Fordmadoxfraud: ref Artemon of Cassandreia
{{Short description|Ancient Greek writer of the 2nd century BCE}}
{{other people|Artemon}}
'''Artemon''' ({{lang-grc|Ἀρτέμων}}) of [[Pergamon]] was a [[rhetoric]]ian of [[ancient Greece]], a [[Grammarian (Greco-Roman)|grammarian]] and writer who wrote a history of [[Sicily]], which is now lost. We know of him primarily from his frequent mentions by ancient grammarians, especially the [[scholiast]]s on the [[Greek lyric|lyric poet]] [[Pindar]], about whom Artemon also wrote commentaries.<ref>[[Scholiast]] on [[Pindar]]'s ''Pythian Odes'' 1.1, 32, 3.48</ref><ref>[[Pindar]], ''Olympian Odes'' 2.16, 5.1</ref><ref>[[Pindar]], ''Isthmian Odes'' ii. Argum.</ref><ref>[[Scholiast]] on [[Lycophron]] 177</ref>
He was said in some works to have been a student of the grammarian and [[Stoicism|stoic]] [[philosophy|philosopher]] [[Crates of Mallus]].<ref>{{cite book
| last =Sandys
| first =John Edwin
| authorlink =John Sandys (classicist)
| title =A History of Classical Scholarship
| publisher =[[Cambridge University Press]]
| series =
| edition=3
| volume =1
| date =1921
| pages =160
| language =English
| url =https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_History_of_Classical_Scholarship_Vol_1/-cA8AAAAIAAJ
| isbn =
| accessdate=2024-03-28}}</ref> As with many writers of his name, he is frequently confounded with other authors of his rough time period who produced works in various genres, such as [[Artemon of Cassandreia]].
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{DGRBM|author=LS|title= Artemon (8) |volume=1|page=377|url=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moa/acl3129.0001.001/392}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Artemon}}
[[Category:Ancient Greek writers known only from secondary sources]]
[[Categoryeople from Pergamon]]
[[Category:Ancient Greek grammarians]]
[[Category:2nd-century BC Greek writers]]
Okumaya devam et...
{{Short description|Ancient Greek writer of the 2nd century BCE}}
{{other people|Artemon}}
'''Artemon''' ({{lang-grc|Ἀρτέμων}}) of [[Pergamon]] was a [[rhetoric]]ian of [[ancient Greece]], a [[Grammarian (Greco-Roman)|grammarian]] and writer who wrote a history of [[Sicily]], which is now lost. We know of him primarily from his frequent mentions by ancient grammarians, especially the [[scholiast]]s on the [[Greek lyric|lyric poet]] [[Pindar]], about whom Artemon also wrote commentaries.<ref>[[Scholiast]] on [[Pindar]]'s ''Pythian Odes'' 1.1, 32, 3.48</ref><ref>[[Pindar]], ''Olympian Odes'' 2.16, 5.1</ref><ref>[[Pindar]], ''Isthmian Odes'' ii. Argum.</ref><ref>[[Scholiast]] on [[Lycophron]] 177</ref>
He was said in some works to have been a student of the grammarian and [[Stoicism|stoic]] [[philosophy|philosopher]] [[Crates of Mallus]].<ref>{{cite book
| last =Sandys
| first =John Edwin
| authorlink =John Sandys (classicist)
| title =A History of Classical Scholarship
| publisher =[[Cambridge University Press]]
| series =
| edition=3
| volume =1
| date =1921
| pages =160
| language =English
| url =https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_History_of_Classical_Scholarship_Vol_1/-cA8AAAAIAAJ
| isbn =
| accessdate=2024-03-28}}</ref> As with many writers of his name, he is frequently confounded with other authors of his rough time period who produced works in various genres, such as [[Artemon of Cassandreia]].
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{DGRBM|author=LS|title= Artemon (8) |volume=1|page=377|url=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moa/acl3129.0001.001/392}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Artemon}}
[[Category:Ancient Greek writers known only from secondary sources]]
[[Categoryeople from Pergamon]]
[[Category:Ancient Greek grammarians]]
[[Category:2nd-century BC Greek writers]]
Okumaya devam et...