Arcesilaus (disambiguation)

Arcesilaus or Arkesilaos (/ˌɑːrsɛsɪˈl.əs/; Ancient Greek: Ἀρκεσίλαος) is a Greek name, Arcesilaus is the Latin spelling, which may refer to:

Four Kings of Cyrene

Others

Statesmen

Mythology

Artists & writers

  • Arcesilaus, an Athenian comic poet of the Old Comedy, none of whose works are extant.
  • Arcesilaus, a sculptor who made a statue of the goddess Diana, celebrated by an ode of Simonides. He may, therefore, have flourished about 500 BCE.
  • Arcesilaus of Paros, was, according to Pliny, one of the first encaustic painters, and a contemporary of Polygnotus, around 460 BCE.
  • Arcesilaus, a painter, the son of the sculptor Tisicrates, flourished about 280 or 270 BCE. Pausanias mentions a painter of the same name, whose picture of Leosthenes and his sons was to be seen in the Peiraeeus. Though Leosthenes was killed in the war of Athens against Lamia, 323 BCE, Sillig argues, that the fact of his sons being included in the picture favors the supposition that it was painted after his death, and that we may therefore safely refer the passages of Pausanias and of Pliny to the same person.
  • Arcesilaus (sculptor)

Astronomy

  • 20961 Arkesilaos, an asteroid
gollark: I mostly just assume that things will go horribly unless someone comes up with a convenient workaround requiring no social change, such as geoengineering or something.
gollark: I mean, yes, it would be *bad* if we ignored the problem and flew pollutingly, but that doesn't mean people won't do it anyway.
gollark: It totally can. Climate change is an abstract and fairly faraway issue for people. "I can't conveniently fly like I used to" is really obvious and immediate.
gollark: Besides, nobody uses planes for high-volume shipping.
gollark: Maybe if batteries improve.

See also

  • Archelaus (disambiguation), a name commonly transliterated as "Arcesilaus"

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William (1870). "Arcesilaus". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. 1. p. 259.

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