Theodorus of Samos, a Greek sculptor and…
525 BCE to 514 BCE
Theodorus of Samos, a Greek sculptor and architect from the Greek island of Samos is often credited, along with Rhoecus, with the invention of ore smelting and, according to Pausanias, the craft of casting.
He is also credited with inventing a water level, a carpenter's square, and, according to Pliny, a lock and key and the turning lathe.
Theodoru according to Vitruvius (vii, introduction), is the architect of the Heraion of Samos, a temple in the Doric Order.
In some texts, he is described, above all, as a great artist and in some statues he is depicted as a great inventor.
Herodotus, also from Samos, twice refers to Theodorus as "the son of Telecles," a Samian artist.
Herodotus credits Theodorus along with Rhoecus with improving the process of mixing copper and tin to form bronze, as well as being the first to use it in casting.
Elsewhere, he credits Theodorus alone for discovering the art of fusing iron and using it to cast statues.
Polycrates, tyrant of Sámos, has employed his one hundred-vessel fleet to transform his island into a major naval power, primarily through acts of piracy against the Persians.
In addition to the political and commercial preeminence that his reign has brought to Samos, Polycrates is also a patron of letters; the poet Anacreon lives at his court.
Polycrates makes an alliance with Egypt, but, when the Persians advance against Egypt in 525 BCE, he abandons his ally and sends a squadron of forty ships to join the Persian fleet.
He takes the opportunity to send his main political opponents with the squadron; they desert, however, and, supported by Spartans, attempt unsuccessfully to dislodge the tyrant.
Polycrates maintains his ascendance until about 522, when Oroetes, the Persian satrap of Sardis, lures him to the Ionian mainland and has him crucified at Magnesia ad Meandrum.
Darius of Persia then takes Samos and partially depopulates the island.