<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="A"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="aristocles-bio-9" n="aristocles_9"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Aristocles</surname></persName></head><p>(<label xml:lang="grc">Ἀριστοκλῆς</label>), sculptors. From different passages in
      Pausanias we learn the following particulars :--</p><p>(1.) Aristocles of Cydonia was one of the most ancient sculptors; and though his age could
      not be clearly fixed, it was certain that he flourished before Zancle was called Messene
       (<bibl n="Paus. 5.25.6">Paus. 5.25.6</bibl>), that is, before 494 B. C.</p><p>(2.) The starting-pillar of the Hippodrome at Olympia was made by Cleoetas, the same
      sculptor by whom there was a statue at Athens bearing this inscription :</p><p>(<foreign xml:lang="grc">Ὃς τὴν ἱππάφεσιν Ὀλυμπίᾳ εὕρατο πρῶτος<lb/> Τεῦξέ
       με Κλεοίτας υἱός Ἀριστοκλέους</foreign>.</p><p>(6.20.7.)</p><p>(3.) There was an Aristocles, the pupil and son of Cleoetas. (5.24.1.)</p><p>(4.) Aristocles of Sicyon was the brother of Canachus, and not much inferior to him in
      reputation. This Aristocles had a pupil, Synnoön, who was the father and teacher of
      Ptolichus of Aegina. (6.9.1.) We are also told, in an epigram by Antipater Sidonius (<hi rend="ital">Greek Anthol.</hi> ii. p. 15, no. 35, Jacobs), that Aristocles made one of three
      statues of the Muses, the other two of which were made by Ageladas and Canachus. [<hi rend="smallcaps">AGELADAS.</hi>]</p><p>(5.) Pantias of Chios, the disciple and son of Sostratus, was the seventh disciple reckoned
      in order from Aristocles of Sicyon (<bibl n="Paus. 6.3.4">Paus. 6.3.4</bibl>), that is,
      according to a mode of reckoning which was common with the Greeks, counting both the first and
      the last of the series.</p><p>From these passages we infer, that there were two sculptors of this name: Aristocles the
      elder, who is called both a Cydonian and a Sicyonian, <pb n="303"/> probably because he was
      born at Cydonia and practised and taught his art in Sicyon; and Aristocles the younger, of
      Sicyon, who was the grandson of the former, son of Cleoetas, and brother of Canachus : and
      that these artists founded a school of sculpture at Sicyon, which secured an hereditary
      reputation, and of which we have the heads for seven generations, namely, Aristocles,
      Cleoetas, Aristocles and Canachus, Synnoön, Ptolichus, Sostratus, and Pantias.</p><p>There is some difficulty in determining the age of these artists; but, supposing the date of
      Canachus to be fixed at about 540-508 B. C. [<hi rend="smallcaps">CANACHUS</hi>], we have the
      date of his brother, the younger Aristocles, and allowing 30 years to a generation, the elder
      Aristocles must have lived about 600-568 B. C. Böckh (<hi rend="ital">Corp. Inscrip.</hi>
      i. p. 39) places him <hi rend="ital">immediately</hi> before the period when Zancle was first
      called Messene, but there is nothing in the words of Pausanias to require such a restriction.
      By extending the calculation to the other artists mentioned above, we get the following table
      of dates: <table><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">1.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Aristocles flourished</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">600 to 568</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">B. C.</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">2.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Cleoetas</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">570-538</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">3.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">{</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Aristocles</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">}</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">540-508</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Canachus</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">540-508</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">4.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Synnön</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">510-478</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">5.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Ptolichus</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">480-448</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">6.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Sostratus</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">450-418</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row><row role="data"><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">7.</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">Pantias</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1"> </cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">420-388</cell><cell cols="1" role="data" rows="1">"</cell></row></table></p><p>These dates are found to agree very well with all that we know of the artists. (See the
      respective articles.) Sillig (<hi rend="ital">Catal. Art. s. v.</hi>) gives a table which does
      not materially differ from the above. He calculates the dates at 564, 536, 508, 480, 452, 424,
      and 396 B. C. respectively. In this computation it has been assumed that the <hi rend="ital">elder</hi> Canachus was the brother of the <hi rend="ital">younger</hi> Aristocles, and that
      Pantias was the seventh in order from the <hi rend="ital">elder</hi> Aristocles. Any other
      supposition would throw the whole matter into confusion.</p><p>Pausanias mentions, as a work of the elder Aristocles, a group in bronze representing
      Hercules struggling for a girdle with an Amazon on horseback, which was dedicated at Olympia
      by Evagoras of Zancle (5.25.6); and, as a work of the younger, a group in bronze of Zeus and
      Ganymede, dedicated at Olympia by Gnothis, a Thessalian. (5.24.1.) The Muse by the latter,
      mentioned above (4), was in bronze, held a lyre (<foreign xml:lang="grc">χέλυς</foreign>),
      and was intended to represent the Muse of the diatonic genus of music. </p><byline>[<ref target="author.P.S">P.S</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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