Julius_Pollux Julius_Pollux

Julius Pollux - Definition and Overview

Julius Pollux (2nd century CE) was an Alexandrian grammarian and sophist who taught at Athens, where he was appointed professor of rhetoric at the Academy by the emperor Commodus— on account of his melodious voice, according to Philostratus' Lives of the Sophists. Nothing of his rhetorical works has survived except some of their titles (in the Suda).

Pollux was the author of the Onomasticon, a Greek thesaurus or dictionary of Attic synonyms and phrases, arranged not alphabetically but according to subject-matter, in ten books. It supplies in passing much rare and valuable information on many points of classical antiquity— objects in daily life, the theater, politics— and quotes numerous fragments of lost works.

Pollux was probably the person satirized by Lucian as a worthless and ignorant person who gains a reputation as an orator by sheer effrontery, and pilloried in his Lexiphanes, a satire upon the affectation of obscure and obsolete words.

A first Latin translation, published at Basel in 1541, made Julius Pollux more available to Renaissance antiquaries and scholars, and anatomists, who adopted obscure Greek words for parts of the body. Julius Pollus was invaluable for William Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, 1842, etc.

This article is based in part on material from the 1999 Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Example Usage of Julius

Dolphins3rd: Cleopatra had a child with Julius Caesar. AOW
halseyhoff: RT @AtomicIndy: Mid Century Modern photog, Julius Shulman's sweet home on the market. $2.5. Needs to find good hands. http://bit.ly/8E3ToY
AfrikanManChild: @LeloB i think that he's the same species at Julius Malema, a psychopath who feeds of negative energy.
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