Perictione
{{Short description|Mother of Plato}}
Perictione {{IPAc-en|ˌ|p|ɛ|r|ɪ|k|ˈ|t|aɪ|ə|ˌ|n|iː}} ({{langx|grc|Περικτιόνη}} Periktiónē; {{circa|450-365 BCE}}{{cite book |last1=Nails |first1=Debra |title=The People of Plato: A Prosopography of Plato and Other Socratics |date=15 November 2002 |publisher=Hackett Publishing |isbn=978-1-60384-027-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cspgDwAAQBAJ |access-date=14 April 2024 |language=en}}) was the mother of the Greek philosopher Plato.
She was a descendant of Solon, the Athenian lawgiver.Diogenes Laërtius, iii.1 Her illustrious family goes back to Dropides, archon of the year 644 b.c.Great Books of the Western World. Dialogues of Plato, footnote She was married to Ariston, and had three sons (Glaucon, Adeimantus, and Plato) and a daughter (Potone).Diogenes Laërtius, iii. 4 After Ariston's death, she remarried Pyrilampes, an Athenian statesman and her uncle. She had her fifth child, Antiphon, with Pyrilampes. Antiphon appears in Plato's Parmenides.{{cite book|author=Plato|title=Republic|year=1992|others=trans. G. M. A. Grube|publisher=Hackett|location=Indianapolis|isbn=0-87220-137-6|page=viii}}
Two spurious works attributed to Perictione have survived in fragments, On the Harmony of Women and On Wisdom. The works do not date from the same time and are usually assigned to a Perictione I and a Perictione II.Mary Ellen Waithe, A History of Women Philosophers: Volume 1, 600 BC-500 AD, Springer. The dating and difference in the dialect of Greek used mean they could not have been written by this Perictione but instead by two other, unknown women named Perictione. Both works are pseudonymous Pythagorean literature. On the Harmony of Women, concerns the duties of a woman to her husband, her marriage, and to her parents; it is written in Ionic Greek and probably dates to the late 4th or 3rd century BC.Ian Michael Plant, Women writers of ancient Greece and Rome: An anthology, University of Oklahoma Press (2004), p. 76. On Wisdom offers a philosophical definition of wisdom; it is written in Doric Greek and probably dates to the 3rd or 2nd century BC.
Sources
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External links
- From the treatise of Perictyone – On the Duties of a Woman. Translated by Thomas Taylor, published 1822, at Wikisource
- From the treatise of Perictyone – On the Harmony of a Woman. Translated by Thomas Taylor, published 1822, at Wikisource
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Category:5th-century BC Athenians
Category:Ancient Athenian women
Category:Ancient Greek pseudepigrapha