Anacharsis

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Anacharsis, by Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki?curid=1732 / CC BY SA 3.0

#6th-century_BC_philosophers
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#Immigrants_to_Archaic_Athens
#Male_murder_victims
#Presocratic_philosophers
#Scythian_people
#Seven_Sages_of_Greece
#6th-century_BC_Iranian_people
#Ancient_Greek_philosophers
#Ancient_Iranian_philosophers
18th-century portrait, based on an ancient engraved gem.
Anacharsis (/ˌænəˈkɑːrsɪs/; Ancient Greek: Ἀνάχαρσις) was a Scythian philosopher; he travelled from his homeland on the northern shores of the Black Sea,
to Athens, in the early 6th century BC, and made a great impression as a forthright and outspoken barbarian, that is, a non-Greek speaker.
He very well could have been a forerunner of the Cynics, in part because of his strong, but playful, parrhesia.
None of his works have survived.
Anacharsis the son of Gnurus, a Scythian chief, was half Greek and from a mixed Hellenic culture, apparently in the region of the Cimmerian Bosporus.
He left his native country to travel in pursuit of knowledge, and came to Athens about 589 BC, at a time when Solon was occupied with his legislative measures.
According to the story recounted by Hermippus, Anacharsis arrived at the house of Solon and said, "I have traveled here from afar to make
you my friend." Solon replied, "It's better to make friends at home." Thereupon the Scythian replied, "Then it is necessary for you,
being at home, to make friends with me." Solon laughed and accepted him as his friend.
Anacharsis cultivated the outsider's knack of seeing the illogic in familiar things.
For example, Plutarch remarks that he "expressed his wonder at the fact that in Greece wise men spoke and fools decided." His conversation was droll and frank, and Solon and the Athenians took to him as a sage and philosopher.
His rough and free discourse became proverbial among Athenians as 'Scythian discourse'.
Anacharsis was the first foreigner (metic) who received the privileges of Athenian cit...




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6th-century BC Iranian people
6th-century BC philosophers
Ancient Greek philosophers
Ancient Iranian philosophers
Immigrants to Archaic Athens
Male murder victims
Presocratic philosophers
Scythian people
Seven Sages of Greece