Phecianus, the disciple of Quintus.
Julian the Alexandrian, the immediate predecessor of Galen, who frequently animadverts on his writings.
Galen, flourished between 150–190 P.C.; wrote Commentaries, still in existence, on the following works:—On the Nature of Man; on Regimen in Health; on Regimen in Acute Diseases; on the Prognostics; on the First Book of the Prorrhetics; on the Aphorisms; on the First, the Third, and the Sixth Books of the Epidemics; on the Treatise on Fractures; on the Articulations; on the Physicians’ Establishment or Surgery; on the Humours; fragments of the Commentaries on Airs, Waters, Places, and on the Aliment. Besides these, he wrote several other Commentaries, which are lost.
Domnus, of uncertain date, after Galen.
Attalion, like the last, cited in the Commentary attributed to Oribasius.
Philagrius, of uncertain date, quoted by Theophilus.
Gesius, of uncertain date.
Asclepius, of uncertain date, quoted by Theophilus. (Dietz, tom. ii., p. 458.)
Stephanus, the Athenian, supposed by Dietz to have lived in the reign of Heraclius, that is to say, in the earlier part of the seventh century. According to Dietz, not the same as Stephanus Alexandrinus.
Palladius, probably about the seventh century; his Commentary on the book “On Fractures,” published by Foës, and a considerable portion of his Commentary “On the Sixth Epidemic,” by Dietz.