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Sositheus (c. 280 BC), Greek tragic poet, of Alexandria Troas, a member of the Alexandrian "pleiad". He must have resided at some time in Athens, since Diogenes Laërtius tells us that he attacked the Stoic Cleanthes on the stage, and was hissed off by the audience. As the ''Suda'' also calls him a Syracusan, it is conjectured that he belonged to the literary circle at the court of Hiero II. According to an epigram of Dioscorides in the ''Greek Anthology'' (''Anth. Pal.'' vii.707) he restored the satyric drama in its original form. A considerable fragment is extant of his pastoral play ''Daphnis'' or ''Lityerses'', in which the Sicilian shepherd, in search of his love Pimplea, is brought into connexion with the Phrygian reaper, son of Midas, who slew all who unsuccessfully competed with him in reaping his grain. Heracles came to the aid of Daphnis and slew Lityerses. See Otto Crusius s.v. Lityerses in Röscher's ''Lexikon der griechischen and römischen Mythologie''. The fragment of twenty-one lines in Nauck's ''Tragicorum graecorum fragmenta'' apparently contains the beginning of the drama. Two lines from the ''Aethlius'' (probably the traditional first king of Elis, father of Endymion) are quoted by Stobaeus (''Flor.'' li. 23). ==References== * 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sositheus」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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