Online Encyclopedia

PHOCYLIDES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 449 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PHOCYLIDES  ,

Greek gnomic poet of Miletus, contemporary of Theognis, was born about 56o B.C . A few fragments of his "
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maxims " have been preserved (chiefly in the Florilegium of Stobaeus), in which he expresses his contempt for the pomps and vanities of rank and
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wealth, and sets forth in
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simple language his ideas of honour, justice and wisdom . A
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complete didactic poem (230 hexameters) called Iloir/µa vovOernK6v or yvi;)ya1, bearing the name of Phocylides, is now considered to be the
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work of an Alexandrian Christian of Jewish origin who lived between 170 B.C. and A.D . 50 . The Jewish element is shown in verbal agreement with passages of the Old Testament (especially the
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book of Sirach) ; the Christian by the
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doctrine of the immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the
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body . Some Jewish authorities, however, maintain that there are in reality no traces of Christan doctrine to be found in the poem, and that the author was a Jew . The poem was first printed at Venice in 1495, and was a favourite school textbook during the Reformation period . See fragments and the
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spurious poem in . T . Bergk, Poetae lyrici graeci, ii . (4th ed., 1882); J . Bernays Ober das Phokylideische Gedicht (1858); Phocylides, Poem of Admonition, with introduction and commentaries by J .

B . Fenling, and

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translation by H . D . Good-win (
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Andover, Mass., 1879); F . Susemihl, Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur in der Alexandrinerzeit, (1892), ii . 642; S . Krauss' (s.v . " Pseudo-Phocylides ") in The Jewish Encyclopedia and E . Schurer, Hist. of the Jewish
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People, div. ii., vol. iii., 313–316 (Eng. trans., 1886), where full bibliographies are given . There is an
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English verse translation by W . Hewett (
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Watford, 1840), The Perceptive Poem of Phocylides .

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