LAT

Lewis Short

Lycus | -os (noun M) : or , , , = Λύκος.
* Son of Pandion, king of Lycia, Mela, 1, 15, 1.
* A Theban, who, when Hercules descended into the Lower World, took possession of the sovereignty in Thebes, Hyg. Fab. 31 and 32.
* One of the Centaurs at the wedding of Pirithoüs, Ov. M. 12, 332.
* A companion of Diomedes, Ov. M. 14, 504.
* One of the companions of Aeneas, Verg. A. 1, 222.
* An historian of Regium, the adoptive father of the tragic writer Lycophron; he wrote a history of Libya and Sicily, Plin. 31, 2, 19, § 27.
* The name of several rivers.
* In Bithynia, the Rhyndacus, now Kilij Su, Ov. P. 4, 10, 47.
* A river flowing into the Euphrates, Plin. 5, 24, 20, § 84.
* An Illyrian city in the territory of the Dessaretes, Liv. 32, 9.
* In Cilicia, Plin. 5, 27, 22, § 91.
* In Ionia, Plin. 5, 29, 31, § 115.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary

PIR

Male Personal name
Confirmed occurences in the Roman Empire:
  • C. Memmius Lycus (Masc), ref: PIR M 0464 | PIR ID9150
Prosopographia Imperii Romani
memory