Simonides Of Ceos b. c. 556 BC,, Iulis, Ceos d. c. 468?, BC, Syracuse, Sicily
lyric poet and epigrammatist from the Aegean island of Ceos. He appears to have
originated the epinician ode in honour of victors in the Olympic Games, his epinicion
of 520 being the earliest recorded. Simonides studied music and poetical composition
on Ceos but left as a young man and lived mostly in Athens. Allusions by later
writers associate him with tyrant rulers of Athens, or Crannon and Larissa in
Thessaly, and of Syracuse, but he did not depend entirely on patronage. His lines
on the Spartan rear guard that held the pass of Thermopylae against the Persians
in 480 BC are a memorable epitaph, and such was his fame that many epigrams were
later wrongfully ascribed to him. He was also the first Greek poet known to have
written on commission for fees. The fragments of his dithyrambic (impassioned,
chanted) poetry, which are known to have been successful in many Athenian competitions,
the remains of his choral lyrics, and his epigrams indicate that he was well-suited
to express the Panhellenic ideals of the new age that developed after the Greek
victories over Persia. (source: Encyclopaedia Britannica)