- Ageladas
Ageladas (Gr. polytonic|Ἀγελάδας) or Hagelaidas,Citation
last = Mason
first = Charles Peter
author-link =
contribution = Ageladas
editor-last = Smith
editor-first = William
title =Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
volume = 1
pages = 67
publisher =
place = Boston
year = 1867
contribution-url = http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/0076.html ] was a celebrated Argive sculptor, who flourished in the latter part of the 6th and the early part of the5th century BC . [Pausanias, "Description of Greece" vi. 8. § 4, vii. 24. § 2, x. 10. § 3]Ageladas' fame is enhanced by his having been the instructor of the three great masters,
Phidias , [Suda "s.v."] [Scholiast "ad Arist. Ran." 504] [John Tzetzes , "Chiliades " vii. 154, viii. 191—-for the names polytonic|Ἐλάδου and polytonic|Γελάδου are unquestionably merely corruptions of polytonic|Ἀγελάδου, as was first observed byJohannes Meursius , with whomJohann Joachim Winckelmann ,Friedrich Thiersch , and Müller agree]Myron , andPolykleitos . [Pliny the Elder , "Natural History" xxxiv. 8, s. 19] The determination of the period when Ageladas flourished has given rise to a great deal of discussion, owing to the apparently contradictory statements in the writers who mention the name. Pausanias tells us that Ageladas cast a statue of Cleosthenes (who gained a victory in the chariot-race in the 66thOlympiad ) with the chariot, horses, and charioteer, which was set up at Olympia. [Pausanias, "Description of Greece" vi. 10. §2] There were also at Olympia statues by him ofTimasitheus of Delphi and Anochus of Tarentum. Timasitheus was put to death by the Athenians, for his participation in the attempt ofIsagoras inOlympiad lxviii. 2 (507 BC ); and Anochus (as we learn from Eusebius) was a victor in the games of the 65thOlympiad . So far everything is clear; and if we suppose Ageladas to have been born about540 BC , he may very well have been the instructor ofPhidias . On the other hand Pliny says that Ageladas, withPolykleitos ,Phradmon , andMyron , flourished in the 87thOlympiad . This agrees with the statement of thescholiast onAristophanes , that atMelite there was a statue ofHeracles (polytonic|Ἡρακλῆς ἀλεξίκακος), the work of Ageladas the Argive, which was set up during the great pestilence (Olympiad lxxxvii. 3. 4).To these authorities must be added a passage of
Pausanias , [Pausanias, "Description of Greece" iv. 33. § 3] where he speaks of a statue ofZeus made by Ageladas for theMessenia ns ofNaupactus . This must have been after the year455 BC , when the Messenians were allowed by the Athenians to settle at Naupactus. In order to reconcile these conflicting statements, some suppose that Pliny's date is wrong, and that the statue ofHeracles had been made by Ageladas long before it was set up at Melite. Others think that Pliny's date is correct, but that Ageladas did not make the statues of the Olympic victors mentioned by Pausanias until many years after their victories; which in the case of three persons, the dates of whose victories are so nearly the same, would be a very extraordinary coincidence.The most probable solution of the difficulty is that of
Friedrich Thiersch , who thinks that there were two artists of this name; one an Argive, the instructor ofPhidias , born about540 BC , the other a native ofSicyon , who flourished at the date assigned by Pliny, and was confounded by thescholiast onAristophanes with his more illustrious namesake of Argos. Thiersch supports this hypothesis by an able criticism on a passage of Pausanias. [v. 24. § 1] Other scholars assume that there were two artists of the name of Ageladas, but both were Argives. Ageladas the Argive executed one of a group of threeMuse s, representing respectively the presiding geniuses of thediatonic ,chromatic andenharmonic styles of Greek music.Canachus and Aristocles of Sicyon made the other two. [Antipater, "Anth. Pal. Plan." 220] [Friedrich Thiersch , "Epoch, d. bild. Kunst." pp. 158—164]References
*SmithDGRBM
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