Polemon was a master of
rhetoric, a prominent member of the
Second Sophistic. He was favored by several
Roman Emperors.
Trajan is said to have granted him the privilege of free travel wherever he wished;
Hadrian extended that privilege to Polemon's posterity. Hadrian not only admitted he ruled with Polemon's advice, but Polemon accompanied the emperor during his travels in Greece and Asia Minor. When his enemies accused Polemon of spending funds Hadrian had given him to benefit the city of Smyrna, the emperor defended the sophist with a letter declaring that Polemon had rendered Hadrian an account of the moneys entrusted to him. Polemon gave the dedicatory oration to Hadrian's Temple of Olympian Zeus in
Athens, which
G.W. Bowersock speculates was "an embarrassing repudiation of the obvious person for the occasion,
Herodes Atticus. Three times he headed a legation dispatched by Smyrna to the emperor. Under Hadrian he was made
strategos, and subsequently appointed strategos for life. He was a priest of
Dionysos and
agonothetes of the athletic competitions that took place in Smyrna in honour of the emperor Hadrian. Owing to Polemon's rhetorical skills the emperor stopped favoring
Ephesos and endowed Smyrna with 10 million drachmae, which financed the building of a new
grain market, a gymnasium, and a temple. Polemon founded in Smyrna one of the foremost schools of rhetoric. His style of oratory was imposing rather than pleasing; however his character was haughty and reserved. ==Later life==