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BACCHIUS

Volume 3 · 143 words · 1815 Edition

a follower of AristoXenus, supposed by Fabriius to have been tutor to the emperor Marcus Antoninus, and consequently to have lived about A. C. 140. He wrote in Greek a very short introduction to music, in dialogue, which, with a Latin translation thereof, Meibomius has published. It seems it was first published in the original by Merfennus, in his Commentary on the first fix chapters of Genesis; and that afterwards he published a translation of it in French, which Meibomius in the preface to his edition of the ancient musical authors, censures as being grossly erroneous.

in ancient poetry, a kind of foot composed of a short syllable and two long ones; as the word [ˈavərɪ]. It takes its name from the god Bacchus, because it frequently entered into the hymns composed in his honour. The Romans called it likewise anotrius, tripodius, falsans.