Online Encyclopedia

PHILETAS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 376 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PHILETAS  of

Cos, Alexandrian poet and critic, flourished in the second
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half of the 4th century B.C . He was tutor to the son of Ptolemy I. of
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Egypt, and also taught
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Theocritus and the grammarian
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Zenodotus . His thinness made him an
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object of ridicule; according to the comic poets, he carried lead in his shoes to keep himself from being blown away . Oter-study of Megarian dialectic subtleties is said to have shortened his
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life . His elegies, chiefly of an amatory nature and singing the praises of his
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mistress Battis (or Bittis), were much admired by the Romans . He is frequently mentioned by Ovid and Propertius, the latter of whom imitated him and preferred him to his
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rival
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Callimachus, whose
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superior mythological lore was more to the taste of the Alexandrian critics . Philetas was also the author of a vocabulary called "AraKra, explaining the meanings of rare and obscure words, including words
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peculiar to certain dialects; and of notes on Homer, severely criticized by
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Aristarchus . Fragments edited by N . Bach (1828), and T . Bergk, Poetae lyrici graeci; see also E . W . Maass, De tribus Philetae carminibus (1895) .

End of Article: PHILETAS
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MANUEL PHILES (c. 1275–1345)
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