22) quotes one Evanthes
pupil and successor of Lacydes as the head of the whom he calls inter auctores Graeciae non spretus,
Academic School at Athens, about B. c. 215. Evan- and from whose work he gives a statement respect-
der himself was succeeded by his pupil Hegesinus. ing some religious rite observed in Arcadia. One
Concerning the opinions and writings of this philo- might therefore be inclined to think him the same
sopher nothing is known. (Diog. Laërt. iv. 60; as the Evanthes who is quoted by the Scholiast on
Cic. Acad. ii. 6. ) Sereral Pythagoreans of the Apollonius Rhodius (i. 1063, 1065) as the author
name of Evander, who were natives of Croton, of avoiká. Athenaeus (vii. p. 296) speaks of an
Metapontum, and Leontini, are mentioned by epic poet Evanthes, of whose productions he men-
Jamblichus (Vit. Pyth. 36), and a Cretan Evander tions a hymn to Glaucus.
[L. S. )
occurs in Plutarch. (Lysand. 23. ) (L. S. ) EVANTHES (Evávons), a painter of unknown
EVANDER, AVIA'NIUS, or, as we read in date, two of whose pictures, in the temple of Zeus
some MSS. , AVIA’NUS EVANDER, lived at Casius at Pelusi um, are described very minutely,
ireg. Nazianz
; Georadios
Ευάγριος 2nd
tor. Ecdes. 11.
Eccles. c. 85;
rol ij.
moires, yol i
rol. vii. p. 434
1. 284, &c. , rol
Tun, Tol ri;
5. vol. 1. p. 8S3,
Oxon. 1710-43. )
zuished by Geci
wrote a work
catio inter The
Tadacun. It is
nadius, de Paris
Biblioth. Patras,
0, &c. )
by
some to be
if we may judge
described as l'a
rmonis Digrane
! nt in the US in
abric. Bibl. Grat
[J. C. J. ]
erred to by Atle
lor of a work ca
## p. 60 (#76) ##############################################
60
EUBIUS.
EUBULIDES.
and with great affectation, by Achilles Tatius (iii. EUBOEA (Eŭbora), a daughter of Asopus, from
6-8). The subjects of them were, the release of whom the island of Euboea was believed to have
Andromeda by Perseus, and the release of Prome- derived its namne. (Eustath. ad Hom. p. 278. )
theus by Heracles. (Comp. Lucian, de Domo, 22; | There are three other mythical personages of the
Philostr. Imag. i. 29. ) Both subjects are repre- same name. (Paus, ii. 17. $ 2; Apollod. ii. 7. & 8;
sented on existing works of art in a manner similar Athen. vii. p. 296. )
(L. S. )
to that of the pictures of Evanthes. (Miller, Arch. EUBOEUS (Etbolos) of Paros, a very cele
d. Kunst, & 396, n. 2, $ 414, n. 3; Pitt. Erc. iv. brated writer of parodies, who lived about the
7,61; Alus. Borb. v. 32, vi. 50, ix. 39; Gell, time of Philip of Macedonia In his poems, which
Pomp. pl. 42. )
[P. S. ) seem to have been written in the style of Homer,
EVA'NTHIUS, a rhetorician and grammarian, he ridiculed chiefly the Athenians. Euboeus and
highly eulogized in the chronicle of St. Jerome, Boeotus are said to have excelled all other paro-
died about A. D. 359, is numbered among the an-dists. In the time of Athenaeus a collection of his
cient commentators on Terence, and is believed by Parodies in four books was still extant, but all of
Lindenbrogius to be the author of the Brevis dis them are lost with the exception of a few short
sertutio de Tragoelia et Comoedia, commonly pre- fragments. (Athen. xv. pp. 698, 699; comp. We
fixed to the larger editions of the dramatist. lle land, Dissert. de Parodiar. Homeric. Scriptoribus,
has sometimes been confounded with Eugraphius, p. 41. &c. )
(L. S. )
who belongs to a much lnter period. (Schofen, De EU BOʻTAS (Ejburas), a Cyrenaean, who
Terentio et Donato ejus interprete, 8vo. , Bonn. 1821, gained a victory in the foot-race in Ol. xcuII. (B. C.
p. 37; Rufinus, De Metris Terent. p. 2705, ed. 408), and in the chariot-race in Ol. civ. (B. C.
