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Polycrates

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Polycrates

died ?522 bc, Greek tyrant of Samos, who was crucified by a Persian satrap
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Polycrates

tyrant of Athens who, renowned for his continual good fortune, is ignominiously trapped and crucified by an envious ruler. [Gk. Myth.: Benét, 801]
See: Irony

Polycrates

tyrant of Samos, known and feared for his proverbial good luck, though it is not permanent. [Gk. Hist.: Benét, 801]
Allusions—Cultural, Literary, Biblical, and Historical: A Thematic Dictionary. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Polycrates

 

Date of birth unknown; died circa 523 or 522 B.C. Ancient Greek tyrant of the island of Samos from circa 540.

During Polycrates’ reign, the polis of Samos became unified. As the owner of a bronze workshop, Polycrates pursued external and internal policies in the interests of the merchant and craftsman strata of the population. He initiated the minting of coins by the government and large-scale construction projects. He created a merchant marine fleet and a land army, fought with the cities of Asia Minor and the islands of the Aegean Sea over trade routes, and concluded treaties with Athens, Naxos, and Cyrenaica. The policies of Polycrates met with active resistance from the clan aristocracy, who joined with Sparta and Corinth to mount a rebellion against him. Polycrates was killed by order of the Achaemenids, who feared the increased strength of Samos.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
A number of works were obviously painted with the intention to seduce the academicians to purchase them, such as Polycrates Receiving the Fish and its pendant The Crucifixion of Polycrates (both c.
Pythagoras, who had left the island of Samos for Croton in about 532 B.C., to escape the tyranny of Polycrates, established the dichotomy of peras and apeiron as a groundwork of his teaching on the universal contrasting principles of the world, linking limit with good and the unlimited with evil.
He travelled to Egypt for the purpose of education, and took advantage of the friendship between his follow Greek Polycrates and Pharaoh Amasis.
Versions of this story occur in many languages, the classic one being told by Herodotus about Polycrates, tyrant of Samos (off the coast of Asia Minor).
'Papias and Polycrates on the origin of the Fourth Gospel,' JThS 44, 24-69.
Some say it was because he felt his teachings were not being properly appreciated there, while others indicate that he fled for his life after arguments with Polycrates, the local tyrant.
Herodotus (484-c.425 BC), the so-called father of history, illustrates this somewhat summary conception of the forces which control history with the story of Polycrates, which may be a mixture of a factual account and a parable.
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