Mnesimachus (Graece Μνησίμαχος), qui saeculo IV a.C.n. exeunte floruit, Antigoni Monophthalmi coaevus, fuit inter annos 323 et 301 a.C.n. huius regis sectator.

Inscriptio Mnesimachi

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Inscriptio quaedam, olim in templo Artemidis in urbe Sardium erecta, terras in planitie Lydiana Mnesimacho ab Antigono Monophthalmo saeculo IV a.C.n. exeunte datas refert; quas terras postea Mnesimachus, pecunia carente, templo ipso tradit. Chaereas quidam, aliter ignotus, de his terris quaestionem iuridicam conduxit. Ex inscriptione de terris aliis a sectatoribus Antigoni possessis legimus, inter quos Adrastus et Pytheus. Hic et Sagarius, Lydi ut videtur, chiliarchae in Lydia merebant.

Bibliographia

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  • "Prosopography of Antigonos's Friends and Subordinates" in Richard A. Billows, Antigonos the One-Eyed and the Creation of the Hellenistic State (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990) no. 74, p. 405
De inscriptione Mnesimachi
  • W. H. Buckler, D. M. Robinson, Sardis VII: Greek and Latin Inscriptions, part 1: seasons 1910-1914 (Lugduni Batavorum, 1932) no. 1
  • W. H. Buckler, D. M. Robinson, "Greek Inscriptions from Sardis" in American Journal of Archaeology vol. 16 (1912) pp. 12-82
  • P. Debord, Aspects sociaux et économiques de la vie réligieuse dans l'Anatolie gréco-romaine (Lugduni Batavorum, 1982) appendix 5, pp. 244-251
  • M. M. Austin, The Hellenistic World from Alexander to the Roman Conquest (Cantabrigiae, 1981) no. 181