Sources The most reliable information we have about ancient poets is largely drawn from their own works. Unfortunately, there is little to no evidence that Apollonius of Rhodes revealed information about himself in his writings. Most of the biographical material comes from four sources: two are texts entitled
Life of Apollonius found in the
scholia on his work (
Vitae A and B); a third is an entry in the 10th-century encyclopaedia the
Suda; and fourthly a 2nd-century BC papyrus,
P.Oxy. 1241, which provides names of several heads of the
Library of Alexandria. Other scraps can be gleaned from miscellaneous texts. The reports from all the above sources however are scanty and often self-contradictory.
Main events •
Birth. The two
Lives and the
Suda name Apollonius' father as Silleus or Illeus, but both names are very rare (
hapax legomenon) and may derive from or "lampoon", suggesting a comic source (ancient biographers often accepted or misconstrued the testimony of comic poets). The second
Life names his mother as "Rhode", but this is unlikely;
Rhodē means "Rhodian woman", and is almost certainly derived from an attempt to explain Apollonius' epithet "Rhodian". The
Lives, the
Suda, and the geographical writer
Strabo say that he came from
Alexandria;
Athenaeus and
Aelian say that he came from
Naucratis, some 70 km south of Alexandria along the river
Nile. No source gives the date of his birth. •
Association with Callimachus. The
Lives and the
Suda agree that Apollonius was a student of the poet and scholar
Callimachus.
Vita B states that Callimachus was his instructor in rhetoric (), but the terminology is anachronistic. Moreover, in ancient biographies "pupil" and "student" are figures of speech designating the influence one poet may have exercised over another. Their poetic works do in fact indicate a close relationship, if only as authors, with similarities in theme and composition, style and phrasing, but it is not easy to work out who was responding to whom, especially since 'publication' was a gradual process in those days, with shared readings of drafts and circulation of private copies: "In these circumstances interrelationships between writers who habitually cross-refer and allude to one another are likely to be complex." •
Head of the Library of Alexandria. The second
Life, the
Suda, and P.Oxy. 1241 attest that Apollonius held this post. Moreover, P.Oxy. 1241 indicates that Apollonius was succeeded in the position by
Eratosthenes; this must have been after 247/246 BC, the date of the accession of
Ptolemy III Euergetes, who was probably tutored by Apollonius and who appointed Eratosthenes. The chronology of P.Oxy. 1241 bears some signs of confusion since it lists Apollonius under
Ptolemy I Soter (died 283 BC), or
Ptolemy V Epiphanes (born 210 BC). The
Suda says that Apollonius succeeded Eratosthenes, but this does not fit the evidence either. There was another Alexandrian librarian named Apollonius ("The Eidographer", succeeding
Aristophanes of Byzantium as library head) and this may have caused some of the confusion. •
Association with Rhodes. The epithet
Rhodios or
Rhodian indicates that Apollonius had some kind of association with the island of that name. The
Lives and the
Suda attest to his move there from Alexandria. They differ about whether he died in Rhodes or came back to Alexandria to take up the position of head of the Library. According to
Vita A, he was a famous teacher in Rhodes, but it may have confused him with yet another Apollonius (
Apollonius the Effeminate) who taught rhetoric there. In fact the epithet "of Rhodes" need not indicate any physical association with the island. It might simply reflect the fact that he once wrote a poem about Rhodes. According to
Athenaeus, he was also called the "Naucratite". Some modern scholars doubt that he was ever given that title but, if he was, it may be because he composed a poem about the foundation of
Naucratis. •
Death. Only the two
Lives give information about Apollonius' death, and they disagree. The first reports that he died in Rhodes; the second reports that he died after returning to Alexandria and adds that "some say" he was buried with Callimachus.
Sensational stories Ancient biographies often represent famous poets as going into exile to escape their ungrateful fellow citizens. Thus for example Homer was said to have left Cyme because the government there would not support him at public expense (
Vit. Herod. 13-14),
Aeschylus left Athens for Sicily because Athenians valued him less than some other poets (
Vit. Aesch.), while
Euripides fled to Macedonia because of humiliation by comic poets (
Vit. Eur.). Similarly
Vitae A and B tell us that Apollonius moved to Rhodes because his work was not well received in Alexandria. According to B, he redrafted the
Argonautica in such fine style at Rhodes that he was able to return to Alexandria in triumph, where he was rewarded with a post in the library and finally a place in the cemetery next to Callimachus. These stories were probably invented to account for the existence of a second edition of
Argonautica, indicated by variant readings in ancient manuscripts. Until recently modern scholarship has made much of a feud between Callimachus and Apollonius. The evidence partly rests on an
elegiac epigram in the
Palatine Anthology, attributed to "Apollonius the grammarian". It blames Callimachus for some unstated offense and mocks both him and his most famous poem, the
Aetia ("
Causes"): Ancient sources describe Callimachus's poem
Ibis — which does not survive — as a polemic and some of them identified Apollonius as the target. These references conjure up images of a sensational
literary feud between the two figures. Such a feud is consistent with what we know of Callimachus's taste for scholarly controversy and it might even explain why Apollonius departed for Rhodes. Thus there arises "a romantic vision of scholarly warfare in which Apollonius was finally driven out of Alexandria by a triumphant Callimachus". However, both of the
Lives of Apollonius stress the friendship between the poets, the second
Life even saying they were buried together; moreover Callimachus's poem
Ibis is known to have been deliberately obscure and some modern scholars believe the target was never meant to be identified. There is still not a consensus about the feud, but most scholars of Hellenistic literature now believe it has been enormously sensationalised, if it happened at all.
Scholar Apollonius was among the foremost Homeric scholars in the Alexandrian period. He wrote the period's first scholarly monograph on Homer, critical of the editions of the
Iliad and
Odyssey published by
Zenodotus, his predecessor as head of the Library of Alexandria.
Argonautica seems to have been written partly as an experimental means of communicating his own researches into Homer's poetry and to address
philosophical themes in poetry. It has even been called "a kind of poetic dictionary of Homer", without at all detracting from its merits as poetry. He has been credited with scholarly prose works on
Archilochus and on problems in
Hesiod. He is also considered to be one of the period's most important authors on geography, though approaching the subject differently from
Eratosthenes, his successor at the library and a radical critic of Homer's geography. It was a time when the accumulation of scientific knowledge was enabling advances in geographical studies, as represented by the activities of
Timosthenes, a Ptolemaic admiral and a prolific author. Apollonius set out to integrate new understandings of the physical world with the mythical geography of tradition and his
Argonautica was, in that sense, a didactic epic on geography, again without detracting from its merits as poetry. == Poetry ==