Doson, a surname of Antigonus, because he promised and never performed.
Dossēnus, or Dorsennus. See: [Dorsennus].
Dotădas, a king of Messenia, &c. Pausanias, bk. 4, ch. 3.
Doto, one of the Nereides. Virgil, Æneid, bk. 9, li. 102.
Dotus, a general of the Paphlagonians, in the army of Xerxes. Herodotus, bk. 7, ch. 72.
Doxander, a man mentioned by Aristotle, Politics, bk. 5.
Dracānus, a mountain where Jupiter took Bacchus from his thigh. Theocritus.
Draco, a celebrated lawgiver of Athens. When he exercised the office of archon, he made a code of laws, B.C. 623, for the use of the citizens, which, on account of their severity, were said to be written in letters of blood. By them, idleness was punished with as much severity as murder, and death was denounced against the one as well as the other. Such a code of rigorous laws gave occasion to a certain Athenian to ask of the legislator why he was so severe in his punishments, and Draco gave for answer, that as the smallest transgression had appeared to him deserving death, he could not find any punishment more rigorous for more atrocious crimes. These laws were at first enforced, but they were often neglected on account of their extreme severity, and Solon totally abolished them, except that one which punished a murderer with death. The popularity of Draco was uncommon, but the gratitude of his admirers proved fatal to him. When once he appeared on the theatre, he was received with repeated applauses, and the people, according to the custom of the Athenians, showed their respect to their lawgiver, by throwing garments upon him. This was done in such profusion, that Draco was soon hid under them, and smothered by the too great veneration of his citizens. Plutarch, Solon.——A man who instructed Plato in music. Plutarch, de Musica.
Dracontides, a wicked citizen of Athens. [♦]Plato [Comicus], The Sophists.
[♦] ‘Plut.’ replaced with ‘Plato’