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Panyassis

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Native name
  
Πανυάσις

Notable work
  
Heracleia Ionica

Cause of death
  
Executed

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Panyassis Panyassis

Ethnicity
  
Greek

Died
  
454 BC, Halicarnassus

Occupation
  
Poet


Panyassis

Born
  
5th-century BC
Halicarnassus

Relatives
  
Herodotus (Nephew or cousin)

Panyassis | Wikipedia audio article


Panyassis of Halicarnassus, sometimes known as Panyasis (Ancient Greek: Πανύασις), was a 5th-century BC Greek epic poet from Halicarnassus in the Persian Empire (modern-day Bodrum, Turkey).

Contents

Life

Panyassis wrote in the Ancient Greek language, but is thought to have been of mixed Greek and Carian heritage because his name is linguistically Carian. In any case, his family was an educated and notable one - the pioneering historian Herodotus was either his nephew or his cousin. In 454 BC, Panyassis was executed for political activities by the tyrant of Halicarnassus and grandson of Artemisia, Lygdamis ΙΙ (Λύγδαμις), after an unsuccessful uprising against him.

Works

Panyassis enjoyed relatively little critical appreciation during his lifetime, but was posthumously recognised as one of the greatest poets of archaic Greece. His most famous works are: the Heracleia about the hero Herakles, written in epic hexameter, and the Ionica about the histories of the Ionian cities of Asia Minor, reportedly written in pentameter. These works are preserved today only in fragments. It is believed that he also wrote other works which have since been lost.

References

Panyassis Wikipedia