Other Definitions
bion (dict)

Bion

In theoretical physics, a bion is the bound state of two solitons.
Bion, Greek bucolic poet, was born at Phlossa near Smyrna, and flourished about 100 BC. The account formerly given of him, that he was the contemporary and imitator of Theocritus, the friend and tutor of Moschus, and lived about 280 BC, is now generally regarded as incorrect. W Stein (De Moschi et Bionis aetate, Tbingen, 1893) puts Bion, chiefly on metrical grounds, in the first half of the 1st century BC. Nothing is known of him except that he lived in Sicily. The story that he died of poison, administered to him by some jealous rivals, who afterwards suffered the penalty of their crime, is probably only an invention of the author of the Eirird^ws Btucos. Although his poems are included in the general class of bucolic poetry, the remains show little of the vigour and truthfulness to nature characteristic of Theocritus. They breathe an exaggerated sentimentality, and show traces of the overstrained reflection frequently observable in later developments of pastoral poetry. The longest and best of them is the Lament for Adonis (E7rn-as 'ASwwSos). It refers to the first day of the festival of Adonis, on which the death of the favourite of Aphrodite was lamented, thus forming an introduction to the Adoniazusae of Theocritus, the subject of which is the second day, when the reunion of Adonis and Aphrodite was celebrated. Fragments of his other pieces are preserved in Stobaeus; the epithalamium of Achilles and Deidameia is not his. Bion and Moschus have been edited separately by G Hermann (1849) and C Ziegler (Tbingen, 1869), the Epitaphios Adonidos by HL Ahrens (1854) and E Hiller in Beitrage zur Textegeschichte der griechischen Bukoliker (1888). Bion's poems are generally included in the editions of Theocritus. There are English translations by J Banks (1853) in Bohn's Classical Library, and by Andrew Long (1889), with Theocritus and Moschus; there is an edition of the text by U von Wilamowitz-Mollendorff in the Oxford Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca (1905). On the date of Bion see Franz Bcheler in Rheinisches Museum, xxx. (1875), pp. 33-411 also G Knaack in Pauly-Wissowa's Realencyclopdie, s.v.; and F Susemihl, Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur in der Alexandrinerzeit, i. (1891), p. 233.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
u.s. national forest
myth (computer game)
protoss
zerg
terran (starcraft)
how green was my valley
shor's algorithm
toxic mold
celtic tiger
1630s bc
1640s bc
1690s bc
1680s bc
1670s bc
1660s bc
1610s bc
1620s bc
1600s bc
1650s bc
andr malraux
supremum
upper bound
kaposi's sarcoma
gloster meteor
transatlantic telephone cable
frank whittle
pendulum
special olympics
nagano, nagano
pulse (legume)
nelly furtado
do it yourself
boer war
mary elizabeth braddon
guar
lady audley's secret
cephalopod
fluoxetine
signal reflection
emory university
transcendental meditation
voc
dutch east india company
bubble fusion