Putsch. )
(W. R. ] 364). There is considerable doubt as to the name.
EVARCHUS (Eớapxos), tyrant of the Acarna- Diodorus calls him Eŭfatos, Xenophon Eubótas;
nian town of Astacus in the first year of the nor is it quite clear whether Pausanias, where he
Peloponnesian war, B. C. 431, was ejected by the mentions him, speaks of two victories gained at
Athenians in the summer and reinstated in the different Olympiads, or of a double victory gained
winter by the Corinthians. (Thuc. i. 30, 33. ) on the second occasion. (Paus. vi. 8. $ 3, 4. & 2;
Nothing is mentioned further either of him or of Diod. xiii. 68; Xen. Hellen. i. 2. $ 1. ) [C. P. M. ]
Astacus, but it is probable that the Athenian in- EUBU'LE (EUujan), a well-informed Pytha-
terest was soon restored. (Comp. i. 102. ) (A. H. C. ] gorean lady, to whom one of the letters of Theano
EVATHLUS (Εύαθλος). 1. An Athenian is addressed. (See J. H.
Wolf's Mulierum Grae-
bycophant and sorry orator, mentioned by Aristo- carum, quae orat. prosa usae sunt, Fragmenta, p.
phanes. (Acharn. 710, Vesp. 590, and Schol. ) He 224. )
(LS. )
was likewise attacked by Plato and Cratinus. EUBU'LEUS (Ejlovaeus). 1. According to
2. A wealthy young Athenian, who placed him- an Argive tradition, a son of Trochilus by an Eleu-
self under the tuition of Protagoras, for the purpose sinian woman, and brother of Triptolemus; whereas,
of learning the art of oratory, promising him a according to the Orphici, Eubuleus and Triptolemus
large sum for his instructions. (According to were sons of Dysaules. (Paus. i. 14. $ 2. )
Quintilian, iii. l. § 10, he paid him 10,000 drach- 2. One of the Tritopatores at Athens. (Cic. de
mae. ) An amusing story is told by A. Gellius Nat. Deor. iii. 21. )
(v. 10; comp. Diog. Laërt. ix. 56) of the way in Eubuleus occurs also as a surname of several
which he evaded paying half the money he had divinities, and describes them as gods of good coun-
promised.
[C. P. M. ) sel, such as Hades and Dionysus. (Schol. ad Ni-
EVAX, said to have been a king of Arabia, cand. Alex. 14; Orph. Hymn. 71. 3; Macrob. Sat.
who is mentioned in some editions of Pliny (H. N. i. 18; Plut. Sympos. vii. 9. )
(L. S. )
xxv. 4) as having written a work “ De Simplicium EUBU'LEUS, a sculptor, whose name is in-
Effectibus,” addressed to Nero, that is, the emperor scribed on a headless Hermes. The inscription
Tiberius, A. D. 14—37. This paragraph, however, ETBOYAETC OPACITEAOTC (sic in Winckel-
is wanting in the best MSS. , and has accordingly mann) makes him a son of Praxiteles; and, accord-
been omitted in most modern editions of Pliny. | ing to Meyer, there is no doubt that the great
(See Salmas. Prolegom. ad Homon. Hyles latr. p. sculptor of that name is meant. The statue still
15; Harduin's Notes to Pliny, l. c. ) He is said by exists, but in private hands. (Winckelmann, Ges-
Marbodus (or Marbodaeus), in the prologue to his chichte d. Kunst
, ix. 3, § 20 ; Visconti, Mus.
poem on Precious Stones, to have written a work Pio-Clem. vi. tab. 22, p. 142. ) [P. S. )
on this subject addressed to Tiberius, from which EUBU'LIDES, (Eubovaidns). 1. An Athe-
his own is partly taken. A Latin prose work, nian, who, having lost a cause, in which he was
professing to belong to Evax, entitled “ De Nomi- prosecutor, through the evidence given by a man
nibus et Virtutibus Lapidum qui in Artem Medi- named Euxitheus, revenged himself on the latter
cinae recipiuntur,” is to be found in a MS. in the by getting a verdict passed in a very irregular
Bodleian library at Oxford (Hatton, 100), and manner by the members of his deme, that he was
probably in other European libraries. The work not an Athenian citizen. Euxitheus appealed to
of Marbodus has been published and quoted under the dicasts of the Heliaea (see Dict. of Ant. 8. o.
