Proper name: ACE'SIAS (Ἀκεσίας), an ancient Greek physician, whose age and country are both unknown. It is ascertained however that he lived at least four hundred years before Christ, as the proverb Ἀκεσίας ἰάσατο, Acesias cured him, is quoted on the authority of Aristophanes. This saying (by which only Acesias is known to us,) was used when any person's disease became worse instead of better under medical treatment, and is mentioned by Suidas (s. v. Ἀκεσίας), Zenobius (Proverb. Cent. i. § 52), Diogenianus (Proverb, ii. 3), Michael Apostolius (Proverb, ii. 23), and Plutarch (Proverb, quibus Alexandr. usi sunt, § 98). See also Proverb, e Cod. Bodl. § 82, in Gaisford's Paroemiographi Graeci, 8vo. Oxon. 1836. It is possible that an author bearing this name, and mentioned by Athenaeus (xii. p. 516, c.) as having wntten a treatise on the Art of Cooking (ὀψαρτικά), may be one and the same person, but of this we have no certain information. (J. J. Baier, Adag. Medic. Cent. 4to. Lips. 1718.) (
Wikisource | public domain)
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (ed. William Smith 1870), Wikisource | public domain