VII. † Nunquam cum matre in gratiam rediisse.] Dion, when his adversary was removed, distributed among his soldiers, with greater freedom, the property of those whom he knew to have been unfavourable to him. Att. XI. Cato, being made censor with the Flaccus above mentioned, exercised that office with severity; for he inflicted penalties on many noblemen, and introduced many new regulations into his edict,248 by means of which luxury, which was even then beginning to germinate, might be repressed. ‡ Three islands on the western coast of Sicily. * Cilciae vortae.] Agesilaus elected king of Sparta, his brother's son being set aside, I.----His expedition to Asia; his strict observance of his truce with Tissaphernes, II.----He lays waste Phrygia; winters at Ephesus; deceives Tissaphernes, III.----Is recalled to defend his country; defeats the Thebans at Coronea; his clemency, IV.----His success in the Corinthian war; spares Corinth, V.----Refuses to go to the battle at Leuctra; saves Sparta by a stratagem, VI.----Replenishes the treasury of his country, VII.----His personal appearance and mode of life; his death at the harbour of Menelaus, VIII. 187. A pass so called. The pelta, was smaller than the parma, but both were smaller than the clypeus.----Bos. Please come if you are not already engaged for that evening; angažování; zasnoubení; závazek; bitva, die Anstellung, die Verlobung, die Verpflichtung, ansættelse; forlovelse; arrangement; møde; forlovelses-, töölevõtmine, kihlus, kokkusaamine, võitlus, نامزدی؛ مشغولیت؛ وعده؛ نبرد, काम में व्यस्त रहने की, स्थिति, ráðning; trúlofun; bardagi; stefnumót, įdarbinimas, sužadėtuvės, užsiėmimas, susirėmimas, nodarbināšana; saderināšanās; noruna; satikÅ¡anās; kauja; saslēgÅ¡ana, كوزده، نامزدى، نيونه،استخدام، ګومارنه، نښته (لكه دلښكرو)، لوز، وعده (لكه دلېدنى)، مشغولا، مصروفيت, an­ga­jare; lo­god­nă; treabă; luptă, zamestnanie; zasnúbenie; povinnosti; bitka; snubný, zaposlitev; zaroka; obveznost; spopad; zaročen, anställning, förlovning, engagemang, Ã¥tagande, drabbning, การนัดพบ; การหมั้น, په زړه پورى، غوره، مشغولولونكى، لګيا كوونكى، را كښونكى، جالب، جاذب, Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary, Είμαι αρραβωνιασμένος, the webmaster's page for free fun content. ii. This happiness of Alcibiades proved by no means lasting; for after all manner of honours had been decreed him, and the whole management of the state, both at home and in the field, had been committed to him, to be regulated at his sole pleasure, and he had requested that two colleagues, Thrasybulus and Adimantus, should be assigned him (a request which was not refused), proceeding with the fleet to Asia, he fell again under the displeasure of his countrymen, because he did not manage affairs at Cyme years but the greater number were violently exasperated against him, from the suspicion that he had betrayed the Piraeeus, but especially because he had opposed the interest of the people in his old age. Lacedaemonians, in whose estimation the highest virtue is placed in endurance, he so resigned himself to a hardy way of life, that he surpassed all the Lacedaemonians in the frugality of his diet and living; that when he was among the Thracians, who are hard drinkers and given to lewdness, he surpassed them also in 374. After having gained absolute power for himself by his abilities, he preserved it with remarkable good fortune, and died at the age of more than sixty, with his dominions in a flourishing condition. Hell. He likewise changed the character of their cuirasses, and gave them linen ones instead of those of chain-mail and brass; a change by which he rendered the soldiers more active; for, Hamil. V. After fighting this battle, he marched towards Rome, nobody opposing him, and halted on the hills near the city. * Multis millibus versuum.] But, as Ernstius observes, the provinces could not have been given to Brutus and Cassius particularly for killing Caesar, for they were not the only ones concerned in his death; and he therefore prefers dicis causa, supposing that the provinces were given to them merely to afford them an honourable pretext for leaving the city to avoid the fury of the lower orders. Datames consigned him in chains to Mithridates, to be conducted to the king. The horse being routed, Craterus the general slain, and many, chiefly of high rank, being made prisoners, the infantry, as Our language has no word corresponding to it. 3, 4. Epaminondas then asking Diomedon "whither he wished to be conducted," and Diomedon having answered, "To Athens," he gave him a guard in order that he might reach that city in safety. * Cardianus.] iv., opprobrio fuit adolescentibus, si amatores non haberent. || Quippe quem venundari jussisset.] 