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Archytas of Tarentum, supposed letter of

Plato to, 508.

Argaeus, a rival of Philip, supported by
Athens, 8. 13.

Argives oppose the destruction of Athens
at the end of the Peloponnesian war,
346 (text).

Ariobarzanes, satrap of Phrygia, revolts
against Artaxerxes Mnemon, 166. 342.
Aristodemus the actor employed by Athe-
nians to sound Philip after his capture
of Olynthus, 119 b. 254.
Aristolaus, 505 b (text).

Aristonicus, two persons of the name,
553 b.

Aristophon of Collytus, and of Azenia,
184. 437; probably the same, 441.
the archon, 437.

Aristotle, not a teacher of Demosthenes,
xvii.

settles in Athens, ibid.

-, year of his birth and death,
xxxix.
Arrangement of topics and arguments in
Orations, 399 b.

Artabazus, a general of Xerxes, mas-
sacres the old inhabitants of Olynthus,
11.

a satrap in the N. w. of Asia
Minor, assisted by the Thebans against
Artaxerxes Ochus, 312; and by Chares,
90. 313.

Artaxerxes Ochus invades Egypt, 271.
343.

Artemisia, queen of Caria, 127. 338.
erects the Mausoleum, 359.
Arthmius of Zeleia, 218 b.

Article separated from participle, 141 b.
Athena, chryselephantine statue of, in
Parthenon, 308.

Promachus, and Polias, statues
of, on Acropolis, ibid.

Athenodorus the Athenian, proceedings
of in Thrace, 168.

Atticus, a βιβλιογράφος, 24.

Arybbas, or Arymbas, grandfather of
Pyrrhus of Epirus, 27.

B.

Barretor, the common, compared with a
συκοφάντης, xxii.
Battalus, orthography of, 3.

-, origin and meaning of, 497 b.
Berisades a competitor for the sovereignty
of Thrace, 168.

Bias, meaning of, 122.

Bloomsbury, St. George's Church in, an
imitation of the Mausoleum, 359.
Boeotia, states of, confederated with
Thebes, 368.

Bosporus, the town and kingdom of,
xiv. 2.
Bottiaei, 11.

Boulair, ten miles and a half north of
Gallipoli, 171.

Brighton, downs about, compared with
neighbourhood of Gallipoli, 171.
Brougham, Lord, on the repetitions in
the speeches of Demosthenes, 231,
232. 236, 237 b, 238.
Burke, his fastidiousness, 20 b.

his style compared with that of
Demosthenes, 229.

Byzantium, attacked by Philip, xxiii. 178.
201.257. 275 b.

--, siege of, an epoch in the his-
tory of siege-machines, 446.
foundation of, 447 b.

C.

Cadmeia, seizure of, by Phoebidas, 46 b.
80. 373. 451.

Calauria, Demosthenes dies there, xxxii.
Callaeschrus an ambassador from Athens
to Thebes, 501.

Callias, & nuórios at Athens, 44.

of Calchis in Euboea, 119. 270 b.
-, son of Hipponicus, peace of, 349.
Callicrates, an architect of the Parthenon,
303.

Callipolis, the modern Gallipoli, 171.
point of disembarkation for
allied troops in the Russian war, ibid.
--, present population of, ibid.
Callippus of Paeania proposes a decree at
Athens, 162 b.

Callistratus, the famous orator, xviii. 4.
Campbell, Thomas, his translation of an
epigram, 544 b.

Cardia in the Thracian Chersonese, 127.
162.

hostile to Athens, 168.
occupied by Philip, 216 b.
Carystus in Euboea, 161.
Cassiope in Corcyra, 159 b.

Portus in Chaonia, ibid.
Cavalry, number of Athenian, 86.
Celtic compared with Greek, 490.
Cephalus, a statesman never accused,
516.528.

Cephisodotus commands the Athenians
in the Hellespont, 167.

Cephisophon advocates the peace with
Philip, and supports Aeschines against
Ctesiphon, 413 b.

Cersobleptes, son of Cotys, prince of
Thrace, 167.

an ally of Athens, not in-
cluded in the peace with Philip, 170.

