Herodotus (physician) explained
Herodotus (; grc|Ἡρόδοτος|Hēródotos, pronounced as /grc-x-attic/) was the name of more than one physician in the time of ancient Greece and Rome:
- A pupil of Athenaeus, or perhaps Agathinus,[1] who belonged to the Pneumatic school.[2] He probably lived towards the end of the 1st century AD, and lived at Rome, where he practised medicine with great success.[1] He wrote some medical works, which are several times quoted by Galen and Oribasius, but of which only some fragments remain.
- The son of Arieus, a native either of Tarsus or Philadelphia, who probably belonged to the Empiric school. He was a pupil of Menodotus of Nicomedia, and tutor to Sextus Empiricus, and lived therefore in the 2nd century AD.[3]
- The physician mentioned by Galen,[4] together with Euryphon, as having recommended human milk in cases of consumption, was probably a different person from either of the preceding, and may have been a contemporary of Euryphon in the 5th century BC.
References
Inline citations
Notes and References
- Galen, De Differ. Puls., iv. 11, vol. viii.
- Galen, De Simplic. Medica. Temper. ac Facult., i. 29, col. xi.
- Suda, Sexstos, Diogenes Laërtius, ix. 116
- Galen, De Bon. et Prav. Aliment. Succ., c. 4. vol. vi.; De Meth. Med., vii. 6. vol. x