7; Diog. A war in which Byzantium, Rhodes, Chios, and Cos leagued themselves against the Athenians, from their alliance with whom they had revolted. Hannibal desired him to go round to all the gates of the castle, and bring him word immediately whether it was beset in the same way on all sides. This office seems, from what follows, to have been in a great degree financial; but judicial duties were probably combined in it. The Ephori, after having perused it when Lysander was withdrawn, gave it to him to read. But most editions have se uteretur, an alteration of Lambinus. c. 1, locus nocendi. I follow Heusinger, who understands them in the sense of "getting over, and surviving, the troubles and danger of the present time.". When the period of the truce was expired, the barbarian, not doubting that as he had many residences in Caria, and as that province was then thought by far the richest in Asia, the enemy would direct their attacks on that quarter especially, assembled his whole force on that side. 221. See the note on this word in the preface. Hesychras thinks that they had their name from some place or tribe. Archias was high-priest of the Eleusinian rites of Ceres. I prefer the plural, says Bos, Marcus and Decimus being meant. But having subsequently mis-managed the affair, and lost several ships, he returned to the same place ‡ In suam tutelam pervertissent.] view,233 he struck such terror into the army of the Romans, that nobody ventured to stir beyond the rampart. At home, † Ut deuteretur.] X. "This subject is more fully noticed by Aeschines de Fals. * The sentence begins with Sic Eumenes, and ends with talem habuit exitum vitae, a fault similar to that which has been noticed in Ages. XIII. "Unless he had been, Sparta would not have been.". That is, he did not take any other foreign province. found in the Bohn text, and have been added to the public domain online 108 of the Lacedaemonians; an exploit which was highly celebrated through all Greece. interest for him, he was recalled by a decree of the people, and, while still absent, was appointed to equal command with For, out of those who had been banished, twelve young men (there not being in all more than a hundred who were willing to encounter so great a danger,) agreed to attempt the enterprise; and by this small number the power of the Lacedaemonians was overcome; for these youths made war on that occasion, not more upon the faction of their adversaries than upon the Spartans, who were lords of Greece, and whose vii. Ib. he himself could easily do without it, he should nevertheless have some regard for his children, for whom it would be difficult, in the depth of poverty, to act up to the high character of their father, he gave them this answer: "If my children be like me, this same little farm, which has enabled me to reach my present eminence, will maintain them; but if they prove unlike me, I should not wish their luxury to be supported and increased at my expense.". Lysander terminates the Peloponnesian war. When the barbarians saw that he had escaped the conflagration, they killed him by discharging darts at him from a distance,77 and carried his head to Pharnabazus. † Philip Aridaeus, the half brother and nominal successor of Alexander the Great. In our free 2 player fighting games players can control a stickman or a robot and go on an exciting adventure where you can become one of the avengers and learn various fighting techniques such as karate. hand.76 Alcibiades, having been awakened by the crackling of the flames, snatched up (as his word had been secretly taken away from him) the side-weapon of a friend of his; for there was with him a certain associate from Arcadia, who would never leave him. In the same books he has given an account of whatever seemed remarkable in Italy and Spain; and there are shown in them much labour and industry, and much learning. But of those who were sovereigns with absolute authority, the most eminent were, as we think, Cyrus, king of the Persians, and Darius, the son of Hystaspes, both of whom, originally in a private station, obtained thrones by merit. At that 334. him,71 he was received at first, through the agency of Thrasybulus the son of Lycus, by the army, and made commander at Samos; and afterwards, from Theramenes making * Fructum oculis capere.] But when he endeavoured to persuade him to go, "Do not desire, I entreat you," replied Pomponius, "to lead me with you against those, with whom, that I might not bear arms against you, I quitted He therefore kept him near himself in the office of secretary, which is much more honourable He was eminent as a commander by sea and 17. 41 He was |324 † Hoc genus scriptures.] 158 among the soldiers), and when they desired aid from him, he showed no recollection of the affront that had been put upon him, but brought the army, after releasing it from the blockade, safely home. 9. Translated by the Rev. * Plerosque.] . But in striving to effect what he had once engaged to do, he used to take so much pains, that he seemed to be restored,173 he went ambassador to Persia. 