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ARISTARCHUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 494 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARISTARCHUS  , of

Samothrace (c . 220—143 B.C.), Greek grammarian and critic, flourished about 155 . He settled early in Alexandria, where he studied under Aristophanes of
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Byzantium, whom he succeeded as librarian of the museum . On the accession of the tyrant Ptolemy Physcon (his former pupil), he found his
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life in danger and withdrew to Cyprus, where he died from dropsy, hastened, it is said, by voluntary
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starvation, at the age of 72 . Aristarchus founded a school of philologists, called after him "Aristarcheans," which long flourished in Alexandria and afterwards at Rome . He is said to have written Boo commentaries alone, without reckoning
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special
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treatises . He edited
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Hesiod, Pindar, Aeschylus, Sophocles and other authors; but his chief fame rests on his critical and exegetical edition of Homer, practically the foundation of our
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present recension . In the time of Augustus, two Aristarcheans, Didymus and
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Aristonicus, undertook the revision of his
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work, and the extracts from these two writers in the Venetian scholia to the Iliad give an idea of Aristarchus's Homeric labours . To obtain a thoroughly correct text, he marked with an obelus the lines he considered
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spurious; other signs were used by him to indicate notes, varieties of
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reading, repetitions and interpolations . He arranged the Iliad and the Odyssey in twenty-four books as we now have them . As a commentator his principle was that the author should explain himself, without recourse to allegorical interpretation; in grammar, he laid chief stress on analogyand uniformity of usage and construction . His views were opposed by
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Crates of Mallus, who wrote a
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treatise Ilepi 'Avwµakias, especially directed against them .

See

Lehrs, De Aristarchi
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Stud . Homericis (3rd ed., 1882) ; Ludwich, Aristarchs homerische Textcritik (1884); especially Sandys, Hist. of Class . Schol . (ed . 1906), vol. i. with authorities; also HoMER .

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