Stoic History posidonius of rhodes (13550 fl), taught by Diogenes, Panaetius, heard by Cicero on geography, anthropology and history; Hecaton of Rhodes wrote a book about practical ethics http://www.cnu.edu/phil/carr/StoicBio.htm
Extractions: Mid Zeno of Citium (344/34-263/2), taught Cleanthes son of Phanias of Assos (331-232) (head263-232), taught Chrysippus of Soli (b280.; head 232-d207/6), taught Zeno of Tarsus (head from 206) Ariston "the Bald", son of Miltiades of Chios, (fl. 270-50?) taught by Zeno, became a heretic Herillus of Carthage, taught by Zeno, became a heretic Dionysius, taught by Zeno Persaeus of Citium, taught by Zeno Aratus of Soli, taught by Zeno Sphaerus of the Bosphorus, taught by Cleanthes, tutor of Cleomenes the king of Sparta and Ptolemy Philopater of Alexandria Eratosthenes of Cyrene (c276-196) Diogenes of Seleucia (Babylon) (head until 152), taught by Chrysippus, taught Antipater of Tarsus ( head c150-129) Panaetius of Rhodes (185-110; head from 129)
Biography-center - Letter P .com/myths/bios/poseidon.html. posidonius of rhodes, wwwhistory.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/ Mathematicians/Posidonius.html. Post, Emil http://www.biography-center.com/p.html
Extractions: random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish 538 biographies
Posidonius posidonius of rhodes. Born 135 BC in Apameia, Syria Died 51 BC in Rhodes. Posidoniusof Rhodes is also known as Posidonius of Apameia. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Posidonius.html
Extractions: Posidonius of Rhodes is also known as Posidonius of Apameia. The first of these names refers to where he taught while the second refers to the town of his birth, Apameia on the Orontes. One must not think of these two as different people. Although he was born in Apameia in Syria, Posidonius was from a Greek family and he was brought up in the Greek tradition. He went to Athens to complete his education, and there he studied under the Stoic philosopher Panaetius of Rhodes . Posidonius travelled widely in the western Mediterranean region and he made many scientific studies on his travels relating to astronomy, geography and geology. Some time not long after 100 BC Posidonius became the head of the Stoic School in Rhodes. While in this position he also held political office in Rhodes. It was in a political position, as ambassador of Rhodes, that he travelled to Rome in 87-86 BC. There he met a number of men who he had known and taught earlier including Cicero In Rome Posidonius visited Gaius Marius , the Roman general and politician who was consul seven times. Marius died on 13 January 86 BC while Posidonius was still in Rome. While there Posidonius became friends with
Geminus A much discussed question is the dependence of Geminus on the famousstoic philosopher posidonius of rhodes (who died around 50 BC). http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Geminus.html
Extractions: It may be surprising that Geminus 's name seems to be Latin rather than Greek but as Heath writes [3]:- The occurrence of a Latin name in a centre of Greek culture need not surprise us, since Romans settled in such centres in large numbers during the last century BC. Geminus, however, in spite of his name, was thoroughly Greek. Geminus is believed by many historians to have worked in Rhodes. Certainly his astronomy text uses mountains on Rhodes to make specific points but, as Dicks points out in [1], this is not proof that he worked there. For example, Geminus refers to Mt Atabyrius (today called Mt Attaviros) without giving any indication of where it is but when he refers to Mt Cyllene he is careful to indicate that it is the Peloponnesus. However, since Rhodes was at this time the centre for astronomical research, and was taken as the reference point for latitude in astronomical observations, it is quite possible that Geminus would assume his reader were familiar with the reference points of Rhodes such as Mt Atabyrius without further comment. Geminus was a Stoic philosopher and either a pupil, or perhaps a later follower, of
Posidonius Biography of Posidonius (135BC51BC) posidonius of rhodes. Born 135 BC in Apameia, Syria Main index. posidonius of rhodes is also known as Posidonius of Apameia http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Posidonius.html
Extractions: Posidonius of Rhodes is also known as Posidonius of Apameia. The first of these names refers to where he taught while the second refers to the town of his birth, Apameia on the Orontes. One must not think of these two as different people. Although he was born in Apameia in Syria, Posidonius was from a Greek family and he was brought up in the Greek tradition. He went to Athens to complete his education, and there he studied under the Stoic philosopher Panaetius of Rhodes . Posidonius travelled widely in the western Mediterranean region and he made many scientific studies on his travels relating to astronomy, geography and geology. Some time not long after 100 BC Posidonius became the head of the Stoic School in Rhodes. While in this position he also held political office in Rhodes. It was in a political position, as ambassador of Rhodes, that he travelled to Rome in 87-86 BC. There he met a number of men who he had known and taught earlier including Cicero In Rome Posidonius visited Gaius Marius , the Roman general and politician who was consul seven times. Marius died on 13 January 86 BC while Posidonius was still in Rome. While there Posidonius became friends with
