Hagnon of Tarsus
Hagnon of
Athenaeus cites him for a curious piece of information that "among the Spartans it is custom for girls before their marriage to be treated like favorite boys (paidikois)" (i.e. sexually).[3] Plutarch quotes him as the source of a story concerning an elephant which was being cheated of its food by its keeper:[4]
Hagnon tells a story of an elephant in Syria, that was bred up in a certain house, who observed that his keeper took away and defrauded him every day of half the measure of his barley; only that once, the master being present and looking on, the keeper poured out the whole measure; which was no sooner done, but the elephant, extending his proboscis, separated the barley and divided it into two equal parts, thereby ingeniously discovering, as much as in him lay, the injustice of his keeper.
Hagnon is also mentioned by Cicero.[5]
Some modern scholars have considered this Hagnon to be the same man as the
References
- ^ Schmitz, Leonhard (1867), "Agnon", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, p. 74, archived from the original on 2012-10-07, retrieved 2016-08-05
- ^ Quintilian, ii. 17. 15
- ^ Athenaeus, xiii. 602D–E
- ^ Plutarch, xii. 375 (968D)
- ^ Cicero, Academica, ii. 16; Index Acad. xxiii. 4–6
- ^ David Ruhnken, Hist. Crit. Orat. Graec. p. xc
- ^ Cornelius Nepos, Phoc. 3
- ^ Athenaeus, xiii. p. 602
Further reading
- Robert W. Smith, Donald Cross Bryant, (1968), Ancient Greek and Roman Rhetoricians: A Biographical Dictionary, p. 52. Artcraft Press
- Charles Brittain, (2001), Philo of Larissa, page 311. Oxford University Press
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
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