Aedesius the philosopher, 377–379, 391–393, 326–327, 338, 365, 367, 369, 373, 411, 427; teacher of the Emperor Julian, 429–431; death of, 439; compared with Priscus, 463, 467, 541; the younger, son of Chrysanthius, 559
Anatolius ofBerytus, prefect of Illyricum, 499–507, 330, 331, 473, 498
Anatolius the philosopher, 363
Andromachus the sophist at Athens, 361
Anteros, spirit of the spring, 369, 371
Anthology, Palatine, 337
Anti-Lebanon, 363
Antioch, 322, 328, 329. 332, 333, 336, 338, 394, 395, 455; Valens at, 457; capital of Coele Syria, 519
Antioch (Nisibis), 531
Antoninus, son of Eustathius, 416–421, 425
Apamea in Bithynia, 563
Apollo, invoked by a
588
Indexes
magician, 425; in Homer, 427
Apollonius of Tyana, 347, 543
Apsines the rhetorician, 467, 469, 471, 475
Aquilinus the neo-Platonist, 359
Arabia, 332; pupils from, 489; Diophantus of, 515
Arcadius, the Emperor, 319, 453
Archidamus, 531
Archytas the philosopher, 543
Aristeides the sophist, 335, 492, 493, 496, 517
Aristophanes, 381, 391, 524
Aristotle, 531, 541
Armenia, 330, 481, 485
Arrian, 477
Artabri, the, a Lusitanian tribe, 451
Asclepius, 532
Asia, 383, 393, 401, 411, 443, 449; Clearchus, proconsul of, 451; definition of the province of, 453; Nemesis in, 458, 477, 489; Justus, prefect in, 553