Category
page 2Ancient Greek grammarians
Boios
Boios (Βοῖος), Latinized Boeus, was a Greek grammarian and mythographer, remembered chiefly as the author of a lost work on the transformations of mythic figures into birds, his Ornithogonia. Ornithogonia was translated into Latin by Aemilius Macer, a friend of Ovid, who was the author of the most familiar such collections of metamorphoses. In the 2nd century CE, Antoninus Liberalis gave extremely brief summaries of the contents of some of the myths collected in Ornithogonia.
Agallis
Agallis (; called Anagallis by the Suda) of Corcyra was a female grammarian who wrote about Homer. She, or her father, was a student of Aristophanes of Byzantium.
Archemachus of Euboea
ancient Greek writer
Nicanor Stigmatias
ancient Greek grammarian
Baton of Sinope
ancient Greek historian
Seleucus of Alexandria
ancient Greek grammarian and historian
Artemidorus Aristophanius
ancient Greek grammarian of the 3rd century BCE
Aristodemus of Nysa the Elder
ancient Greek grammarian

Apollodorus of Cyrene
ancient Greek grammarian

Aeschylus of Alexandria
ancient Greek poet
Carystius
Carytius of Pergamum () was an ancient Greek grammarian who lived at the end of the 2nd century BCE, all of whose works are now lost. Among his works were Historical Notes (Ἱστορικα ὑπομνήματα), On the Dramatic Poets (Περι διδασκαλιῶν), and On Sotades (Περι Σωτάδου). The first of these was used by Athenaeus in composing the Deipnosophistae, in which many of its passages are preserved.
Theodosius of Alexandria
ancient Greek grammarian
Alexander of Cotiaeum
Greek grammarian
Philoxenus of Alexandria
ancient Greek grammarian
Metrodorus
ancient Greek mathematician
Callistratus
Alexandrian grammarian
Marcus Mettius Epaphroditus
1st-century Greek grammarian