Pherecydes of Leros
The
Greek mythographer and
logographer Pherecydes of Leros (c.
450s BC) came from the island of
Leros (and wrote the island's history in a lost work) but spent the greater part of his working life at
Athens, and so he was also called
Pherecydes of Athens (
Suidas considered them separate.)
His great treatises, a history of
Leros, an essay
On Iphigeneia, On the Festivals of Dionysus are all lost, but numerous fragments of his
genealogies of the
gods and
heroes, originally in ten books, written in the
Ionian dialect to glorify the ancestors in the heroic age of his
5th century patrons, have been preserved. He modified the
legends, not with a view to rationalizing them, but rather to adjust them to popular
beliefs.
He cannot, therefore, be classed with the later mythographer
Hecataeus, whose
Genealogiai ("Genealogies") were more skeptical and critical.
Pherecydes of Leros should not be confused with
Pherecydes of Syros, the mid-
6th century philosopher, one of the
Seven Sages of Greece, reputed to have been the teacher of
Pythagoras.