Achaeus(2), of Eretria, Athenian tragic poet
Andrew Brown
Achaeus (2) of Eretria, Athenian tragic poet, to be distinguished from Achaeus of Syracuse, who may be the Achaeus who won a *Lenaean victory c.356. According to the *Suda the Eretrian was born in ...
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Achilles Tatius (1), Greek novelist
Ewen Bowie
(see novel, greek) from *Alexandria (1), author of ‘The Story of Leucippe and Cleitophon’ (Τὰ κατὰ Λευκίππην καì Κλειτοφῶντα) in eight books. Shown by papyri to be circulating by the mid-2nd cent. ...
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Achilles Tatius (2), probably 3rd cent. CE
Achilles Tatius (2) (probably 3rd cent.
Adrianus, of Tyre, c. 113–193 CE
M. B. Trapp
Adrianus (Hadrianus) of Tyre (c. CE 113–93), sophist, pupil of *Herodes Atticus; held the chairs of rhetoric at Athens and Rome. One short *declamation attributed to him survives. See ...
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(Aelia) Eudocia, c. 400–460 CE
Pavlos Avlamis
Originally named Athenais, Eudocia was the daughter of Leontius, a teacher of rhetoric. She was born in Athens (Evagrius Scholasticus Historia ecclesiastica 1.20) and probably followed her father in ...
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Aelianus, 1st–2nd cent. CE
M. B. Trapp
Aelianus (1st–2nd cent.
Aeneas Tacticus
David Whitehead
Aeneas (Aineias) Tacticus, probably the Stymphalian general of the Arcadian koinon (see arcadian league) in 367 bce (Xen. Hell. 7. 3. 1); anyway the earlies (-surviving) and most ...
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