Alcmaeon (
Gr. ), son of the
Megacles who was guilty of sacrilege with respect to the followers of
Cylon, was invited by
Croesus, king of
Lydia, to
Sardis in consequence of the services he had rendered to an embassy sent by Croesus to consult the
Delphic oracle. On his arrival at Sardis, Croesus made him a present of so much gold that he couldn't carry it all out of the treasury. Alcmaeon took the king at his word by putting on a most capacious dress, the folds of which (as well as the vacant space of a pair of very wide boots, also provided for the occasion) he stuffed with gold, and then filled his mouth and hair with gold dust. Croesus laughed at the trick, and presented him with as much again. This was supposed to have taken place around 590 BC. The wealth thus acquired is said to have contributed greatly to the subsequent prosperity of the
Alcmaeonidae.