Volume 1
The plague of lust : being a history of venereal disease in classical antiquity ... / by Julius Rosenbaum ; translated from the 6th (unabridged) German edition by an Oxford M.A.
- Georg August Wilhelm Julius Rosenbaum
- Date:
- 1901
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The plague of lust : being a history of venereal disease in classical antiquity ... / by Julius Rosenbaum ; translated from the 6th (unabridged) German edition by an Oxford M.A. Source: Wellcome Collection.
110/344 page 70
![* In the time of Xenarchus immorality with married women was particularly univer- sal. Athenaeus, XII. p. 569. * Athenaeus, Deipnosoph. bie SLi ps. 569. ie Oe Dijuov 6’ éy AdeApois mooLoTogWr, Ot WO@TOS Zolov, dic THY tev veov dnwjp, Eornosv, Ent olanud- TOV ybvarı mgıduevog' Kader nal Ninavögos 6 0 KoAogymvıog iorogei éy Toit Kohogovte- 4@V, paonav aotoy nal Ilavönuov Agpgodiens iggöv TOOTOY Wovouotar dp ov Hoyvoloavto ct mMoostéoor tav oixnuctav Ah 6 yE Piljwav ottas myst’ Zu 8 sis Exavtag svoss évPeanovs, DOA@V, Ge yuo Akyovoıv tobt idsiv meatov [Boorar]. Önuorındv, © Zed, moüywe ned eT QLOy LECT Y OQ@rvta tiv Ohm vEateoar, TOUVTOVS T Eyovras THY EVO YRELAD Pvory, auagrdvovras ve eigü 0 wn TOOOTKOY nv, OTOL TO ba WEVOY TOTE yuvainas HOTEL Tomong noıvas Ämacı Hal AUTEGKEVEOMEVES. Eoräoı yuuvat’ um * Sere tHPijs weve dea’ — — — — Ff Boa or cevEe@y wevn. eis 6Bodos siondnoov’ oön for’ obdé eig CAKLGLOS, ODE Ajjeos, on” Öpngmaser. CAR eddc ac Bodie oo yor Bodie Toor. Eiidee: oluogeıv ‚My, Ghroroia ori Got. (So too Philemon in his play the “Adelphi” relates that it was Solon who first on ac- count of the vigorous desires of the young men bought and established public women in brothels. The same is related by Nicander of Colophon in the Third book of his Colo- phoniaca, who says that he (Solon) was the first to found a temple of the Pandemian Aphrodite, built from the gains of the women in charge of brothels. Prilemon writes as follows: “ Well hast thou deserved of all men, Solon; for thou they say wert first to invent a thing both popular, by Zeus, and salutary. Seeing the city crowded full of young men, and these possessed of the natural appetites of man- hood, and consequently of- bought women and established them in certain places to be](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b31364433_0001_0110.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


