The following six works are attributed to Phylarchus by the
Suda: — •
Histories (Iστoριαι), in 28 books, which were by far the most important of his writings. This work is thus described by the
Suda: — "The expedition of Pyrrhus of
Epirus against the
Peloponnese in 28 books; and it comes down to
Ptolemy who was called Euergetes, and to the end of
Berenice, and as far as Cleomenes the Spartan, against whom
Antigonus made war." When the
Suda entitles it "the expedition of Pyrrhus, &c." he merely describes the first event in the work. The expedition of Pyrrhus into the Peloponnese was in 272 BC; the death of Cleomenes in 220 BC: the work therefore embraced a period of fifty-two years. From some of the fragments of the work which have been preserved, it has been conjectured by some writers that Phylarchus commenced at an earlier period, perhaps as early as the death of
Alexander the Great. The work gave the history not only of
Greece and
Macedonia, but likewise of
Aegypt,
Cyrene, and the other states of the time; and in narrating the history of Greece, Phylarchus paid particular attention to that of Cleomenes and the Spartans. •
The story of Antiochus and Eumenes of Pergamum (Tα κατα τoν Aντιoχoν και τoν Περγαμηνoν Eυμενη), was probably a portion of the preceding work, since the war between the
Attalid Eumenes I and the
Seleucid Antiochus I Soter was hardly of sufficient importance to give rise to a separate history, and that between
Eumenes II and
Antiochus III the Great was subsequent to the time of Phylarchus. •
Epitome of myth on the apparition of Zeus, was one work, although cited by the
Suda as two: the general title was
Epitome mythike, and that of the first part
Peri tes tou Dios epiphaneias. •
On discoveries, on which subject
Ephorus and
Philochorus also wrote. •
Digressions. •
Agrapha, not mentioned by the
Suda, and only by the
Scholiast on
Aelius Aristides, was probably a work on the more abstruse points of mythology, of which no written account had ever been given. ==References==