The Encyclopedia of Ancient Natural Scientists: The Greek tradition and its many heirs

(Ron) #1

Kleo ̄n (of Kuzikos?) (100? – 20 BCE)


C 6.6.5 reports two of his collyria, one with saffron, poppy-juice and rose oil in gum,
the other of roasted copper, litharge, and squamae aeris quod stomoma appellant (but stomo ̄ma
are iron flakes), in gum. O, Syn. 3.137 (CMG 6.3, p. 102), is still using a variant
of the latter (spodion, lead and sulfur roasted together, and iron flakes in gum),
and A  A 7.109 (CMG 8.2, p. 375), says Kleo ̄n’s recipe was known to
D P and A “M” (Kind therefore suggested Kleo ̄n
was a He ̄rophilean); cf. also P  A 7.16.36 (CMG 9.2, p. 342), using
pompholux for the spodion, and adding saffron. Other ophthalmologic recipes are pre-
served by Oreibasios, Syn. 3.146 (p. 104), and Paulos 3.22.21 (CMG 9.1, p. 179), 7.16.36, 58
(9.1, pp. 342, 346). A P., in G CMLoc 3.1 (12.636 K.), cites an
ear-remedy, composed of aloes, frankincense, misu, myrrh, and poppy-juice, in vinegar.
Perhaps from Kuzikos, if the same as the Kleo ̄n of Kuzikos credited with speculations about
the salamander as fire-extinguisher by (pseudo?)-A P §74 (p. 75 Ihm).


RE 11.1 (1921) 719–720 (#11), F.E. Kind.
PTK


Kleo ̄n of Surakousai (ca 350 – 270 BCE?)


Wrote On Harbors cited by P  D 118, A OM 42 – 50, M-
 1.2, and S  B. Cf. perhaps K  S?


RE 11.1 (1921) 718–719 (#8), F. Jacoby.
PTK


Kleoneide ̄s (100 – 200 CE?)


Author of the most important of a number of handbooks of the Imperial period which
summarized the musical theory of A (others include those of B, the
Dionusios who composed the second half of Bakkheios’ treatise, and G). His
Introduction to Harmonics (Eisago ̄ge ̄ harmonike ̄), ascribed also to E, Zo ̄simos, or P 
A in some MSS but now accepted as the work of Kleoneide ̄s, is a précis in 14
short chapters of the principal harmonic doctrines of Aristoxenos. Its structure is simple,
transparent, and uncomplicated: the seven parts of harmonics are treated in turn (notes
[§4], intervals [§5], genera [§§3, 6–7], scale-systems [§§ 8 – 11], tonos [§12], modulation [§13]
and melodic composition [§14]). Consisting mainly of terms and their definitions, the epit-
ome is thus devoid of the richness and sophistication of its original. Much of Kleoneide ̄s’
material was in turn appropriated by Manuel Bryennius in his Harmonics (ca 1300).


Ed.: MSG.
KP 5.1622, D. Najock; J. Solomon, Kleo ̄neide ̄s, Eisago ̄ge ̄ harmonike ̄ (Diss. Chapel Hill, 1980); L. Zanoncelli,
La manualistica musicale greca (1990); BNP 3 (2003) 437, D. Najock; SRMH 1; Mathiesen (1999).
David Creese


KLEONEIDE ̄S
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