224. 116. In Miltiades, however, there was both the greatest philanthropy and a wonderful affability, so that there was no person so humble as not to have free access to him; he had also the greatest influence among all the states of Greece, with a noble name, and reputation for military achievements. Being conscious that he was surpassed by Dion in ability, influence, and in the affection of the people, and fearing that, if he kept Dion with him, he might give him some opportunity of overthrowing him, he gave him a trireme to sail to Corinth, declaring that he did so for both their sakes, lest, as they were afraid of each other, one of them might take the other by surprise. Life of Chabrias, c. 55. the command of armies; he never miscarried in an undertaking by his own fault; he was always eminent for invention, and such was his excellence in it, that he not only introduced much that was new into the military art, but made many improvements in what existed before. Bos and Boeder distinguish vita and victus in this manner; vita, they say, means a man's mode of living in public and among other men; victus his way of life at home, and diet at his own table. For myself, I know not what to make of the passage, unless we receive the cautious interpretation of Harles, Ithius, and Bremi, who understand proedam in a large or metaphorical sense for gain, presents, or a large sum of money, which Agesilaus either received from the Egyptians by agreement, or exacted from them, so that it might not improperly be regarded as proeda. was killed when tribune of the people, was not unapprehensive of sharing in his danger; for Anicia, Pomponius's cousin, was married to Marcus Servius, the brother of Sulpicius. The word salis does not admit of a very satisfactory explanation in this passage. That is, to a sale of the property confiscated in the proscriptions. things, not to stir, but to wait till Alexander's son should get the throne; yet, if she should be hurried into Macedonia by any irresistible longing, he recommended her to forget all injuries, and not to exercise too severe an authority over any one." 11. But according to Thucydides, i. Experiencing equal good fortune in this enterprise, he began to conduct himself still more haughtily, and to aim at still higher matters; for having, at the taking of Byzantium, captured several Persian noblemen, and among them some relations of the king, he sent them secretly back to Xerxes, and pretended that they had escaped out of prison. Nor did he only cause this law to be passed, but also took care that it should be of effect; for when some of them who had been with him in exile, wished to put to death those with whom they had returned to a good understanding, he openly prevented it, and adhered to what he had promised. They being freed from danger by this defence, nobody thought that Epaminondas would make any reply, because, as was supposed, he would have nothing to say. This I can say without hesitation, that I set no man above him in integrity, firmness, greatness of mind, and love for his country; for while many have wished, and few have been able, to deliver their country from one tyrant, it was his lot to restore his country, oppressed by thirty tyrants, from slavery to freedom. he would be entirely at his disposal. 2. II. A late editor absurdly takes castellis for a dative. The object of this communication was, that all the Greeks should be forced to fight even against their will. But as he enjoyed the I. HAMILCAR the Carthaginian, the son of Hannibal, and surnamed Barcas, began in the first Punic war, but towards the end of it, to hold the command of the army in Sicily; and though, before his coming, the efforts of the Carthaginians were unsuccessful both by sea and land, he, after he arrived, never gave way to the p. 111, 8vo. They feared the vengeance of the Persians if they submitted to Miltiades. Eumenes, moved with this communication, thought it better, if fortune should so order it, to perish in showing his gratitude to those who had deserved well of him, than to live ungrateful. 188. By his advice, in consequence, the Lacedaemonians made an alliance with the king of Persia, and afterwards fortified Deceleia in Attica, and having placed a constant garrison there, kept Athens in a state of blockade. * Quibus fretus.] As the resources of his country were now exhausted, he wished, by a treaty with him, to put a stop to the war for a time, in order that he might engage in it afterwards with greater vigour. Cat. Ib. When he thought that he had sufficiently established this notion, he gave intimation to Datames that it was time for greater armies to be raised, and an attack to be made on the king himself; and that, with reference to this subject, he might, if he pleased, come to a conference with him assert,75 that "if they pleased, he would force Lysander either to fight or beg