Python of Aenus (/ˈpaɪθɒn, ən/; Greek: Πύθων Αἴνιος; fl.
4th-century BCE) was a Greek philosopher and a former student of Plato.
[1] Around 360 BC, he and his brother Heraclides assassinated Cotys I, the ruler of Thrace.
[2] Based on Demosthenes's Against Aristocrates, Python of Aenus was identified as Python of Byzantium, a Greek statesman.
[3] This biography of a philosopher from ancient Greece is a stub.