Philiscus of Corcyra
, or
Philicus was a distinguished tragic poet, and one of the
seven who formed the Tragic Pleiad,
was also a priest of Dionysus, and in that
character he was present at the coronation procession of Ptolemy II Philadelphus in 284 BC. Pliny states that his portrait was
painted in the attitude of meditation by
Protogenes, who is known to have been still alive
in
304 BC. It seems, therefore, that the time
of Philiscus must be extended to an earlier period than that
assigned to him by the
Suda, who merely says
that he lived under Ptolemy Philadelphus. He wrote 42 dramas, of
which we know nothing, except that the
Themistocles, which
is enumerated among the plays of
Philiscus of Athens the comic poet,
ought probably to be ascribed to him : such subjects are known to
have been chosen by the tragedians, as in the
Marathonians
of
Lycophron. The
choriambic hexameter
verse was named after Philiscus, on account of his frequent use of
it (
Hephaestion . p. 53).
There is much dispute whether the name should be written, or , but
the former appears to be the true form, though he himself, for the
sake of metre, used the latter.
Spyridon Samaras from Corcyra
, the
composer of the Olympic Hymn was named
after Philiscus.
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