Archytas of Tarentum, supposed letter of Bosporus, the town and kingdom of, xiv. 2. Boulair, ten miles and a half north of at the end of the Peloponnesian war, Brighton, downs about, compared with neighbourhood of Gallipoli, 171. against Artaxerxes Mnemon, 166. 342. the speeches of Demosthenes, 231, nians to sound Philip after his capture Burke, his fastidiousness, 20 b. his style compared with that of Demosthenes, 229. 201. 257. 275 b. siege of, an epoch in the his. foundation of, 447 b. C. Cadmeia, seizure of, by Phoebidas, 46 b. Calauria, Demosthenes dies there, xxxii. sacres the old inhabitants of Olynthus, to Thebes, 501. Callias, ó Onubotos at Athens, 44. of Calcbis in Euboea, 119, 270 b. 303. ; point of disembarkation for · present population of, ibid. Callippus of Paeania proposes a decree at Campbell, Thomas, his translation of an Cardia in the Thracian Chersonese, 127. hostile to Athens, 168. occupied by Philip, 216 b. Cassiope in Corcyra, 159 b. - Portus in Chaonia, ibid. Cavalry, number of Athenian, 86. Celtic compared with Greek, 490. 516. 528. Cepbisodotus commands the Athenians Philip, and supports Aeschines against Ctesiphon, 413 b. Thrace, 167. an ally of Athens, not in- cluded in the peace with Philip, 170. war, Cersobleptes submits to Philip, 173. Coroneia, connexion of, with Thebes, 125. 483 b. Cranon, battle of, xxxi. Cresphontes, a character in a play of Eu- Crithote in Thracian Chersonese, 166. Crowning of Demosthenes on four oc- casions, 444. Ctesiphon proposes it once, xxv. 393. assists Artabazus in his revolt, Curran on extempore speaking, 20 b. Curvature of horizontal lines in Athenian made a citizen of Athens, D. Dascylium, the satrapy of, 260 b. history and connexion of, Deceleic 81. 452. Deinarchus, an enemy of Demosthenes, v. xxxiv. heads an embassy to Alex- ander, xxviii. proposes a sentence of death as a financial minister, 56. 56 b. his character and antecedents, Demochares the nephew of Demosthenes, xxxiii. note. himself master of Eretria in Euboea, of the Thracian Chersonese, 166. Dercyllus, an envoy on the third em- Peloponnese with Demosthenes, 228 Dionysiac festivals, 95 b. 534. Dionysius the younger, of Syracuse, 273 Halic., his opinion of Demos- thenes, xxxvii. Dionysus, Sabazian, 53). the Chersonese, 170. the father of Menander, 171. Diotimus demanded from Athenians by Athens at the end of the Pelopon- Dolopes, an insignificant people, 434 b. Doriscus in Thrace, 195. Drongilus in Thrace, 188. Gui: bard, Claude, of Lyons, describes the spoliation of the Mausoleum, 357. Gylon, the maternal grandmother of De- mosthenes, xü. 3. in Phthiotis, ibid. H. seized by Philip, xxiv. 477. 484. 173. Haliartus, battle of, 87. 450 b, 451 b. and discoveries there, 354. between Philip and Athenians, 144. Halus or Alus, on the Pagasaean gulf, 259. besieged by Parmenio, Philip's thenes, xxx. Hegesippus, the supposed author of the -, an envoy to Philip, ibid. called & Kpoßulos, 440. 320 b. , intrigues of Philip in, 118 b. Hierax, an ambassador from Amphipolis to Athens, 24 (text). Horse-keeping at Athens, 557. Hypaethral temples, 306. of Demosthenes in the affair of Har. palus, xxx. 9 I, & J. F. Festival of Fools, practical joking at, 467 b. liation of the Mausoleum, 357. thenes, 121 b. 456. 550 b. Ictinus, an architect of the Parthenon, 303. 127. 273. ing, 223 b. his Ode in imitation of compared with him, xvii. thenon to the church of Santa Sophia G. Geraestus in Euboea, 77. 95. Athenian merchantmen cap- Aeschines, 472. K. Kassopo, gulf of, 159 b. off the materials of the Mausoleum, L. Lampsacus given to Chares by Arta- -, point of embarkation for 223. 428 b. -, lost to Athens by the battle of Lamian war, xxxi. and returned unopened by Athenians, 269. 468 b. Demosthenes, xxxix. Martial on the Mausoleum, 357. 166. 361-363. conspiracy there, 437 b. rinthians and Athenians, 60. 292. 527. Euxine, 239. wind, 94. Athenian cavalry, 91 b. not the same as the Menon of Sparta, 260. 364. 375. soncse, 165, at Athens, 297. Phocion in Euboea, after the battle of a M. Macedonia alleged to have been depend- natives of, not regarded as from kings of Argos, 500 b. battle of, and its consequences, thenes, xxvi. 509 b. dispute between it and Thasos N. Napier on unity of command, 22. of Aeschines, 460 b. Neoptolemus the actor, an agent of Parmenio, one of Philip's generals, 224. Parricide against the State, 547 b. Peace, treaty of with Alexander, 382. Peace of 346 B.C., antecedents, nego- tiation, and results of, 104-115. Pella, contemptuously described as Phi. lip's birth-place, 150. 436 b. Penestae of Thessaly, 289. laid waste by Philip, 437. 289 b. Pericles secures the Oeupiká to the Athe- sends 1000 colonists to the Cher- sonese, 165. 546 b. Perinthus attacked by Philip, 201. 257. the Macedonians in Thessaly, 38 b. Persia, an alliance of the Athenians with, recommended by Demosthenes, 228. Personalities of Demosthenes and Aes. Pherae occupied by Philip, 159. 193. Philammon the Athlete, 556. 58. character of, 44. proceedings of (B.C. after 426. general description of his progress and power, 213. of Macedon, 264 b. Philippi, formerly Crenides, 76. Oreus in Euboea, 215 b. 438. 443 (text). Philo, a connexion of Aeschines, 554 (text). Philochorus, author of the Atthis, 258. exiled, 440. an enemy of Demosthenes, 527 (text). Phlius, relations of, with Athens, Thebes, the modern · Polyfengs,' 293. Phocians crushed by Philip after the Phocion, both Statesman and General, 49 b. at the battle of Tamynae, 119. repels Philip at Byzantium, 443. |