Hipparchia of Maroneia












I, Hipparchia chose not the tasks of rich-robed woman, but the manly life of the Cynic.
Brooch-clasped tunics, well-clad shoes, and perfumed headscarves pleased me not;
But with wallet and fellow staff, together with coarse cloak and bed of hard ground,
My name shall be greater than Atalanta: for wisdom is better than mountain running.











When she went into a symposium with Crates, she tested Theodoros the  atheist by proposing a sophism like this: "That which if Theodoros did, he  would not be said to do wrong, neither should Hipparchia be said to do  wrong if she does it. Theodoros hitting himself does not do wrong, nor  does Hipparchia do wrong hitting Theodoros." He did not reply to what  she said, but pulled up her garment.[2]