Page:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) - Volume 2.djvu/570

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loc cit.
loc cit.

556 TASU3. 2. Of Nysa, a Stoic philosopher, son of Mone- crates, and, on the mother's side, grandson of Posi- donius, of whom also he was the disciple and successor. He therefore flourished after the middle of the first century b. c. (Clinton, Fasti^ vol. iii. s. a. 51, B. c.) Suidiis (s. V.) mentions his works Btot ei'5o|wj' and ^LKo(yQ(pu}v SiaSoxaK and adds that -some ascribed to him a B/os 'EAAaSos, in four books, which, however, as Avell as the work Uepl 'Po'Sou, should perhaps be assigned to Jason of Argos. '6. Of Argos, an historian, who was, according to Suidas, younger than Plutarch. He therefore lived under Hadrian. He wrote a work on Greece in four books, containing the early history (dpxaio- Xoyia) of Greece, and the history from the Per- sian wars to the death of Alexander and the taking of Athens by Antipater, the father of Cassander. His book riepl Kvihov (Schol. ad Theocrit. xvii. Q9)^ and that Ile^i 'PoSou (see above), seem to have been parts of this work, and so was probably the book Ilept rwv 'Ahe^dvdpou Upwv. (Ath. xiv. p. 620, d ; comp. Steph. Byz. s. vv. 'AKe^avdp^la, TijKos ; Vos- sius, de Hist. Graec, p. 264, ed. Westermann ; Fabric. Bibl. Graec. vol. vi. p. 370.) Suidas also calls him a grammarian ; and a grammarian Jason is quoted in the Etj'mologicum Magnum (p. 184, 27). 4, Of Byzantium, only known by a single re- ference in Plutarch (de Fluv. 11), where the title of his work, instead of TpayiKo., should probably be OpaKiKci. (Jonsius, Script. Hist. Philos. iii. 2,2.) ^ [P. S.] lASO'NIA ('latroi'ta), a surname of Athena at Cvzicus. (Apollon. Rhod. i. 960 ; conip. MUller, drchom. p. 282, 2d edit.) [L. S.] lASUS ("loo-os), the name of a considerable number of mythical personages, which is some- times written lasius, and is etymologically the same as lason and lasion, though the latter is more especially used- for the same persons as lasius. Five persons of the name of lasus occur in the legends of Argos, viz. : — 1. A son of Phoroneus, and brother of Pelasgus and Agenor, or Arestor. (Eustath. ad Horn. p. 385.) 2. A son of Argus and Evadne, a daughter of Strymon, or, according to a scholiast {ad Eurip. Phoen. 1151), a son of Peitho, the father of Agenor, and father of Argus Panoptes. ( Apollod. ii. 1. § 2.) 3. A son of Argus Panoptes and Ismene, the daughter of Asopus, and the father of lo. (Apollod. ii. 1. § 3.) 4. A son of To. (Eustath. ad Horn. p. 1 185.) 5. A son of Triopas, grandson of Phorbas, and brother of Agenor. This person is in reality the same as No. 3, with only a different pedigree as- signed to him. (Pans. ii. 16. § 1; Hom. Od. xviii. 246; Eustath. ad Hom. p. 1465.) 6. An Arcadian, a son of Lycurgus and Cleo- pliile or Eurynome, a brother of Ancaeus and Am- })hidamas, and the husband of Clymene, the daughter of Minyas, by whom he became the father of Ata- lante. (Apollod. iii. 9. § 2.) Hyginus {Fab. 70, 99) calls him lasius, and Aelian {V. H. xiii. 1) and Pausanias (v. 7. § 4, 14. § 5) lasion. At the first Olympian games which Heracles celebrated, lasus won the prize in the horse-race, and a statue of him stood at Tegea. (Pans. v. 8. § 1, viii. 4.) 7. A son of Eleuther, and father of Chaeresileus. (Paus. ix. 20. $ 2 ) JAVOLENUS. 8. The father of Amphion, and king of the Mi- nyans. (Hom. Od. xi. 282 ; Paus. ix. 36, in fin.) 9. A son of Sphelus, the commander of the Athenians in the Trojan war, was slain by Aeneias. (Hom. //. XV. 332, &c.) 10. The father of Dmetor, king of Cyprus. (Hom. Od. xvii. 443.) [L. S.j lATROCLES ('larpoKA^), a Greek writer on cookery, of uncertain age and country. Athenaeus quotes from two of his works, namely, ApTo- irouKos and Uep nAa/couj/Tojv, unless indeed these are merely different titles of one and the same work. (Athen. vii. p. 326, e., xiv. p. 646, a., p. 647, b.) JAVOLE'NUS PRISCUS or PRISCUS JA- VOLE'NUS, an eminent Roman jurist. His name occurs in both forms ; Pomponius calls him first Priscus Javolenus, and afterwards Javolenus Pris- cus. (Dig. 1. tit. 2. s. 2. § ult.) Pliny adopts the latter form (Ep. vi, 15). Javolenus was a pupil of Caelius Sabinus, and a leader of the Sabinian school during a period when Celsus the father, Celsus the son, and Neratius Priscus, led the opposite school, as successors of Pegasus. He was the teacher of Aburnus Valens, Tuscianus, and Julianus. It ap- pears from a fragment of Julianus (Dig. 40. tit. 2. s. 5), that Javolenus was a praetor and proconsul in Syria. According to a passage of Capitolinus (Ant. Pius, 12), he was one of the council of An- toninus Pius. Some of his biographers think that if he were alive in the reign of Antoninus, he must have been too old to hold such a post ; hence they ' question the authority of Capitolinus, and, more- over, the passage referred to is probably interpo- lated and corrupt. But there is no pressing im- probability in the stiitement, if the reading be genuine ; for if, as appears to be likely, Javolenus was bom about the commencement of the reign of Vespasian (a. d. 79), he might well be an imperial councillor between the age of sixty and seventy. Pliny relates from hearsay an anecdote of Javole- nus, which has given rise to much discussion (Ep. vi. 15). Passienus Paulus, a noble eques and writer of verses, invited Javolenus to a recitation. Paulus began by saying "Prisce jubes," but we are not told whether these were the first words of his poem, or a polite form of asking leave to com- mence. Javoleiuis, however, replied, "Ego vero non jubeo." This mal-.T,propos expression occa- sioned much laughter among the party, but was chilling to the host. Whether it was uttered by Javolenus in a fit of mental absence, or by way of awkward joke, or as a blunt expression of impa- tience, under an infliction which more than once roused the indignation of Juvenal, does not ap- pear. Pliny sets down Javolenus as a madman, but this imputation is probably to be construed in a loose sense. Even if the rude saying of Javole- nus was occasioned, as some think, by actual tem- porary mental aberration, brought on by overwork, his madness was not of such a kind as to prevent him from attending to the ordinary duties of his profession (Plin. I. c.) Some writers, in order to save the credit of the jurist of the Digest, have absurdly imagined a second mad jurist of the same name. Others, as absurdly, have imagined that the insanity of Javolenus is to be detected in two passages of the Digest (Dig. 35. tit. 1. s. 55, Dig. 17. tit. 1. s, 52), from the badness of their reason- ing. In the former passage, Javolenus compares the bequest of a legacy to an incapable person to a