Polybus

Polybus (fl. c. 400 BCE) was an ancient Greek physician and author of the Hippocratic treatise On the Nature of Man, the earliest known text to advance a four-humor system of blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile. According to Galen, he was the student and son-in-law of Hippocrates.

In Greek mythology, there were five people named Polybus, or Pólybos.


 * 1) A Corinthian king, husband of Merope or Periboea, who raised Oedipus, who had been abandoned by his mother. He was the father of Alcinoe.
 * 2) A King of Sicyon, son of Hermes and Chthonophyle, daughter of the eponym of Sicyon. He inherited the throne of Sicyon from his grandfather; he had a daughter Lysimache or Lysianassa whom he married to Talaus of Argos. His successor was his grandson Adrastus.
 * 3) A King of Thebes (in Egypt). Menelaus and Helen stayed in his court for a while after the Trojan War.
 * 4) The father of a suitor, Eurymachus, of The Odyssey, who was killed by Odysseus once he returned.
 * 5) A son of Antenor and Theano, killed in the Trojan war by Neoptolemus

Polybos Полиб Polibos