head of Apollo, and on the reverse Pallas in a
chariot drawn by four horses ; it is supposed by
Eckhel more ancient than the time of the consul,
and is therefore referred by him to the father or
grandfather of the latter. The next two coins
belong to the consul. The former bears on the
obverse the head of Bacchus, and on the reverse
Ceres in a chariot drawn by two dragons: the
latter has on the obverse a youthful head, and on
the reverse Ceres with a torch in each of her hands
and with a pig by her side. (Eckhel, vol. v.
p. 339.)
COINS OF C. VIBIUS PANSA, COS. B. C. 43.
PA'NTACLES (UavraKXrjs), an Athenian, im-
mortalized by Aristophanes as a pre-eminently
stupid man, who, preparing to conduct a procession,
put on his helmet before he fixed the crest to it.
He was ridiculed also for his stupidity by Eupolis
in the Xpvcrovuydvos. (Arist. Nan. 1034 ; Schol.
ad he. ; comp. Meineke, Fragm. Com. Graec.
vol. i. p. 145, ii. p. 544.) [E. E.]
PANTAENUS {ndvTaivos), the favourite pre-
ceptor of Clemens Alexandrinus. Of what country
he was originally, is uncertain. Cave endeavours to
reconcile the various accounts by conjecturing that
he was of Sicilian parentage, but that he was born in
Alexandria. In this city he was undoubtedly edu-
cated, and embraced theprinciplesof thestoical school
of philosophy. We do not find it mentioned who the
parties were that instructed him in the truths of
Christianity, but we learn from Photius (Cod. 1 1 8)
that he was taught by those who had seen the
Apostles, though his statement that he had heard
some of the Apostles themselves justly appears to
Cave chronologically impossible. About a. d. 181,
he had acquired such eminence that he was ap-
pointed master of the catechetical school in Alex-
andria, an office which he discharged with great
reputation for nine or ten years. At this time the
learning and piety of Pantaenus suggested him as
a proper person to conduct a missionarj- enterprise
to India. Of his success there we know nothing.
But we have a singular story regarding it told by
St. Jerome. It is said that he found in India a
copy of St. Matthew's Gospel, written in Hebrew,
which had been left by St. Bartholomew, and that
he brought it back with him to Alexandria, He
probably resumed his place in the catechetical
school, which had been filled during his absence by
his pupil and friend Clemens. The persecution
under Severus, a. d. 202, drove both Pantaenus
and Clemens into Palestine ; but that he resumed |
VOL. IIL
his labours before his death appears from an ex-
pression of Eusebius {H. E. v. 10), T^Kevrwv
rJ^etTOi. We do not know the exact date of his
death, but it cannot have been prior to a. d. 211,
as he lived to the time of Caracalla. His name has
a place in the calendar of the Roman Church, on
the seventh of July. He was succeeded by Cle-
mens Alexandrinus. This, with some other points,
has been disputed by Dodwell {ad Irenaeum^ p.
501, &c.), who makes Pantaenus to be not the pre-
decessor, but the successor of Clemens. He was a
man of much eloquence, if we may trust the
opinion of Clemens, who calls him a Sicilian bee.
Both Eusebius and Jerome speak of his writings,
the latter mentioning his Commentaries on the
Scriptures, but we have not even a fragment of
them. Cave states that he is numbered by Ana-
stasius of Sinai amongst the commentators who re-
ferred the six days' work of the Creation to Christ
and the Church. (Eabric. Bill. Graec. vol. iii. p.
5QQ ; Cave, Aposiolici, p. 127, &c., Hist. Lit. vol.
i. p. 81, &c.; Euseb. II. E. v. 10.) [W. M.G.]
PANTA'LEON {navTaKiu>v historical. 1. A
son of Alyattes, king of Ly dia, by an Ionian woman.
His claim to the throne in preference to his brother
Croesus was put forward by his partisans during
the lifetime of Alyattes, but that monarch decided
in favour of Croesus. (Herod, i. 92.)
. Son of Omphalion, was king or tyrant of
Pisa in Elis at the period of the 34th Olympiad
(b. c. 644), assembled an army, with which he
made himself master of Olympia, and assumed
by force the sole presidency of the Olympic
games on that occasion. The Eleans on tliis
account would not reckon this as one of the
regular Olympiads. (Paus. vi. 21. §1,22. §2.)
We learn also from Strabo that Pantaloon assisted
the Messenians in the second Messenian war
(Strab. viii. p. 362), which, according to the chro-
nology of Pausanias, followed by Mr. Clinton, must
have been as much as thirty years before ; but
C. O. Miillerand Mr. Grote regard the intervention
of Pantaleon as furnishing the best argument for
the real date of the war in question. (Clinton,
F. II. vol. i. p. 188 ; MUUer's Dorians., vol. i.
p. 171 ; Grote's Greece, vol. ii. p. 574.)
. A Macedonian of Pydna, an officer in the
service of Alexander, who was appointed by him
governor of Memphis, B.C. 331. (Arr. Anab. iii. 5.
§4.)
. An Aetolian, one of the chief citizens and
political leaders of that people, who was the prin-
cipal author of the peace and alliance concluded by
the Aetolians with Aratus and the Achaeans, B. c.
239. ( Plut. Arat. 33.) He was probably the same
as the father of Archidamus, mentioned by Poly-
bius (iv. 61).
. An Aetolian, probably a grandson of the pre-
ceding, is first mentioned as one of the ambassadors
charged to bear to the Roman general, M. Acilius
Glabrio, the unqualified submission of the Aeto-
lians, B.C. 191. (Polyb. XX. 9.) Again, in b. c.
1G9 he appears as one of the deputies at Thermus
before C. Popillius, when he uttered a violent
harangue against Lyciscus and Thoas. (Id. xxviii.
4.) He is also mentioned as present with Eu-
menes at Delphi, when the life of that monarch
was attempted by the emissaries of Perseus, On
this occasion he is termed by Livy '* AetoJiae
princeps." (Liv. xlii. 15.)
. A king of Bactria, or rather perhaps of the
i
Page:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) - Volume 3.djvu/125
This page needs to be proofread.
PANTAENUS.
PANTALEON.
113