[Home]History of Anaximenes of Lampsacus

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Anaximenes of Lampsacus (fl. 380-320 B.C.), Greek
rhetorician and historian, was a favourite of Alexander the Great, whom he accompanied in his Persian campaigns. He
wrote histories of Greece and of Philip, and an epic on
Alexander (fragments in Muller, Scriptores Rerum Alexandri Magni.) As a rhetorician, he was a determined opponent of
Isocrates? and his school. The Rhetorica ad Alexandrum,
usually included among the works of Aristotle, is now
generally admitted to be by Anaximenes, although some consider
it a much later production (edition by Spengel, 1847).

See P. Wendland, Anax. von Lampsakos (1905); also RHETORIC.


Anaximenes of Lampsacus (fl. 380-320 BC), Greek rhetorician and historian, was a favourite of Alexander the Great, whom he accompanied in his Persian campaigns. He wrote histories of Greece and of [Philip of Macedon]?, and an epic on Alexander (fragments in Muller, Scriptores Rerum Alexandri Magni.) As a rhetorician, he was a determined opponent of
Isocrates? and his school. The Rhetorica ad Alexandrum ("Rhetoric to Alexander"), traditionally included among the works of Aristotle, is now generally admitted to be by Anaximenes, although some consider it a much later production.

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