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Antiochus belonged to a distinguished family, some members of which were afterwards raised to the consulship at Rome. He took no part in the political affairs of his native city, but with his large property, which was increased by the liberality of the emperors, he was enabled to support and relieve
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Antiochus was one of the most distinguished rhetoricians of his time. He used to speak extempore, and his declamations and orations are said to have been distinguished for their pathos, their richness in thought, and the precision of their style, which had nothing of the pomp and bombast of other
71:, partly on account of the dreams and the communications with the god in them, and partly on account of the conversation of other persons who likewise spent their nights there without being able to sleep. During the
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rhetoricians. He also acquired some reputation as a writer. Philostratus mentions a historical work of his (ἱστορία) which is praised for the elegance of its style, but the subject of this history is unknown.
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he was at first of some service to the Roman army by his Cynic mode of life, but afterwards he deserted to the
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his fellow citizens whenever it was needed. He is said to have spent his nights in the temple of the Roman god of sleep
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Antiochus was at some point in his career honored by the city of
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The Second
Sophistic: A Cultural Phenomenon in the Roman Empire
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mentions a writer of this name who produced a work called
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
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The
Cambridge Companion to the Greek and Roman Novel
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103:for claiming kinship between Argos and Aegeae.
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217:California Studies in Classical Antiquity
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264:. Cambridge Companions to Literature.
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364:3rd-century historians
359:2nd-century historians
162:2.4. 5.4; D. C. 77.19
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339:2nd-century Romans
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160:Vit. Soph.
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228:: 67–80.
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57:Caracalla
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258:(2008).
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123:(2005).
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