Athenian sophist (late 5th-early 4th century BC)
Polycrates (Greek : Πολυκράτης c. 440 -370 B.C.) was a sophist from Athens , who later retired to the island of Cyprus .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
He wrote a work titled The Indictment of Socrates , thought to have been written during the 390s BC. He wrote works about the Greek mythical characters Clytaemnestra , wife of Agamemnon , king of Mycenae , and Busiris , a king of Egypt. He also wrote verses on cooking pots, mice, counters, pebbles and salt.[ 1] [ 2] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
The poet Aeschrion of Samos claimed that Polycrates was the author of the sex manual traditionally attributed to Philaenis of Samos .[ 8]
^ a b John Lemprière (1839). A Classical Dictionary containing a copious account of all the proper names mentioned in antient authors with the value of coins, weights and measures, used among the Greeks and Romans, and a chronological table . T Cadell 1893. Retrieved 20 March 2019 .
^ a b D Russell, St John's College Oxford (2012). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (p.1176) . Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199545568 . Retrieved 20 March 2019 .
^ O'Grady, Patricia (2013). The Sophists: An Introduction . A&C Black. pp. 155– 156. ISBN 9781472521194 . Retrieved 20 March 2019 .
^ William Keith Chambers Guthrie - Socrates (p.11) Cambridge University Press, 1971 (reprint, revised) ISBN 0521096677 Volume 2 of Fifth-Century Enlightenment [Retrieved 2015-05-02]
^ Chisholm, Hugh , ed. (1911). "Polycrates of Athens" . Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 23; see line two. He composed declamations on paradoxical themes
^ Jacqueline de Romilly - A Short History of Greek Literature (p.128) University of Chicago Press, 1985 ISBN 0226143120 [Retrieved 2015-05-02]
^ Richard Bentley, Alexander Dyce - Anglistica and Americana (p.193-4) Georg Olms Verlag 1836 ISBN 3487401932 [Retrieved 2015-05-02]
^ West, M. L. (1977). "Erinna". ZPE . 25 : 118.