Historians accept that Hippocrates existed, was born around the year 460 BC on the
Greek island of
Kos (Cos), and became a famous physician and teacher of medicine. Other biographical information, however, is apocryphal and likely to be untrue (
see Legends).
Soranus of Ephesus, a 2nd-century Greek
gynecologist, was Hippocrates's first biographer and is the source of most information on Hippocrates' person. Information about Hippocrates can also be found in the writings of
Aristotle, which date from the 4th century BC, in the
Suda of the 10th century AD, and in the works of
John Tzetzes, which date from the 12th century AD. Soranus stated that Hippocrates's father was Heraclides, a physician; his mother was Praxitela, daughter of Phenaretis. The two sons of Hippocrates, Thessalus and Draco, and his son-in-law, Polybus, were his students. According to
Galen, a later physician, Polybus was Hippocrates’s true successor, while Thessalus and Draco each had a son named Hippocrates.
Soranus said that Hippocrates learned medicine from his father and grandfather, and studied other subjects with
Democritus and
Gorgias. Hippocrates was probably trained at the
asklepieion of
Kos, and took lessons from the
Thracian physician
Herodicus of Selymbria. The only contemporaneous mention of Hippocrates is in
Plato's dialogue
Protagoras, where Plato describes Hippocrates as "Hippocrates of Kos, the
Asclepiad". Hippocrates taught and practiced medicine throughout his life, traveling at least as far as
Thessaly, Thrace, and the
Sea of Marmara. He probably died in
Larissa at the age of 83 or 90, though some accounts say he lived to be well over 100; several different accounts of his death exist.