HERMAGORAS school, the members of which called themselves Hermagorei. His chief opponent was posidonius of rhodes, who is said to http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/H/HE/HERMAGORAS.htm
HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results Skeptic (Altadena, CA); September 22, 2003; McIver, Tom creator. (25) Ciceroalso relates that posidonius of rhodes, a firstcentury BC Stoic http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru
World Civ I Terms The successor states (Saleucid Syria, Ptolomaic Egypt, Antigonid Macedonia) Pergamum. Rhodes. Individualism. Realism Panaetius and posidonius of rhodes. Epictetus (c. 50 135) http://www.utc.edu/~bwright/trms103.html
Search Results For Entire - Encyclopædia Britannica posidonius of rhodes Biographical sketch of this Greek philosopher, consideredthe most learned man of his time and, possibly, of the entire Stoic school. http://www.britannica.com/search?query=entire&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
Search Results For Stoics - Encyclopædia Britannica , posidonius of rhodes Biographical sketch of this Greek philosopher, consideredthe most learned man of his time and, possibly, of the entire Stoic school. http://www.britannica.com/search?query=stoics&fuzzy=N&ct=eb&start=8&show=10
Mathem_abbrev Francesca, Piero della Francesca Pisano, Leonardo Fibonacci Planck, Max Plato Playfair,John Pontryagin, Lev Porphyry of Malchus posidonius of rhodes Post, Emil http://www.pbcc.cc.fl.us/faculty/domnitcj/mgf1107/mathrep1.htm
Extractions: Mathematician Report Index Below is a list of mathematicians. You may choose from this list or report on a mathematician not listed here. In either case, you must discuss with me the mathematician you have chosen prior to starting your report. No two students may write a report on the same mathematician. I would advise you to go to the library before choosing your topic as there might not be much information on the mathematician you have chosen. Also, you should determine the topic early in the term so that you can "lock-in" your report topic!! The report must include: 1. The name of the mathematician. 2. The years the mathematician was alive. 3. A biography. 4. The mathematician's major contribution(s) to mathematics and an explanation of the importance. 5. A historical perspective during the time the mathematician was alive.
Northvegr - Germanic Sources Pliny the Elder (Caius Plinius) Pliny the Younger, (Gaius Plinius Caecilius Secundus) Plutarch Pompeius Trogus posidonius of rhodes Priscus Of Panium http://www.northvegr.org/lore/germanic/index.php
Northvegr - Germanic Sources ** Pompeius Trogus, (Cnaeus) 61 (!) ** posidonius of rhodes (c. 13550 BCE) Syrianphilosopher, devoted to Germany the thirtieth of his fifty-two books of http://www.northvegr.org/lore/germanic/p.php
Extractions: Paterculus, Gaius Velleius Roman History : served as army officer on the Rhine frontier after defeat of Varus in 9 CE. The Germans inspired fear and terror at this time. He called the Germans inhuman savages, feri ; This was an extreme view of one who encountered Germans in crisis but this viewpoint is echoed in other sources at later dates. The Germans were seen as tall ferocious northerners, a dire threat even to the best army of the ancient world. Giving a brief account of the Varus disaster, Paterculus' passage lays blame for the disaster very much on Varus and gives the names of two of his senior officers;
OML: Neptune's Realm: Currents limited to specific regions) are affected by astrological, or lunar, events was realizedas early as the first century BC by posidonius of rhodes and affirmed http://www.usm.maine.edu/maps/exhibit8/nrcurr.html
Extractions: Charting Neptune's Realm The Enigma of Currents In the sixteenth, and well into the seventeenth century, the course of ocean currents was virtually unknown. But as European ships left the familiar shores of continental Europe and their trade routes in the Mediterranean to venture out into the Sea of Darkness, or Great Green Sea of Gloom, as Arab geographers called the Atlantic Ocean, they encountered great rivers within the seathe ocean currents. With an ever increasing number of expeditions to discover new lands and a sea route to the East Indies, mariners slowly accumulated new knowledge of these currents. Gradually, general patterns began to emerge. William Bourne, in his A Regiment for the Sea (1580), describes how the Portuguese in sailing toward the East Indies kept away from the westward setting Agulhas current off Cabo bone sperance (Cape of Good Hope) by sailing a hundred or a hundred and fifty leagues south of the Cape. On the return trip they made use of this self-same current to speed their passage by sailing close to the Cape. When they entered the northern Atlantic, mariners avoided the contrary setting Canary Current, and the Northeast Tradewinds, by making a wide sweep to the northwest until halfway to America, before setting a final course homeward. The Spanish also gained knowledge of this invisible mover of shipsthe great clockwise gyre of water in the North Atlantic. On their way to the West Indies, Spanish ships sailed south past the Canary Islands, then turned west to take advantage of the westward flowing North Equatorial Current. Returning, they sailed north with the Florida Current (between the Bahamas and Florida) to higher latitudes, then headed homeward. Christopher Columbus followed this route on his voyages, but he attributed the favorable eastward set of the Gulf Stream to the effect of tides, rather than recognizing it as part of the continuous circle of current in the North Atlantic.