the name of Evax. (See Choulant, Handbuch der Appellatio, Greek), and succeeded in establishing
Bücherkunde für die Aeltere Medicin, 2nd ed. his citizenship. A speech composed in his defence
art. Marbodus. )
(W. A. G. ] has come down to us among those of Demosthenes,
EU'BIUS (Eu610s). 1. A Stoic philosopher of but is, by some critics, perhaps without sufficient
Ascalon, who is mentioned only by Stephanus of reason, attributed to Lysias. (Dem. c. Eubulid. c. 5. )
Byzantium. (s. ο. 'Ασκάλων. )
2. An Athenian, son of Sositheus and Phylo
2. An author of obscene erotic stories (impurae mache, but adopted by his maternal grandfather,
conditor historie, Ov. Trist. ii. 416. ) [L. S. ] Eubulides On his behalf a suit was commenced
EU'BIUS, sculptor. [X ENOCRITUS. ) against a relative of the name of Macartatus, fer
## p. 61 (#77) ##############################################
EUBULUS.
61
ULIDES.
a daughter of Asopas fram
aboea was believed to hare
Eustath. ad Hom. p. 276)
mythical personages d the
7. 82; Apollod. ii. 7. & 8;
[LS]
) of Paros, a Fery cela
es, who lived about the
ziz In his poems, a hich
in the style of Hozan
theniang. Eabens and
excelled all other part
-
enaeus a collection de bis
s still extant, but all of
xception of a few sbart
698, 699; comp. We
Homeric. Scriptores
(L S. )
a Cyrепзеал, но
ace in Ol. ACUL (2. C
ce in Ol cy. (B. C
doubt as to the na. zz.
Xenophon Evêtes ;
Pausanias, ubere be
- victories gained at
ouble victory gained
vi. 8. $ 3, 4. 32;
2. $ 1. ) (CPM
-L-informed Pyths
e letters of Trease
's Mulier. Graz
snil, Frapsenban
(LS. )
1. According +
chius by an Ein
olemns; whereas
and Triptolead
14. & 2. )
thens. (Cicero
EUBULIDES.
the recovery of some property. He being still a In the year 1837 the great group of Eubulides
boy, his father, Sositheus, appeared for him. De in the Cerameicus was discovered. Near it was a
mosthenes wrote in his defence the speech apos fragment of an inscription . . . XEIPOZ KPANIAHE
Μακάρτατον.
ΕΠΟΙΗΣΕΝ. Another inscription was found near
The name Eubulides was borne by several the Erechtheum, . ]XEIP KAI ETBOTAIAH
others of this family, the genealogy of which it is KPONIAAI ENDIHAN. (Böckh, Corp. Inscr.
rather difficult to make out; but it appears that i. p. 504, No. 666, comp. Add. p. 916. ) From
Eubulides, the grandfather and adoptive father of a comparison of these inscriptions with each
the boy of the same name, was himself the grand other and with Pausanias (viii
. 14. § 4),
Bon of another Eubulides, son of Buselus. (Dem. c. it may be inferred that the first inscription
Macart, cc. 1-8. )
should be thus completed : ΕΥΒΟΥΛΙΔΗΣ
3. 4. Two individuals the name of Eubulidas | EYXEIΡΟΣ ΚΡΩΠΙΔΗΣ ΕΠΟΙΗΣΕΝ, and that
are mentioned as among the victims of the rapacity there was a family of artists of the Cropeian demos,
of Verres. One sumamed Grosphus, a native of of which three generations are known, namely,
Centuripae, the other a native of Herbita. (Cic. c. Eubulides, Eucheir, Eubulides. The architectural
Verr. iii. 23, v. 42, 49. )
(C. P. M. ] character of the monument and the forms of the
EUBU’LIDES (Euboulons), of Miletus, a phi- letters, alike shew that these inscriptions must be
losopher who belonged to the Megaric school. It referred to the time of the Roman dominion in
is not stated whether he was the immediate or a Greece. (Ross, in the Kunstblatt, 1837, No. 93, &c. )
later successor of Eucleides (Diog. Laërt. ii.
viii. 44. & 5; Dionys. l. c. )
several passages in which authors of the name of
2. A son of Priam. (Apollod. iii. 12. & 5; Dict. Evanthes are referred to; but, their native coun-
Cret. iii. 14. )
tries not being stated, it is uncertain whether those
3. A son of the Lycian king Sarpedon, who passages refer to any of the three Evanthes here
took part in the Trojan war. (Diod. v. 79. ) [L. S. ) specified, or to other persons of the same name.
