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Alexandria Dentist - Alexandria Cosmetic Dentist Alexandria alexandriadentaloffice.co... | Alexandria Dentist, Dentists in Alexandria | Kathleen Mullaney DDS, FAGD kathleenmullaneydds.com |
For other Theons (some of whom also worked in Alexandria) see Theon Theon (Greek: Θέων, ca. 335 - ca. 405 AD) was a Greek[1] (or as some scholars contend an Egyptian)[2] scholar and mathematician who lived in Alexandria, Egypt. The biographical tradition (Suda) defines Theon as "the man from the Mouseion"; actually, both the Library of Alexandria and the Mouseion may have been destroyed a century before by the Emperor Aurelian during his struggle against Zenobia. Some scholars think that they were closed by the patriarch Theophilus on order of the Christian Roman emperor Theodosius I in 391 AD. Theon's most durable achievement may be his edition of Euclid's Elements, published around 364 and authoritative into the 19th century. The bulk of Theon's work, however, consisted of commentaries on important works by his Hellenistic predecessors. These included a "conferences" (Synousiai) on Euclid, and commentaries (Exegeseis) on the Handy Tables and Almagest of Ptolemy, and on the technical poet Aratus. In one of the commentaries on the Handy Tables, he is the first author to describe the theory of trepidation of the equinoxes, as an alternative to precession. Theon described but did not endorse this theory. Theon is portrayed in Ki Longfellow's Flow Down Like Silver, Hypatia of Alexandria[1] in a highly imaginative way. [edit] Notes
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