Ἀρτέμων
ὅσον ἀπὸ τοῦ ἱεροῦ ἐφεωρᾶτο τῆς νήσου → as much of the island as was in view from the temple
Spanish (DGE)
-ονος, ὁ
Artemón
1 ὁ περιφόρητος Ἀρτέμων = atacado por afeminado por Anacreonte, Anacr.8.2, 82.5.
2 padre de Protágoras, Apollod.Hist.70.
3 ingeniero inventor de máquinas de guerra de la época de Pericles, también apodado περιφόρητος a causa de su parálisis
• confundido a veces con 1, Ephor.194, D.S.12.28, Sch.Ar.Ach.850a.
4 poeta contemporáneo de Aristófanes, tb. llamado περιφόρητος Ar.Ach.850, Ath.533e, Lib.Ep.224.2 (v. tb. 1).
5 historiador de Clazómenas del IV a.C., Artemo Claz., I.
6 comerciante, D.35.3, 30.
7 poeta epigramático del III a.C., AP 12.55, 124, Artemo, I.
8 gramático de Casandrea del III a.C., Ath.515e, 694a.
9 ateniense hijo de Artemón, poeta épico del II a.C. FD 2.50.5.
10 gramático y crítico de Pérgamo del II a.C. (pero tal vez igual a 8, Artemo Perg., I.
• Diccionario Micénico: a-te-mo (?).
Wikipedia EN
Artemon (Ancient Greek: Ἀρτέμων) (fl. c. 230 AD), a prominent Christian teacher in Rome, who held Adoptionist, or Nontrinitarian views. Little is known about his life.
He is mentioned as the leader of a nontrinitarian sect at Rome in the third century. He is spoken of by Eusebius of Caesarea as the forerunner of Paul of Samosata, an opinion confirmed by the acts of a Council of Antioch in 264, which connect the two names as united in mutual communion and support. Eusebius and Theodoret describe his teaching as a denial of Christ's divinity and an assertion that he was a mere man, the falsification of Scripture, and an appeal to tradition in support of his errors. Both authors mention refutations: Eusebius an untitled work, Theodoret one known as The Little Labyrinth, which has been attributed to a Roman priest named Caius, and more recently to Hippolytus of Rome, the supposed author of the Philosophoumena.