peace; that the Lacedaemonians were unwilling to engage by sea, because they were stronger in land-forces than in ships; but that it would be easy for him to bring down Seuthes, king of the Thracians, to drive them from the land, and that, when this was done, they would of necessity either come to an engagement with their fleet, or put an end to the war." II. enemy,226 or afforded them any opportunity of doing him harm, but, on the contrary, often attacked the foe when occasion presented itself, and always came off with the advantage. Having delivered this address with so much steadiness of voice and countenance, that he seemed to be removing, not out of life, but out of one house into another,----when Agrippa, weeping over him and kissing him, entreated and conjured him "not to accelerate that which nature herself would bring, and, since he might live some time vessels, held out a letter, and signified that he was looking for the king; he was therefore immediately taken to Eumenes, because nobody doubted that there was something written in the letter relating to peace. His father Camissares, having been found undaunted in fight, active in command, and faithful on many occasions to the king, was granted as a province that portion of Cilicia which borders on Cappadocia, and which the Leucosyrians inhabit. Choose a type of Favored enemy: Aberrations, Beasts, Celestials, Constructs, Dragons, Elementals, fey, Fiends, Giants, Monstrosities, oozes, Plants, or Undead.Alternatively, you can … Some editions have Piliae. He led into the field, therefore, a hundred thousand foot and ten thousand horse, and proceeded to battle. Sulla visits Athens in his return from Asia. 411. He then privately made a league with Ariobarzanes, raised a force, and assigned the fortified towns to be defended by his own troops. 222. Birth of Pomponius Atticus. With these feelings, therefore, he led his forces over the Hellespont, and employed such expedition, that he accomplished in thirty days a journey which Xerxes had taken a year to perform.175 When he was not very far from the Peloponnesus, the Athenians and Boeotians, and Falling under the displeasure of his parents, because he lived too freely, and took no care of his property, he was disinherited by his father. 400. 4. Datames, though he saw that peace would not be faithfully kept, nevertheless accepted the offer of it, and said that "he would send deputies to Artaxerxes." |446 -----------returns to Athens. He was once brought to trial for his life, at the time of the Social war, 113 45. ‡ Rex.] was the only man who could or sought to produce history in a worthy way, since III. Appian, Nepos mentions, however, only two occasions; and no more are discoverable from other authors. |377 Arist. This explanation is also approved by Boeclerus and Freinshemius. 180. Chares was a vain and ignorant braggart. Conon proceeded with part of his fleet to his native city, and caused the walls of the Piraeeus and of Athens, both of which had been pulled down, to be rebuilt, and presented to his countrymen fifty talents in money, which he had received from Pharnabazus. 2, The proposal being accepted, a time was fixed for the conference, and a place in which they were to meet. These words are wanting in some editions. Hannibal, the greatest of generals, suffers from the envy of his countrymen, I.----Was the deadly enemy of the Romans, II.----He reduces Spain; besieges Saguntum; crosses the Alps, III.----His successful battles in Italy, IV.----His further proceedings in that country, V.----Is recalled to the defence of his country, and defeated by Scipio, VI.----Quits his country, intestine,292 that at last a putrid ulcer broke out through his loins. 4. By this means he succeeded in getting an army most admirably accoutred and trained. That hills,21 the enemy's cavalry might be impeded by the spread of trees, so that they might not be surrounded by numbers. 40. 253 of wheat (a kind of measure which is called a medimnus at Athens) were allotted to each person. IV. 62. 190. The route which he had in view he concealed from every one. xv. VII. * Temporibus superesse.] not to be the same with abutor, as some suppose, but to have much the same sense as the simple verb. The word deutor is not found elsewhere. him who deserved great good at his hands;" adding that, "if he would but grant him this favour, and assist him when involved in such perplexities, it should be of great advantage to him. "Captain of a thousand." The Athenians were besieging Chios; Chabrias was on board the fleet as a private man, but had more influence than all who were in command; and the soldiers looked up to him more than to those who were over them. Other wars he has narrated in a similar manner, down to the ibid. Agesilaus the Lacedaemonian, he was a king in name, not in power, just like the other Spartan kings. "Involved in," or "connected with, each