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--, error of, in Greek, 490.

his opinion of Demosthenes, xxxii.
Cineas, the ambassador of Pyrrhus, a
pupil of Demosthenes, 5 b.

Cirrha, or Crissa, 482.

Cleitarchus, a creature of Philip, makes
himself master of Eretria in Euboea,
226 b.

expelled by Athenians, 270 b.
Cleitomachus, an ambassador to the
Peloponnese with Demosthenes, 228
(text).

Cleobule, the mother of Demosthenes, 11.
Cleonae, near Argos, 451.

Climax, examples of, 497.
Collytus, township of, 498 b.

Columns, inclination of, on Acropolis at
Athens, 300. 310.

Corinth, the war of, or å Kopiroiakos
πόλεμος, 89. 451 b.

Corinthians oppose the destruction of
Athens at the end of the Pelopon-
nesian war, 346 b.

Corn, whence exported to Athens, 446.
524.

Coroneia, connexion of, with Thebes, 125.
Cottyphus, president of Amphictyons,
483 b.

Cotys, a prince of Thrace, 166.
Cranon, battle of, xxxi.

Creon, a second-class character in An-
tigone, 498 b.

Cresphontes, a character in a play of Eu-
ripides, 498.

Crithote in Thracian Chersonese, 166.
Cromnus, near Megalopolis, 365.
Crowning of Demosthenes on four oc-
casions, 444.

Ctesiphon proposes it once, xxv. 393.
Cunaxa, battle of, 347 b.

Curran on extempore speaking, 20 b.
Curvature of horizontal lines in Athenian
architecture, 299. 309.

Cynthus, inhabitants of described, 293 b.

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his character and antecedents,

541 b.
Demochares the nephew of Demosthenes,
xxxiii. note.

Dercyllidas the Spartan fortifies the neck
of the Thracian Chersonese, 166.
Dercyllus, an envoy on the third em-
bassy' to Philip, 113.

Diondas, an enemy of Demosthenes, 517.
Dionysiac festivals, 95 b. 534.

Dionysius the younger, of Syracuse, 273

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E.

Echinus in Acarnania, 216 b.

in Phthiotis, ibid.

Guichard, Claude, of Lyons, describes
the spoliation of the Mausoleum, 357.
Gylon, the maternal grandmother of De-
mosthenes, xii. 3.

Egypt, its revolt from Persia, 244. 340.
343 b.

Eion, on the Strymon, 289.

Elateia, its position and history, 137.

seized by Philip, xxiv. 477. 484.

492 (text).

Eleusis, road to, from Athens, 496.
Elgin marbles, 307.

Elis, Philip gains a footing in, 159.
213 b.

massacres there, 236.

Entasis of columns, 300. 310.
Epaminondas invades Laconia, 362.
founds Megalopolis, 363.
Epithets sparingly used by Demosthenes,

510.

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H.

Haemus, the Balkan or Emineh Dagh,
173.

Haliartus, battle of, 87. 450 b, 451 b.
Halicarnassus (Boudroum), excavations
and discoveries there, 354.

Halonnesus, dispute about island of,
between Philip and Athenians, 144.
Halus or Alus, on the Pagasaean gulf,
259.

--

besieged by Parmenio, Philip's
general, 106.

Harpalus, his alleged bribery of Demos-
thenes, xxx.

Hegemon, a partizan of Philip, 542.
Hegesippus, the supposed author of the
speech on Halonnesus, 145.

an envoy to Philip, ibid.
called & Κρώβυλος, 440.
Heiresses exempt from the trierarchy,
320 b.

Hellen, an Anglo-Saxon word, 551 b.
Hierax, an ambassador from Amphipolis
to Athens, 24 (text).

Hieromnemones, 481 b.

Horse-keeping at Athens, 557.

Hypaethral temples, 306.

Eurylochus, one of Philip's generals, Hyperides, or Hypereides, the prosecutor

224.

Evagoras of Cyprus, 273.

of Demosthenes in the affair of Har-
palus, xxx.

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Martial on the Mausoleum, 357.
Mastura in Thrace, 188.

Mausoleum, description of, 353-359.
Mausolus of Caria, 336.

Mecyberna near Olynthus, 11.

Medocus or Amadocus, a prince of Thrace,
166.

