Proteas of Zeugma

Proteas (Ancient Greek: Πρωτέας) was the ancient grammarian and the author of a commentary on Homer. His dates are uncertain, but as he was probably cited by Herodian he could have lived no later than the middle of the 2nd century AD. He was a native of the city of Zeugma in Syria.[1] Stephanus of Byzantium gives him as an example of a Zeugmatite.[2]

Proteas's commentary is lost. All that is known of it comes from three citations. It is quoted in two in scholia, one on the Odyssey and one on the Iliad, although the identification of the source as Proteas in the first case is not completely certain.[1] In addition, the Byzantine Etymologicum Magnum cites Proteas Zeugmatites arguing that the name of the Cimmerians mentioned in the Odyssey is a corruption of "Cheimerians", inhabitants of the city of Cheimerion.[3][4] The three separate attestations show that the work dealt with orthography, etymology and exegesis.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Giuseppe Ucciardello (2015), "Proteas" (trans. Patrick Hogan), in F. Montanari, F. Montana and L. Pagani (eds.), Lexicon of Greek Grammarians of Antiquity (Brill, 2006), retrieved 16 August 2025.
  2. ^ Harold W. Miller, "A Homeric Commentator", Classical Philology 36, 2 (1941): . doi:10.1086/362494
  3. ^ Adolfo J. Domínguez, "'Phantom Eleans' in Southern Epirus", Ancient West & East 14 (2015): 129.
  4. ^ Daniel Ogden, Greek and Roman Necromancy (Princeton University Press, 2001), p. 213.