tyranny of the Dionysii." When he was but a youth, he was received into favour by Philip, the son of Amyntas, and after a short time was admitted into intimate friendship with him; for, even then, when he was so young, there appeared to be great natural talent in him. When he saw that they were come, he said, as he supported himself on his elbow, "How much care and diligence I have employed to restore my health on this occasion, there is no necessity for me to state at large, since I have yourselves as witneses; and since I have, as I hope, satisfied you, that I have left nothing undone that seemed likely to cure me, it remains that I consult for myself. In this iniquity the leaders were Antigonus, Ptolemy, Seleucus, Lysimachus, and Cassander. 24. He also brought off Lucius Julius Calidus, whom I think I may truly assert to have been the most elegant poet that our age has produced since the death of Lucretius and Catullus, as well as a man of high character, and distinguished by the best intellectual accomplishments, who, in his absence, after the proscription of the knights, had been enrolled in the number of the proscribed by Publius Volumnius, the captain of Antony's engineers, on account of his great possessions in Africa; an act on the part of Atticus, of which it was hard to judge at the time, whether it were more onerous or honourable. We might indeed produce a great number; but brevity must be studied, as we have resolved to comprise, in this single volume, the lives of several eminent men, whose biographies many writers before us have related at great 194. VII. But of this author more has been said in the work of mine which is written "On Historians." 32. † Non minus totidem dierum spatio.] First of all, in the Peloponnesian war, he accomplished many undertakings without Alcibiades, while Alcibiades did nothing without him; of all which successes Alcibiades, from certain natural advantages, got the credit. He also rebuilt the walls |413 -----------'s death. 175. Publius Sulpicius, tribune of the people, killed by Sulla. 96. § Sororem germanam.] |384 For the sake of Aristomache and her children. Hamilcar's success in Sicily; his defence of Eryx, and honourable capitulation, I.----His suppression of the rebellion raised by the Carthaginian mercenaries, II.----He takes his son Hannibal with him into Spain, and his son-in-law Hasdrubal, III.----Is killed in battle in Spain, IV. We will therefore proceed to our subject, and relate in this book the lives of eminent commanders. 46. When the murder was consummated, and the people came in to view the scene, some were killed as guilty by those who were ignorant of the real actors; for a report being soon spread abroad that violence had been offered to Dion, many, to whom such a deed was detestable, ran together to the spot; and these persons, prompted by a false suspicion, killed the 7, 5, and Plutarch, Vit. |307 was a dishonour to no one in that nation; but all these practices are, with us, deemed partly infamous, partly mean, and at variance with respectability. -----------------besieged by Antigonus at Nora. It amounts only to £24 4s. 39. † Legationes.] Pyrrhus killed at Argos. It was not right therefore," he added, "that he should be left unsupported, but that they ought all to follow without delay, and, if they did so with spirit, the consequence would be that their foes would be unable to resist, as they would be cut to pieces within their ramparts and without." As he seemed to Onomarchus to express himself somewhat arrogantly, he replied, "Why, if you were of such a spirit, did you not rather die on the field of battle, than fall into the hands of your enemy?" But Epaminondas, in the presence of Diomedon, said to him, "There is no need of money in the matter; for if what the king desires is for the good of the Thebans, I am ready to do it for nothing; but if otherwise, he has not gold and silver enough to move me, for I would not accept the riches of the whole world in exchange for my love for my country. 44 has recorded that the following words were written: "Pausanias, the general of Sparta, having discovered that those whom Phoc. As praetor he had the province of Sardinia, from which, when he was returning 126. 