
Also known as Apollonius Rhodius
3rd century BC Greek epic poet
Apollonius of Rhodes was a Greek epic poet who lived in the 3rd century BC and is best known for writing the *Argonautica*, an ancient poem about Jason and his crew's quest for the Golden Fleece. His work is significant because it represents an important example of Hellenistic poetry and helped shape how later writers told stories about Greek mythology.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Top works
via Open Library + Wikidata
Crew
via TMDB
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Apollonius+of+Rhodes">Read more on Last.fm</a>
~22 min read
Apollonius of Rhodes (Ancient Greek: Ἀπολλώνιος ὁ Ῥόδιος, Apollṓnios o Rhódios; Latin: Apollonius Rhodius; fl. first half of 3rd century BC) was an ancient Greek author, best known for the Argonautica, an epic poem about Jason and the Argonauts and their quest for the Golden Fleece. The poem is one of the few extant examples of the epic genre and it was both innovative and influential, providing Ptolemaic Egypt with a "cultural mnemonic" or national "archive of images", and offering the Latin poets Virgil and Gaius Valerius Flaccus a model for their own epics. His other poems, which survive only in small fragments, concerned the beginnings or foundations of cities, such as Alexandria and Cnidus, which were places of interest to the Ptolemies, whom he served as a scholar and librarian at the Library of Alexandria. A literary dispute with Callimachus, another Alexandrian librarian/poet, is a topic much discussed by modern scholars since it is thought to give some insight into their poetry, although there is very little evidence that there ever was such a dispute between the two men. In fact, almost nothing at all is known about Apollonius and even his connection with Rhodes is a matter for speculation. Once considered a mere imitator of Homer, and therefore a failure as a poet, his reputation has been enhanced by recent studies, with an emphasis on the special characteristics of Hellenistic poets as scholarly heirs of a long literary tradition writing at a unique time in history.
Life
5 total works indexed
· 1978 · cited 21,558x
· 2020 · cited 8,884x
· 1977 · cited 7,910x
· 2020 · cited 6,600x
· 2006 · cited 5,116x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikiquote · CC BY-SA
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).