EVANDER (Eŭavopos), a Phocian, was the Thus Pliny (H. N. viii. 22) quotes one Evanthes
pupil and successor of Lacydes as the head of the whom he calls inter auctores Graeciae non spretus,
Academic School at Athens, about B. c. 215. Evan- and from whose work he gives a statement respect-
der himself was succeeded by his pupil Hegesinus. ing some religious rite observed in Arcadia. One
Concerning the opinions and writings of this philo- might therefore be inclined to think him the same
sopher nothing is known. (Diog. Laërt. iv. 60; as the Evanthes who is quoted by the Scholiast on
Cic. Acad. ii. 6. ) Sereral Pythagoreans of the Apollonius Rhodius (i. 1063, 1065) as the author
name of Evander, who were natives of Croton, of avoiká. Athenaeus (vii. p. 296) speaks of an
Metapontum, and Leontini, are mentioned by epic poet Evanthes, of whose productions he men-
Jamblichus (Vit. Pyth. 36), and a Cretan Evander tions a hymn to Glaucus.
[L. S. )
occurs in Plutarch. (Lysand. 23. ) (L. S. ) EVANTHES (Evávons), a painter of unknown
EVANDER, AVIA'NIUS, or, as we read in date, two of whose pictures, in the temple of Zeus
some MSS. , AVIA’NUS EVANDER, lived at Casius at Pelusi um, are described very minutely,
ireg. Nazianz
; Georadios
Ευάγριος 2nd
tor. Ecdes. 11.
Eccles. c. 85;
rol ij.
moires, yol i
rol. vii. p. 434
1. 284, &c. , rol
Tun, Tol ri;
5. vol. 1. p. 8S3,
Oxon. 1710-43. )
zuished by Geci
wrote a work
catio inter The
Tadacun. It is
nadius, de Paris
Biblioth. Patras,
0, &c. )
by
some to be
if we may judge
described as l'a
rmonis Digrane
! nt in the US in
abric. Bibl. Grat
[J. C. J. ]
erred to by Atle
lor of a work ca
## p. 60 (#76) ##############################################
60
EUBIUS.
EUBULIDES.
and with great affectation, by Achilles Tatius (iii. EUBOEA (Eŭbora), a daughter of Asopus, from
6-8). The subjects of them were, the release of whom the island of Euboea was believed to have
Andromeda by Perseus, and the release of Prome- derived its namne. (Eustath. ad Hom. p. 278. )
theus by Heracles. (Comp. Lucian, de Domo, 22; | There are three other mythical personages of the
Philostr. Imag. i. 29. ) Both subjects are repre- same name. (Paus, ii. 17. $ 2; Apollod. ii. 7. & 8;
sented on existing works of art in a manner similar Athen. vii. p. 296. )
(L. S. )
to that of the pictures of Evanthes. (Miller, Arch. EUBOEUS (Etbolos) of Paros, a very cele
d. Kunst, & 396, n. 2, $ 414, n. 3; Pitt. Erc. iv. brated writer of parodies, who lived about the
7,61; Alus. Borb. v. 32, vi. 50, ix. 39; Gell, time of Philip of Macedonia In his poems, which
Pomp. pl. 42. )
[P. S. ) seem to have been written in the style of Homer,
EVA'NTHIUS, a rhetorician and grammarian, he ridiculed chiefly the Athenians. Euboeus and
highly eulogized in the chronicle of St. Jerome, Boeotus are said to have excelled all other paro-
died about A. D. 359, is numbered among the an-dists. In the time of Athenaeus a collection of his
cient commentators on Terence, and is believed by Parodies in four books was still extant, but all of
Lindenbrogius to be the author of the Brevis dis them are lost with the exception of a few short
sertutio de Tragoelia et Comoedia, commonly pre- fragments. (Athen. xv. pp. 698, 699; comp. We
fixed to the larger editions of the dramatist. lle land, Dissert. de Parodiar. Homeric. Scriptoribus,
has sometimes been confounded with Eugraphius, p. 41. &c. )
(L. S. )
who belongs to a much lnter period. (Schofen, De EU BOʻTAS (Ejburas), a Cyrenaean, who
Terentio et Donato ejus interprete, 8vo. , Bonn. 1821, gained a victory in the foot-race in Ol. xcuII. (B. C.
p. 37; Rufinus, De Metris Terent. p. 2705, ed. 408), and in the chariot-race in Ol. civ. (B. C.