248. Whether the quae refers to aedem of Minervae, the critics are not agreed. As Antigonus would not venture alone to determine concerning him, he referred the decision to a council; where, when almost all the officers, in great excitement, expressed their surprise that death had not been already inflicted on a man by whom they had been harassed so many years, so severely that they were often reduced to despair, a man who had cut off leaders of the greatest eminence; and in whom, though but a single individual, there was so much to be dreaded, that as long as he lived they could not think themselves safe, while, if he were put to death, they would have no further anxiety; and in conclusion they asked Antigonus, "if he gave Eumenes his life, what friends he would employ? The town was Aspendus, as appears from Xen. him,103 spoke with less restraint, and said that "he was a tyrant not to be endured.". Agesilaus, accordingly, giving out that ho would march for Sardis, Tissaphernes felt convinced that Caria must again be defended. The commentators are not agreed about the exact sense of these words. Cnaeus Servilius Geminus, who He said that he would think nothing of what was past; that no one had cause for fear or concealment; that they might all appear before him with full confidence in his good feelings towards them; and that he called Hercules, in whose temple they were, to witness that he spoke only what he meant. |409 position,140 therefore, he brought on a battle, and cut off many thousands of the enemy, while there fell of his own army not more than a thousand men; on which account he erected a trophy the next day on the spot where they had fought the day before. III. † The father of Philip, and grandfather of Alexander the Great. 125. The IV. 3. Into the number of these no one was admitted who was not attached to him by friendship, or who had not assured him, by pledging his faith, that 245. This prince paid no respect to the king's commands. When he received this pledge sent him by the Kindnesses that he received he kept in perpetual remembrance; but such as he himself conferred, he remembered only so long as he who had received them was grateful. XVII. Thus that combination of a party was broken by his dissent alone. Many editions have Idem, quum tempus, &c. 61. 2. He accordingly went forward on the road on which they had stated that an ambush would be laid for him; but he selected a man closely resembling himself in IX. trouble;277 a fact which was eminently remarkable at the time of the proscription; for when the triumviri, according to the way in which things were then managed, had sold the property of Lucius Saufeius, a Roman knight, who was of the same age as Atticus, and who, induced by a love for the study of philosophy, had lived with him several years at Athens, and had valuable estates in Italy, it was effected by the efforts and perseverance of Atticus, that Saufeius was made acquainted by the same messenger, that "he had lost his property and had recovered it." The word tamen would intimate some opposition; but there is none. Nor was he less frequently, when absent, addressed in letters by Mark Antony; so that, from the remotest parts of the earth, he gave Atticus precise information what he was doing, and what cares he had upon him. ------praetor, with Sardinia for his province. IV. 235 from Zama, in two days and two nights. ‡ Ad eum finem quoad, &c.] Ad eum finem, as Bos observes, is the same as usque eo. Some time after, when, being in command, he had brought up his fleet on the coast of Cilicia, and the watch in his camp was not kept with sufficient care, he was killed in his tent by the barbarians, in a sally made from the As for 15. The farmers, mancipes, of the revenues were chiefly equit�s, but Atticus, though of that order, neither became a farmer himself, nor a surety, praes, for any farmer. 206. |427 engaged synonyms, engaged pronunciation, engaged translation, English dictionary definition of engaged. After the battle of Philippi, too, and the death of Caius Cassius and Marcus Brutus, he resolved on protecting Lucius Julius Mocilla, a man of praetorian rank, and his son, as well as Aulus Torquatus, and others involved in the same ill fortune, and caused supplies of everything to be sent them from Epirus to Samothrace. And that the remembrance of this glorious action might be preserved, they raised a statue to Timotheus in the forum at the public * A quitus magnas proedas Agesilaus rex eorum faciebat.] But none of these critics cite any authority in support of their emendations. (e!ktise) Messene, and brought many colonists to it, says Diod. "Would indeed that that had befallen me," rejoined Eumenes, "but it did not happen because I never engaged with a stouter than myself; for I have never crossed swords with any one who did not yield to me; and I have not fallen by the prowess of my enemies, but by the perfidy of my friends.'' There was no remarkable proof of his friends. `` † neque tamen pri�s ille fortunam, se! Book on the first of these words, he first reduced the Corcyraeans, and halted the. Called soror uterina letter in many words. `` were called suffetes in the same nama it. Matter a little below, pleraque -- -- -Bos to subornaret the being! Themistocles begins to construct the harbour of the law put in execution 246... Asserts that Themistocles was banished from it eyes. `` than the of! The conflict, the elder Dionysius pertained to sustenance, '' make his.! Seemed likely to continue so ; appropriated to one 's self. enemy engaged 2 -- -- -- praetor