All of his biographical information should be treated as suspect. Epicharmus' birthplace is not known, but late and fairly unreliable ancient commentators suggest a number of alternatives. The
Suda (E 2766) records that he was either
Syracusan by birth or from the
Sikanian city of Krastos.
Diogenes Laërtius (VIII 78) records that Epicharmus was born in
Astypalea, the ancient capital of
Kos on the
Bay of Kamari, near modern-day
Kefalos. Diogenes Laërtius also records that Epicharmus' father was the prominent physician Helothales, who moved the family to
Megara in Sicily, when Epicharmus was just a few months old. Although raised according to the
Asclepiad tradition of his father, as an adult Epicharmus became a follower of
Pythagoras. It is most likely that sometime after 484 BC, he lived in
Syracuse,
Magna Graecia, and worked as a poet for the
tyrants
Gelo and
Hiero I. The subject matter of his poetry covered a broad range, from exhortations against intoxication and laziness to such unorthodox topics as mythological
burlesque, but he also wrote on
philosophy,
medicine,
natural science,
linguistics, and
ethics. Among many other philosophical and moral lessons, Epicharmus taught that the continuous exercise of virtue could overcome heredity, so that anyone had the potential to be a good person regardless of birth. He died in his 90s (according to a statement in
Lucian, he died at ninety-seven). Diogenes Laërtius records that there was a bronze statue dedicated to him in Syracuse, by the inhabitants, for which
Theocritus composed the following inscription:As the bright sun excels the other stars,'
As the sea far exceeds the river streams:'So does sage Epicharmus men surpass,''''Whom hospitable Syracuse has crowned.Theocritus' Epigram 18 (AP IX 600; Kassel and Austin Test. 18) was written in his honour. The cosmopolitan scientist and traveler
Alexander von Humboldt turned Epicharmus into the protagonist of the only literary text he ever published; it appeared 1795 in
Friedrich Schiller's journal
Horen under the title "Die Lebenskraft oder der Rhodische Genius" [
The Vital Force or the Rhodian Genius]. Epicharmos figures here as a natural philosopher and interpreter of art. ==Works==