Echecrates

In ancient Greece, Echecrates (Greek: Ἐχεκράτης) was the name of the following men:

  • Echecrates of Thessaly, a military officer of Ptolemy IV Philopator, documented around 219–217 BC.
  • A son of Demetrius the Fair (c. 285–250 BC) by Olympias of Larissa, and brother of Antigonus III Doson. He had a son named Antigonus after his uncle.[1]
  • Three Pythagorean philosophers mentioned by Iamblichus:[2]
    • A Locrian, one of those to whom Plato is said to have gone for instruction.[3] The name Caetus in Valerius Maximus[4] is perhaps an erroneous reading for Echecrates.
    • A Tarentine, probably the same who is mentioned in Plato's Ninth Letter.
    • Echecrates of Phlius, a contemporary with Aristoxenus the Peripatetic.[5]

References

  1. ^ Liv. xl. 54; see vol. i. pp. 187, 189, b.
  2. ^ Vit. Pyth. ad fin.
  3. ^ Cic. de Fin. v. 29.
  4. ^ viii. 7, Ext. 3
  5. ^ Diog. Laërt. viii. 46; comp. Gell. iv. 11; Fabric. Bibl. Graec. i. p. 861.
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