Diokleide ̄s
Dionusios of Alexandria
Diphilos
Do ̄rio ̄n
Epikrate ̄s
Epimakhos
Euclid
Harpalos
He ̄ge ̄to ̄r of Buzantion
He ̄rakleide ̄s of Taras
He ̄rodotos
He ̄ro ̄n of Alexandria
Isido ̄ros of Abudos
Kallias
Kallistratos
Kallixeinos of Rhodes
Kárpos
Keras
Kharias
Kharo ̄n of Magnesia
Kineas
Krate ̄s of Khalkis
Kte ̄sibios
Leontios
Marcellus
Moskhio ̄n
Neileus
Niko ̄nide ̄s
Numphodo ̄ros
Paconius
Pappos of Alexandria
Pasikrate ̄s
Pausistratos
Pephrasmenos
Perigene ̄s
Phaiax
Philo ̄n of Buzantion
Polu ̄ıdos
Poseido ̄nios of Macedon
Pro ̄tarkhos
Purgotele ̄s
Purrhos of E ̄peiros
Quirinus
Skopinas
Stuppax
Tekto ̄n
Teukros of Carthage
Theodo ̄ros
Trupho ̄n of Alexandria
Urbicius
Vitruuius
Zo ̄puros of Taras
Medicine (420) (writers on medicine, including commentators on Hippokrate ̄s, and
all members of medical schools, Empiricist, He ̄rophilean, Erasistratean,
Askle ̄piadean, Methodist, and Pneumaticist, as noted, but excluding people known
only for Pharmacy; some tracts of Astrology touch on medicine, as do some works
of Cosmology); many authors are ambiguous, classifiable as both medical or
pharmaceutical:
Abas (Aias)
Adamantios of Alexandria
Aeficianus
Aelius Promotus
Aëtios of Amida
Africanus
Agapios
Agathinos (Pneum.)
Agathokle ̄s
Aglaias
Agnellus
Ahrun
Aigimios
Aiskhine ̄s of Athens
Aiskhrio ̄n of Pergamon (Emp.)
Akesias
Akro ̄n
Alexander
Alexander, Sophiste ̄s
Alexander of Laodikeia (He ̄r. )
Alexander of Tralleis
Alkamene ̄s
Alkinoos
Alkmaio ̄n
Alko ̄n
Ammo ̄nios of Alexandria
TOPICS (MEDICINE)