HERMAGORAS His chief opponent was posidonius of rhodes, who is said to have contendedwith him in argument in the presence of Pompey (Plutarch, Porn pey, 42). http://27.1911encyclopedia.org/H/HE/HERMAGORAS.htm
Delv.co.uk: St. Louis Post-dispatch Websites In The UK Giovanni Della (409*) posidonius of rhodes (908*) Post , Emil(1939*) Potapov , Vladimir (577*) Poussin Mathematics and http://www.delv.co.uk/kqry/st. louis post-dispatch
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Euclid - Books I-IX of mathematics, and also wrote, about 7367 BC, a not less comprehensive commentaryon the meteorological textbook of his teacher posidonius of rhodes. http://www.headmap.org/unlearn/euclid/before/proclus.htm
Map - Southern Italy In The 3rd Century B.C. It was the calculation made by posidonius of rhodes (b. ca. 135 BC), however,that had been accepted by Columbus, as it had also been by Ptolemy. http://www.roangelo.net/valente/samnium.html
Extractions: Home Search Site Map Valente and DiRenzo Family History - Historical Background Maps - 3rd Century B.C. Roman Italy On this page ... Map Source: the map above is based on map 23 titled "Italy Before the First Punic War 264 B.C." drawn by Berit Lee in Historical Atlas of the World (Edinburgh, 1970; original edition: Oslo, 1962). (Warning: much of what follows is only my opinions, and I am not an historian. The sources for these notes are cited, where remembered. Last revised: November 2002, with minor changes after that.) At the time of this map, Roman territory extended northwards about 125 miles from Asculum (Ascoli Piceno) to just beyond Florentia (Florence) and ended in the south at the Strait of Messana (Messina). Both the islands of Sardinia and Corsica were Carthaginian territory. Neapolis (Naples) and the nearby island of Pithecussa (Ischia) were Greek colonies.
Extractions: E ncyclopedic Theosophical Glossary: Ard-Asr EDITORS' NOTE: This electronic version of the Encyclopedic Theosophical Glossary is presented to the public as a work in progress. The manuscript, produced originally in the 1930s and '40s, is currently being revised and expanded by the Editorial Committee. Theosophical University Press is presenting this working version online because, even in its present unfinished form, we feel that the contents will be of value to students of theosophical literature, particularly of the works of H. P. Blavatsky. The manuscript will be updated periodically. Comments, corrections, and suggestions are welcome; please send to eglossary@theosociety.org NB Quick links: Aa-Adh Adi-Ag Ah-Al Am-Ani ... List of Abbreviations Ardan See ERIDANUS Ardeshan Ardeshir Babagan Revisor and translator of the Zend-avesta Ardhamatra (Sanskrit) [from ardha half + matra a metrical unit] Half a short syllable; the Nadabindu-Upanishad in speaking of Aum says that the syllable or character A is considered to be Kalahamsa's right wing; U, the left wing; M, the tail of the Swan, and the ardhamatra its head (cf VS 5, 74-5). In the Mahabharata kalahamsa is the name of several species of the hamsa bird, a goose or swan. Ardhamatra is a mystical term for one of the portions of the swan of time Brahma or the manifest or Third Logos of the universe, whose emanation or creative activity is hamsa-vahana (the vehicle or carrier of the swan). Ardhamatra, therefore, has reference to the egoic individuality of the cosmic Third Logos or Brahma (also called Purusha), considered to be "one-half the measure" of the eternal past and the eternal future such egoic individuality being the product in space and time of the continuously reimbodying spirit of the universe, evolving and changing its nature by evolution as the cycles of time pass from the present into the past, and forwards into the future.