Chorizontes ("separators") was the name given to the ancient Alexandrian critics who believed the Iliad and Odyssey were by different poets. The best known of them were the grammarians Xenon and Hellanicus, but they are nonetheless extremely obscure figures about whom nothing else is known. Aristarchus of Samothrace was one of their opponents.[1]
Chorizontes ("separators") was the name given to the ancient Alexandrian critics who believed the Iliad and Odyssey were by different poets. The best...
Hellanicus (grammarian) [it] (3rd century BC), Greek grammarian; see Chorizontes Hellanicus (mythology), one of the suitors of Penelope Hellanicus of...
Dactylic hexameter Homeric scholarship Homeric Laughter Homeric Question Chorizontes Jørgensen's law Historicity of the Iliad "The Iliad or the Poem of Force"...
Dactylic hexameter Homeric scholarship Homeric Laughter Homeric Question Chorizontes Jørgensen's law Historicity of the Iliad "The Iliad or the Poem of Force"...
Dactylic hexameter Homeric scholarship Homeric Laughter Homeric Question Chorizontes Jørgensen's law Historicity of the Iliad "The Iliad or the Poem of Force"...
Dactylic hexameter Homeric scholarship Homeric Laughter Homeric Question Chorizontes Jørgensen's law Historicity of the Iliad "The Iliad or the Poem of Force"...
ancient scholars like Zoilus and the so-called "separatists" (χωρίζοντες chōrizontes, the best known of whom, Xenon and Hellanicus, are nonetheless very obscure...