tonius represents also the head of his brother, M. Antonius, the triumvir, with the inscription: M. Ant. Im(p). Avg. IIIvir. R. P. C. M. Nerva. Proq. P.
15. 16. Antonia. [Antonia, 2. 3.]
17. Antonia, the daughter of M. Antonius, the triumvir, and Antonia. [Antonia, 4.]
18. M. Antonius, M. f. M. n., called by the Greek writers Antyllus (Ἄντυλλοϛ), which is probably only a corrupt form for Antonillus (young Antonius), was the elder of the two sons of the triumvir by his wife Fulvia. In B.C. 36, while he was still a child, he was betrothed to Julia, the daughter of Caesar Octavianus. After the battle of Actium, when Antony despaired of success at Alexandria, he conferred upon his son Marcus the toga virilis (B.C. 30), that he might be able to take his place in case of his death. He sent him with proposals of peace to Caesar, which were rejected; and on his death, shortly after, young Marcus was executed by order of Caesar. (Dion Cass, xlviii. 54, li. 6, 8, 15; Suet. Aug. 17, 63 ; Plut. Ant. 71, 81, 87.)
19. Julus Antonius, M. f. M. n., the younger son of the triumvir by Fulvia, was brought up by his step-mother Octavia at Rome, and after his father's death (B.C. 30) received great marks of favour from Augustus, through the influence of Octavia. (Plut. Ant. 87; Dion Cass. li. 15.) Augustus married him to Marcella, the daughter of Octavia by her first husband, C. Marcellus, conferred upon him the praetorship in B.C. 13, and the consulship in B.C. 10. (Vell. Pat. ii. 100; Dion Cass. liv. 26, 36; Suet. Claud. 2.) In consequence of his adulterous intercourse with Julia, the daughter of Augustus, he was condemned to death by the emperor in B.C. 2, but seems to have anticipated his execution by a voluntary death. He was also accused of aiming at the empire. (Dion Cass. lv. 10; Senec. de Brevit. Vit. 5 ; Tac. Ann. iv. 44, iii. 18; Plin. H. N. vii. 46; Vell. Pat. l. c.) Antonius was a poet, as we learn from one of Horace's odes (iv. 2), which is addressed to him.
20. Antonia Major, the elder daughter of M. Antonius and Octavia. [Antonia, No. 5.]
21. Antonia Minor, the younger daughter of M. Antonius and Octavia. [Antonia, No. 6.]
22. Alexander, son of M. Antonius and Cleopatra. [Alexander, p. 112, a.]
23. Cleopatra, daughter of M. Antonius and Cleopatra. [Cleopatra.]
24. Ptolemaeus Philadelphus, son of M. Antonius and Cleopatra. [Ptolemaeus.]
25. L. Antonius, son of No. 19 and Marcella, and grandson of the triumvir, was sent, after his father's death, into honourable exile at Massilia, where he died in A.D. 25. (Tac. Ann. iv. 44.)
ANTO'NIUS (Ἀντώνιοϛ). 1. Of Argos, a Greek poet, one of whose epigrams is still extant in the Greek Anthology, (ix. 102; comp. Jacobs, ad Anthol. vol. xiii. p. 852.)
2. Surnamed Melissa (the Bee), a Greek monk, who is placed by some writers in the eighth and by others in the twelfth century of our era. He must, however, at any rate have lived after the time of Theophylact, whom he mentions. He made a collection of so-called loci communes, or sentences on virtues and vices, which is still extant. It resembles the Sermones of Stobaeus, and consists of two books in 176 titles. The extracts are taken from the early Christian fathers. The work is printed at the end of the editions of Stobaeus published at Frankfort, 1581, and Geneva, 1609, fol. It is also contained in the Biblioth. Patr. vol. v. p. 878, &c., ed. Paris. (Fabr. Bibl. Gr. ix. p. 744, &c.; Cave, Script. Eccles. Hist. Lit. i. p. 666, ed. London.)
3. A Greek monk, and a disciple of Simeon
Stylites, lived about a. d. 460. He wrote a life
of his master Simeon, with whom he had lived
on intimate terms. It was written in Greek, and
L. AUatius {Diatr. de Script. Siin. p. 8) attests,
that he saw a Greek MS. of it; but the only
edition which has been published is a Latin
translation in Roland's ^d. Sandor. i. p. 264. (Cave,
Script. Eccles. Hist. Lit. ii. p. 145.) Vossius {De
Hist. Lai. p. 231), who knew only the Latin translation, was doubtful whether he should consider
Antonius as a Latin or a Greek historian.
4. ST., sometimes surnamed Abbas, because
he is believed to have been the founder of the
monastic life among the early Christians, was
bom in a. d. 251, at Coma, near Heracleia, in
Middle Egypt. His earliest years were spent in
seclusion, and the Greek language, which then
every pergon of education used to acquire, remained unknown to him. He merely spoke and wrote
the Egyptian language. At the age of nineteen,
after having lost both his parents, he distributed
his large property among his neighbours and the
poor, and determined to live in solitary seclusion
in the neighbourhood of his birthplace. The
struggle before he fully overcame the desires of the
flesh is said to have been immense ; but at length
he succeeded, and the simple diet which he
adopted, combined with manual labour, strength-
ened his health so much, that he lived to the age
of 105 years. In a. d. 285 he withdrew to the
mountains of eastern Egypt, where he took up his
abode in a decayed castle or tower. Here he spent
twenty years in solitude, and in constant stnlggles
with the evil spirit. It was not till A. D. 305, that
his friends prevailed upon him to return to the
world. He now began his active and public career.
A number of disciples gathered around him, and his
preaching, together with the many miraculous cures
he was said to perform on the sick, spread his fame
all over Egj-pt. The number of persons anxious to
learn from him and to follow his mode of life increased every year. Of such persons he made two
settlements, one in the mountains of eastern Egypt,
and another near the town of Arsinoe, and he himself usually spent his time in one of these monasteries, if we may call them so. From the accounts
of St. Athanasius in his life of Antonius, it is clear
that most of the essential points of a monastic life
were observed in these establishments. During
the persecution of the Christians in the reign of the
emperor Maximian, A. D. 311, Antonius, anxious
to gain the palm of a martyr, went to Alexandria,
but all his efforts and his opposition to the commands of the government were of no avail, and he