- Alexandrian Pleiad
The Alexandrian Pleiad is the name given to a group of seven
Alexandria npoet s andtragedian s in the3rd century B.C. (Alexandria was at that time the literary center of theMediterranean ) working in the court ofPtolemy II Philadelphus . The name derives from the seven stars of the Pleiadesstar cluster .There are several conflicting lists of the greatest poets of the Alexandrian age (traditionally ascribed to
Aristophanes of Byzantium andAristarchus of Samothrace ) which include the "Alexandrian Pleiad", some with tragic poets, other which include lyric or epic poets. The following members are usually always included in the "Alexandrian Pleiad":* Homerus the younger, son of Andromachus, from Byzantium, a tragedian who wrote 57 plays
* Philicus
*Lycophron
*Alexander Aetolus , tragic poet
*Sositheus of Alexandria, dramatist
*Aeantides , a poet traditionally associated with the "Tragic pleiad" The other members are variously:
*Theocritus , who wrote the bucolic poems
*Aratus , who wrote the "Phaenomena" and other poems
*Nicander
* Apollonius, who wrote the "Argonautica"
* Sosiphanes of Syracuse, tragic poetLater uses
The name "Pléiade" was adopted in 1323 by a group of fourteen poets (seven men and seven women) in
Toulouse and is used as well to refer to the group of poets aroundPierre de Ronsard andJoachim du Bellay inFrance in the 16th century (see "La Pléiade "). In modern times, "pleiad" is also used as a collective noun for a small group of brilliant or eminent persons.ources
*"The Oxford Classical Dictionary." London: Oxford University Press, 1949.
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