Putsch. )
(W. R. ] 364). There is considerable doubt as to the name.
EVARCHUS (Eớapxos), tyrant of the Acarna- Diodorus calls him Eŭfatos, Xenophon Eubótas;
nian town of Astacus in the first year of the nor is it quite clear whether Pausanias, where he
Peloponnesian war, B. C. 431, was ejected by the mentions him, speaks of two victories gained at
Athenians in the summer and reinstated in the different Olympiads, or of a double victory gained
winter by the Corinthians. (Thuc. i. 30, 33. ) on the second occasion. (Paus. vi. 8. $ 3, 4. & 2;
Nothing is mentioned further either of him or of Diod. xiii. 68; Xen. Hellen. i. 2. $ 1. ) [C. P. M. ]
Astacus, but it is probable that the Athenian in- EUBU'LE (EUujan), a well-informed Pytha-
terest was soon restored. (Comp. i. 102. ) (A. H. C. ] gorean lady, to whom one of the letters of Theano
EVATHLUS (Εύαθλος). 1. An Athenian is addressed. (See J. H.
Wolf's Mulierum Grae-
bycophant and sorry orator, mentioned by Aristo- carum, quae orat. prosa usae sunt, Fragmenta, p.
phanes. (Acharn. 710, Vesp. 590, and Schol. ) He 224. )
(LS. )
was likewise attacked by Plato and Cratinus. EUBU'LEUS (Ejlovaeus). 1. According to
2. A wealthy young Athenian, who placed him- an Argive tradition, a son of Trochilus by an Eleu-
self under the tuition of Protagoras, for the purpose sinian woman, and brother of Triptolemus; whereas,
of learning the art of oratory, promising him a according to the Orphici, Eubuleus and Triptolemus
large sum for his instructions. (According to were sons of Dysaules. (Paus. i. 14. $ 2. )
Quintilian, iii. l. § 10, he paid him 10,000 drach- 2. One of the Tritopatores at Athens. (Cic. de
mae. ) An amusing story is told by A. Gellius Nat. Deor. iii. 21. )
(v. 10; comp. Diog. Laërt. ix. 56) of the way in Eubuleus occurs also as a surname of several
which he evaded paying half the money he had divinities, and describes them as gods of good coun-
promised.
[C. P. M. ) sel, such as Hades and Dionysus. (Schol. ad Ni-
EVAX, said to have been a king of Arabia, cand. Alex. 14; Orph. Hymn. 71. 3; Macrob. Sat.
who is mentioned in some editions of Pliny (H. N. i. 18; Plut. Sympos. vii. 9. )
(L. S. )
xxv. 4) as having written a work “ De Simplicium EUBU'LEUS, a sculptor, whose name is in-
Effectibus,” addressed to Nero, that is, the emperor scribed on a headless Hermes. The inscription
Tiberius, A. D. 14—37. This paragraph, however, ETBOYAETC OPACITEAOTC (sic in Winckel-
is wanting in the best MSS. , and has accordingly mann) makes him a son of Praxiteles; and, accord-
been omitted in most modern editions of Pliny. | ing to Meyer, there is no doubt that the great
(See Salmas. Prolegom. ad Homon. Hyles latr. p. sculptor of that name is meant. The statue still
15; Harduin's Notes to Pliny, l. c. ) He is said by exists, but in private hands. (Winckelmann, Ges-
Marbodus (or Marbodaeus), in the prologue to his chichte d. Kunst
, ix. 3, § 20 ; Visconti, Mus.
poem on Precious Stones, to have written a work Pio-Clem. vi. tab. 22, p. 142. ) [P. S. )
on this subject addressed to Tiberius, from which EUBU'LIDES, (Eubovaidns). 1. An Athe-
his own is partly taken. A Latin prose work, nian, who, having lost a cause, in which he was
professing to belong to Evax, entitled “ De Nomi- prosecutor, through the evidence given by a man
nibus et Virtutibus Lapidum qui in Artem Medi- named Euxitheus, revenged himself on the latter
cinae recipiuntur,” is to be found in a MS. in the by getting a verdict passed in a very irregular
Bodleian library at Oxford (Hatton, 100), and manner by the members of his deme, that he was
probably in other European libraries. The work not an Athenian citizen. Euxitheus appealed to
of Marbodus has been published and quoted under the dicasts of the Heliaea (see Dict. of Ant. 8. o.
