Zopyrus (Greek: Ζώπυρος; 1st-century BCE) was a surgeon at Alexandria, and the tutor of Apollonius of Citium and Posidonius.[1] He invented an antidote, which he recommended to Mithridates VI of Pontus, and wrote a letter to that king, begging to be allowed to test its efficacy on a criminal.[2] Another somewhat similar composition he prepared for one of the Ptolemies.[3] Some of his medical formulae are quoted and mentioned by various ancient authors, viz. Caelius Aurelianus,[4] Oribasius,[5] Aetius,[6] Paul of Aegina,[7] Marcellus Empiricus,[8] and Nicolaus Myrepsus.[9] Pliny[10] and Dioscorides[11] mention that a certain plant was called zopyron, perhaps after his name. Nicarchus satirizes a physician named Zopyrus in one of his epigrams.[12] Not to be confused with Zopyron.

Notes

  1. Apoll. Cit. ap. Dietz, Schol. in Hippocr. et Gal. vol. i. p. 2
  2. Galen, De Antid. ii. 8, vol. xiv. p. 150
  3. Celsus, v. 23. § 2
  4. Caelius Aurelianus, De Morb. Chron. ii. 14, v. 10
  5. Oribasius, Coll. Medic. xiv. 45, 50, 52, 56, 58, 61, 64
  6. Aetius, ii. 4. 57, iii. 1. 31, iv. 2. 74
  7. Paul of Aegina, vii. 11
  8. Marcellus Empiricus, De Medicam. c. 22
  9. Nicolaus Myrepsus, i. 291
  10. Pliny, Hist. Nat. xxiv. 87
  11. Dioscorides, iii. 99. vol. i. p. 446
  12. Anthol. Gr. xi. 124

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1870). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

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