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Aristophanes Of Byzantium

Greek critic and grammarian
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Born:
c. 257 bc
Died:
180 bc, Alexandria
Notable Works:
“About Analogy”
Subjects Of Study:
Greek language
grammar

Aristophanes Of Byzantium (born c. 257 bc—died 180 bc, Alexandria) was a Greek literary critic and grammarian who, after early study under leading scholars in Alexandria, was chief librarian there c. 195 bc.

Aristophanes was the producer of a text of Homer and also edited Hesiod’s Theogony, Alcaeus, Pindar, Euripides, Aristophanes, and perhaps Anacreon. Many of the Arguments prefixed in the manuscripts to Greek tragedies and comedies are ascribed to Aristophanes, and his study of Greek comedy led to separate works on Athenian courtesans and on character types. He revised and continued the Pinakes of Callimachus, a biographical history of Greek literature. As a lexicographer he compiled collections of archaic and unusual words, technical terms, and proverbs.

Portrait of Plato (ca. 428- ca. 348 BC), Ancient Greek philosopher.
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An Odyssey of Grecian Literature

As a grammarian Aristophanes founded a school and wrote a treatise, About Analogy, which laid down rules for declension, etc. In editing the work of lyric and dramatic poets he introduced innovations in metrical analysis and textual criticism that were widely adopted by later scholars. Aristophanes also was responsible for arranging Plato’s dialogues in trilogies, and he is generally credited with the foundation of the so-called Alexandrian Canon, a selection in each genre of literary work that contemporaries considered to be models of excellence.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.