Pamphilus Of Alexandria

Pamphilus (1st century AD) was a Greek grammarian, of the school of Aristarchus. He was the author of a comprehensive lexicon, in 95 books, of foreign or obscure words, the idea of which was credited to another grammarian, Zopyrion, himself the compiler of the first four books. The work itself is lost, but an epitome by Diogenianus (2nd century) formed the basis of the lexicon of Hesychius. A similar compilation, called "meadow" (cf. the Praia of Suetonius) from its varied contents, dealing chiefly with mythological marvels, was probably a supplement to the lexicon, although some scholars identify them. Pamphilus was one of the chief authorities used by Athenaeus in the Deipnosophists. Suidas assigns to another Pamphilus, simply described as "a philosopher," a number of works, some of which were probably by Pamphilus the grammarian. See G Thilo in Ersch and Gruber's Allgemeine Encyclopedic, M Schmidt, appendix to his edition of Hesychius, (1862) vol. iv.; A Westermann in Pauly's Real-encyclopddie (1848).

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
hanover (district)
leine
oker
kiva kahl
ro mam
system dynamics
air augmented rocket
working mass
kuching
carrier wave
manchu language
liquid air cycle engine
heat exchanger
peine (district)
chinese nationalism
hildesheim (district)
list of songwriters
kenyan hotel bombing
heinkel he 162
two part tariff
hildesheim
nigella lawson
court order
apion
heliodorus
diogenianus
ephedra vulgaris
heraclea pontica
w h smith
dipsacaceae
ricardo lopez
fowler's solution
samson (island)
aa
edmund of east anglia
friedrich ernst dorn
robert whytlaw gray
enrico dandolo
john i of castile
tense
john ii of castile
thomas walsingham
engelbert humperdinck (disambiguation)
henry walton smith