(Ῥοῖκος), the son of Phileas or Philaeus, of Samos, an architect and statuary, belonging
Respecting Rhoecus himself we are informed that he was the first architect of the great temple of Hera at Samos (Hdt. 3.60), which Theodorus completed; and also, in conjunction with Smilis and Theodorus, of the labyrinth at Lemnos (Plin. Nat. 36.13, s. 19.3); that he, and the members of his family who succeeded him, invented the art of casting statues in bronze and iron (Paus. 8.14.5, s. 8; Plin. Nat. 35.12, s. 43), and that there still existed, at the time of Pausanias, in the temple of Artemis at Ephesus, a bronze statue of rude antique workmanship, which was said to represent night, and to have been the work of Rhoecus. (Paus. 10.38.3, s. 6.)
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