[1421] She was a poetess of Teios or Lesbos, and a contemporary of Sappho.
[1422] “Multiplicasse veritatem.” Sillig has commented at some length on this passage, Dict. Ancient Artists.
[1424] There is a painter of this name mentioned in B. xxxv. c. [43]. The reading is extremely doubtful.
[1425] Mentioned by Plato, De Legibus, B. viii. and by Pausanias, B. vi. c. 13. He was thrice victorious at the Olympic Games.
[1426] Python.
[1427] From the Greek word Δικαιὸς, “just,” or “trustworthy.”—B.
[1428] Diogenes Laertius mentions a Pythagoras, a statuary, in his life of his celebrated namesake, the founder of the great school of philosophy.—B. Pausanias, B. ix. c. 33, speaks of a Parian statuary of this name.
[1430] See end of B. vii.