Antiochus (physician)

Antiochus (Ancient Greek: Ἀντίοχος) was a physician of ancient Greece who appears to have lived at Rome in the 2nd century. The ancient physician Galen gives a precise account of the food he used to eat and the way in which he lived;[1] and tells us that, by paying attention to his diet, he was able to dispense with the use of medicines, and when upwards of eighty years old used to visit his patients on foot. Byzantine Greek medical writer Aëtius of Amida[2] and Paulus Aegineta[3] quote a prescription which may perhaps belong to this physician, but he is probably not the person mentioned by Galen under the name "Antiochus Philometor".

Notes

  1. Galen, De Sanitate Tuenda, 5.5, vol. vi. p. 332
  2. Aëtius of Amida, tetrab. i. serm. 3.100.114. p. 132
  3. Paulus Aegineta, 7.8, p. 290

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: William Smith (1870). "Antiochus". In Smith, William. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 1. p. 195. 

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