Crates of Athens (
Greek: Κράτης; died 268–264 BC) was the son of Antigenes of the Thriasian
deme, the pupil and
eromenos of
Polemo, and his successor as
scholarch of the
Platonic Academy, in 270/69 BC. The intimate friendship of Crates and Polemo was celebrated in antiquity, and
Diogenes Laërtius has preserved an epigram of the poet
Antagoras, according to which the two friends were united after death in one tomb. The epigram, according to him, reads: <poem> "Stranger, who passest by, relate that here The God-like Crates lies, and Polemo; Two men of kindred nobleness of mind; Out of whose holy mouths pure wisdom flowed, And they with upright lives did well display, The strength of all their principles and teaching." </poem>