the name of Evax. (See Choulant, Handbuch der Appellatio, Greek), and succeeded in establishing
Bücherkunde für die Aeltere Medicin, 2nd ed. his citizenship. A speech composed in his defence
art. Marbodus. )
(W. A. G. ] has come down to us among those of Demosthenes,
EU'BIUS (Eu610s). 1. A Stoic philosopher of but is, by some critics, perhaps without sufficient
Ascalon, who is mentioned only by Stephanus of reason, attributed to Lysias. (Dem. c. Eubulid. c. 5. )
Byzantium. (s. ο. 'Ασκάλων. )
2. An Athenian, son of Sositheus and Phylo
2. An author of obscene erotic stories (impurae mache, but adopted by his maternal grandfather,
conditor historie, Ov. Trist. ii. 416. ) [L. S. ] Eubulides On his behalf a suit was commenced
EU'BIUS, sculptor. [X ENOCRITUS. ) against a relative of the name of Macartatus, fer
## p. 61 (#77) ##############################################
EUBULUS.
61
ULIDES.
a daughter of Asopas fram
aboea was believed to hare
Eustath. ad Hom. p. 276)
mythical personages d the
7. 82; Apollod. ii. 7. & 8;
[LS]
) of Paros, a Fery cela
es, who lived about the
ziz In his poems, a hich
in the style of Hozan
theniang. Eabens and
excelled all other part
-
enaeus a collection de bis
s still extant, but all of
xception of a few sbart
698, 699; comp. We
Homeric. Scriptores
(L S. )
a Cyrепзеал, но
ace in Ol. ACUL (2. C
ce in Ol cy. (B. C
doubt as to the na. zz.
Xenophon Evêtes ;
Pausanias, ubere be
- victories gained at
ouble victory gained
vi. 8. $ 3, 4. 32;
2. $ 1. ) (CPM
-L-informed Pyths
e letters of Trease
's Mulier. Graz
snil, Frapsenban
(LS. )
1. According +
chius by an Ein
olemns; whereas
and Triptolead
14. & 2. )
thens. (Cicero
EUBULIDES.
the recovery of some property. He being still a In the year 1837 the great group of Eubulides
boy, his father, Sositheus, appeared for him. De in the Cerameicus was discovered. Near it was a
mosthenes wrote in his defence the speech apos fragment of an inscription . . . XEIPOZ KPANIAHE
Μακάρτατον.
ΕΠΟΙΗΣΕΝ. Another inscription was found near
The name Eubulides was borne by several the Erechtheum, . ]XEIP KAI ETBOTAIAH
others of this family, the genealogy of which it is KPONIAAI ENDIHAN. (Böckh, Corp. Inscr.
rather difficult to make out; but it appears that i. p. 504, No. 666, comp. Add. p. 916. ) From
Eubulides, the grandfather and adoptive father of a comparison of these inscriptions with each
the boy of the same name, was himself the grand other and with Pausanias (viii
. 14. § 4),
Bon of another Eubulides, son of Buselus. (Dem. c. it may be inferred that the first inscription
Macart, cc. 1-8. )
should be thus completed : ΕΥΒΟΥΛΙΔΗΣ
3. 4. Two individuals the name of Eubulidas | EYXEIΡΟΣ ΚΡΩΠΙΔΗΣ ΕΠΟΙΗΣΕΝ, and that
are mentioned as among the victims of the rapacity there was a family of artists of the Cropeian demos,
of Verres. One sumamed Grosphus, a native of of which three generations are known, namely,
Centuripae, the other a native of Herbita. (Cic. c. Eubulides, Eucheir, Eubulides. The architectural
Verr. iii. 23, v. 42, 49. )
(C. P. M. ] character of the monument and the forms of the
EUBU’LIDES (Euboulons), of Miletus, a phi- letters, alike shew that these inscriptions must be
losopher who belonged to the Megaric school. It referred to the time of the Roman dominion in
is not stated whether he was the immediate or a Greece. (Ross, in the Kunstblatt, 1837, No. 93, &c. )
later successor of Eucleides (Diog. Laërt. ii.