Megalopolis, foundation and history of,
361-363.

Megara, an object of Philip's attacks,
209.215 b.

conspiracy there, 437 b.
Megarians, quarrels of, with the Co-
rinthians and Athenians, 60. 292.
Melanchthon called Wolf, Lycius,' 121 b.
Melantus, an enemy of Demosthenes,
527.

Melinophagi, near Salmydessus on the
Euxine, 239.

Meltem, the Turkish term for the Etesian
wind, 94.

Menelaus, a foreigner, commands the
Athenian cavalry, 91 b.

Menestheus, son of Iphicrates, 388.
Menon, the Pharsalian, assists the Athe-
nians against Brasidas, 289.

not the same as the Menon of
the Anabasis,' ibid.

Mentor the Rhodian, 243.

Messene, a dependency of Sparta, 136 b.
Messenia, connexion of with Athens and
Sparta, 260.

Messenians established in Megalopolis,
364. 375.

Miltiades leads a colony to the Cher-
soncse, 165.

Miltocythes, a chieftain in Thrace, 167.
Milton imitates Demosthenes, 535 b.
Mnesicles, an architect of the Propylaea
at Athens, 297.

Molossus, an Athenian general, succeeds
Phocion in Euboea, after the battle of
Tamynae, 119.

Money, value of, at Athens, 92.
Months, Athenian division of, 422 b.
Montius, the name preserved in Monti, 1.
Mouravieff, the Russian general, 88.
Mylasa, the ancient capital of Caria, 355.
Mysteries at Eleusis, 53 b.

Mystica Vannus, 533.

N.

Napier on unity of command, 22.
Naupactus, now Lepanto, 216.
Nausicles, an Athenian general and friend
of Aeschines, 460 b.

Nausinicus, valuation of, 457. 494.
Navarchus, a Spartan title, 500.

Naxos, battle of, 288 b.

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Parmenio, one of Philip's generals, 224.
Parricide against the State, 547 b.
Parthenon, description of, 303–311.
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.
Peparethus, island of, 145.

laid waste by Philip, 437.
Perdiccas of Macedon, a mistake about,
289 b.

Pericles secures the Ocwpikά to the Athe-
nians, 55. 417 b.

sends 1000 colonists to the Cher-
sonese, 165.

Perilaus, a traitor of Megara, 429 (text),
546 b.

Perinthus attacked by Philip, 201. 257.
275.

Persia, an alliance of the Athenians with,
recommended by Demosthenes, 228.
Personalities of Demosthenes and Aes-
chines, 539 b, 540.

Pherae occupied by Philip, 159. 193.
Philammon the Athlete, 556.

Orens in Euboea, intrigues of Philip Philip of Macedon described as Bápßapos,

there, 180. 193. 438.

-, position of, 186.

attacked by Philip, 215 b.
liberation of by Athenian troops,

270 b. 442 b.
Orgas, the border land between Athens
and Megara, 292.

Oropus, position of and law-suit about,
4. 371. 453 b.

Orphans exempt from the trierarchy,
321.

Ozolian Locrians, 486.

P.

Paeania, demus of, 162 b.
Paeonians, position of, 27.

-, conquered by Philip, ibid.
Pagasae, captured by Philip, 26 b. 77.
Panaetius the Stoic, on the principles of
Demosthenes, 396.
Panathenaea, 95 b. 462 b.
Panathenaic procession, 307.

Panemus, a Macedonian month, 486
(text).

Pangaeus Mons, now Pirnari, 173 b.
Panticapaeum or Kertch, xiii. 3.
Parallelism, want of, in the buildings of
the Acropolis at Athens, 298.
Paralus, the Sacred Trireme, so called,
95.

Paris, condition of in A.D. 1609, 7.

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the peace of B.C. 346, 129, 130. 420.
426.

--, general description of
his progress and power, 213.

Philip (I.) of France compared with Philip
of Macedon, 264 b.

Philippi, formerly Crenides, 76.
Philistides, a creature of Philip, rules at
Oreus in Euboea, 215 b. 438. 443
(text).

Philo, a connexion of Aeschines, 554
(text).

Philochorus, author of the Atthis, 258.
Philocrates proposes the peace with
Philip, 105. 156 b.

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