Online Encyclopedia

APELLICON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 161 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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APELLICON  , a wealthy native of Teos, afterwards an Athenian

citizen, a famous
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book
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collector . He not only spent large sums in the acquisition of his library, but stole
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original documents from the archives of Athens and other cities of
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Greece . Being detected, he fled in order to escape punishment, but returned when Athenion (or Aristion), a bitter opponent of the Romans, had made himself tyrant of the city with the aid of
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Mithradates . Athenion sent him with some troops to
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Delos, to
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plunder the treasures of the temple, but he sholved little military capacity . He was surprised by the Romans under the command of Orobius (or Orbius), and only saved his
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life by
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flight . He died a little later, probably in 84 B.C . Apellicon's chief pursuit was the collection of rare and import-ant books . He
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purchased from the
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family of
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Neleus of Skepsis in the Troad
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manuscripts of the
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works of Aristotle and
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Theophrastus (including their
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libraries), which had been given to Neleus by Theophrastus himself, whose pupil Neleus had been . They had been concealed in a cellar to prevent their falling into the hands of the book-
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collecting princes of Pergamum, and were in a very dilapidated condition . Apellicon filled in the lacunae, and brought out a new, but faulty, edition . In 84 Sulla removed Apellicon's library to Rome (Strabo xiii. p . 609; Plutarch, Sulla, 26) .

Here the

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MSS. were handed over to the grammarian Tyrannion, who took copies of them, on the basis of which the peripatetic philosopher Andronicus of Rhodes prepared an edition of Aristotle's works . Apellicon's library contained a remarkable old copy of the Iliad . He is said to have published a biography of Aristotle, in which the calumnies of other biographers were refuted .

End of Article: APELLICON
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