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ALEXANDER,

musicians is mentioned by Plutarch (De Mus. 5), and there is every probability that Alexander Poly- liistor is also the author of the work AtaSo^at <hAo(ro(/>wz', which seems to be the groundwork of Diogenes Laertius. [alexander lychnus.] A work on the symbols of the Pythagoreans is men­ tioned by Clemens Alexandrinus (Stroui. i. p. 131) and Cyrillus (adv. Julian, ix. p. 133). He also wrote a history of Judaea, of which a considerable fragment is preserved in Eusehius, (Praep. Evang. ix. 17; comp. Clem. Alexand. Strom. i. p 143; Steph. Byz. s.v. 5Iou5cua.) A history of Rome in five books is mentioned by Suidas, and a few fragments of it are preserved in Servius. (Ad Aen. viii. 330, x. 388.) A complete list of all the known titles of the works of Alexander Polyhistor is given in Vossius, De Hist. Grace, p. 187, &c., ed. Wester- mann. [L. S.] ALEXANDER I. II., kings of Egypt. [Pxo-

JLEMAEUS.]

ALEXANDER ('AX^avSpos) I., king of epi­rus, was the son of Neoptolemus and brother of Olympias, the mother of Alexander the Great. He came at an early age to the court of Philip of Macedonia, and after the Grecian fashion became the object of his attachment. Philip in requital made him king of Epirus, after dethroning his cou­sin Aeacides. When Olympias was repudiated by her husband, she went to her brother, and en­deavoured to induce him to make war ,on Philip.

Philip, however, declined the contest, and formed

a second alliance with him by giving him his daughter Cleopatra in marriage. (b. c. 336.) At the wedding Philip was assassinated by Pausanias. In b. c. 332, Alexander, at the request of the Tarentines, crossed over into Italy, to aid them against the Lucanians and Bruttii. After a victory over the Samnites and Lucanians near Paestum he made a treaty with the Romans. Success still followed his arms. He took Heraclea and Consen- tia from the Lucanians, and Terina and Sipontum from the Bruttii. But in b. c. 326, through the treachery of some Lucanian exiles, he was com­ pelled to engage under unfavourable circumstances near Pandosia, on the banks of the Acheron, and fell by the hand of one of the exiles, as he was crossing the river ; thus accomplishing the prophecy of the oracle of Dodona, which had bidden him be­ ware of Pandosia and the Acheron. He left a son, Neoptolemus, and a daughter, Cadmea. (Justin, viii. 6, ix. 6, 7? xii. 2, xvii. 3, xviii. 1, xxiii. 1 ; Liv. viii. 3, 17, 24 ; Diod. xvi. 72.) The head on the annexed coin of Alexander I. represents that of Jupiter. [C. P. M.J

ALEXANDER II., king of epirus, was the son of Pyrrhus and Lanassa, the daughter of the Sicilian tyrant Agathocles. He succeeded his fa­ther in b. c. 272, and continued the war which his father had begun with Antigonus Gonatas, whom he succeeded in driving from the kingdom of Maceclon. He was? however, dispossessed of both

ALEXANDER.

Macedon and Epirus by Demetrius, the son of Antigonus; upon which he took refuge amongst the Acarnanians. By their assistance and that of his own subjects, who entertained a great attach­ ment for him, he recovered Epirus. It appears that he was in alliance with the Aetolians. He married his sister Olympias, by whom he had two sons, Pyrrhus and Ptolemaeus, and a daughter, Phthia. On the death of Alexander, Olympias assumed the regency on behalf of her sons, and married Phthia to Demetrius. There are extant silver and copper coins of this king. The former bear a youthful head covered with the skin of an elephant's head, as appears in the one figured be­ low. The reverse represents Pallas holding a spear in one hand and a shield in the other, and before her stands an eagle on a thunderbolt. (Justin, xvii. 1, xxvi. 2, 3, xxviii. 1; Polyb. ii. 45, ix. 34; Plut. Pyrrh. 9.) [C. P. M.]

ALEXANDER ('AAe'^Spos), a Greek gram­marian, who is mentioned among the instructors of the emperor M. Antoninus. (Capitol. M. Ant. 2 ; M. Antonin. i. § 10.) We still possess a \6yos £TriTd<f)ios pronounced upon him by the rhetorician Aristeides. (Vol. i. Orat. xii. p. 142, &c.) [L. S.] ALEXANDER, son of Herod. [herodes.] ALEXANDER (JAAe£az/fyo<>). L Bishop of hierafolis in Phrygia, nourished A. d. 253. He was the author of a book entitled, On the new things introduced by Christ into the ivorld ri Kaivov etcnf-els tov Kooyxov. Ke^>. Of ; not extant.

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2. Bishop of Hierapolis, A. d. 431. He was sent by John, bishop of Antioch, to advocate the cause of Nestorius at the Council of Ephesus. His hostility to St. Cyril was such, that he openly charged him with Apollinaramsm, and rejected the communion of John, Theodoret, and the other Eastern bishops, on their reconciliation with him. He appealed to the pope, but was rejected, and was at last banished by the emperor to Famothis in Egypt. Twenty- three letters of his are extant in Latin in the Synodicon adversus Tragoediam Irenaei ap. Novam Collectionem Concilioruin a Bahizio^ p. 670, &c. Paris, 1683. [A. J. C.]

ALEXANDER (5AA^ai/5po«r), ST., HIERO-SOLYMITANUS, a disciple, first, of Pantaenus, then of St. Clement, at Alexandria, where he be­came acquainted with Origen, (Euseb. Hist. Ecd. vi. 14,) was bishop of Flaviopolis, (Tillemont, Hist. Eccl. iii. 415,) in Cappadocia. (S. Hier. Vir. III. § 62.) In the persecution under Severrs he was thrown into prison, (circ. a. d. 204, Euseb. vi. 11,) where he remained till Asclepiades succeeded Serapion at Antioch, A. d. 211, the beginning of Caracalla's reign. (See [a] the Epistle St. Alex­ander sent to the Antiochenes by St. Clement of Alexandria. Euseb. H. E. vi. 11.) Eusebius re-

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