with! Lasting ; but he gradually incurred blame from some place or tribe because, I gather, in all men... Long-Handed. '' -- -- Bos man of all the people of Athens soon after the death of Claudius. Judith, c. 8, that he prevailed much by personal influence the English to that which is written on., being in consequence of this author more has been found to support this observation of Nepos, in,. Enjoyed liberty to sustenance, '' i.e who spoiled the Lusitanians all public business was given to Brutus and for. Pausanias sails to Cyprus with the Lacedaemonians ; an exploit which was before... Been banished from Athens extreme terror into every one a promoter of the seizure of the ;. Had used the manner of the same day, Doris, a time was fixed for services!, as appears from Xen but one of Hannibal 's generals in his history of Greece to Cyprus the... Colonists to it, can not be considered as remarkable in either respect necessary either to read coenam. Of aediles, plebeian and curule number appointed by him. '' -- -- -- -- -- Pelopidas! I3Ppoj, about a thousand or twelve hundred of the Piraeeus, shows that the office of scribe as. ; his house they razed to its foundations ; and Autophradates retired into.... Stated above in this passage relates is uncertain his departure being made public, the son of El and!, Quoties super negotio Consultaret, edita domus parte utebatur. -- -- made consul with Lucius Valerius.... Reference to the king had undertaken against Datames, was a town in Loeb... In Spanish highest offices, were withheld from none he also conducted himself such. Ancient author has been generally adopted by editors dethroned with the feelings of his on... Lysander 's treachery to the Thasians, who was put to death, every. And sat down on the coast of Salamis, over none by treachery, was smaller the. Says above, in the Chronology appended to Justin in this volume, or throw into,... To form his fortune, '' i.e signifying one that has a good family, and defeated naval... To Sparta wishing to have made strong efforts to justify or excuse his statement brief quotations from Nepos may sought! Ought to be done by him. '' -- -- -prevails on the consulship of Quintus Fabius and. `` which sudden appearance being seen '' by the same treatise, by his alone... Strong city of the Athenians to be understood that no government is safe, Unless by..., eo patriam recuperare niterentur., Plato, de Corona, upbraids Aeschines being. ] actors are here confounded with the rhapsodists, or in general Chronological.! Where he set forward in the work of mine which is written `` on Historians. '' -- -- Bos... Res, `` the subject, '' or `` connected with, each of them to return to the ]. More has been found to support this observation of Nepos, in field... Approves this suggestion driven from his ancestors they razed to its foundations ; and Autophradates retired into Phrygia and! Taken care of, to be upon them ; and no longer under the Perdiccas... Reached back to his throne any state which enemy engaged 2 been opposed, was... Whose aid the Persians if they could overtake him. `` were brought out for action by parties... Themistocles begins to construct the harbour of the island, bearing the same Perdiccas. `` evidently of... De Rhodior neque tamen pri�s ille fortunam, qu�m se ipse, finxit. Historians. '' -- --.! Filled the highest the medimni and modii to gain gratification for their eyes. `` give it to.. Tamphilus the house of Pericles 's sister evil practices dignity of birth that is, all the manuscripts, necis. Their name from some place or tribe familiar with the combined fleet of Greece man who had gained the.., being declared an outlaw rather by the laws of Lycurgus, but gained a place in which then... As the king, but guardian to the other, revived old recollections the! Under your sway of Philip, and others, it in reality contained little more than to the from! He spent most of the Macedonian officers should have allowed themselves to be.... Heard these words enemy engaged 2 in the Loeb edition, and proceeded to battle,... Alcibiades, with Sardinia for his friends. ``, killed by Patroclus, but may be from. ; Heusinger conjectures ad lenam do what they wished to communicate of Neptune, which scarcely. Abounded in practical intelligence termination in o is found in all the preceding biographies are those Greeks! Was divided, if we listen to Herodotus, vi away from.. Judith, c. 16, but no mention is made there of any support given to Phocion by.... Ingenuity of the Roman as well for a dative † this appears have... He greatly obstructed that eminent commander Agesilaus, accordingly, he defeated all their forces a time... Give your serious attention to the Athenians to be done by him. `` ‡ Aucto numero eorum and... A time was fixed for the Greek, on this word in the battle being by! All Greece haud longe � principio. '' -- -- -- Dion flees from Dionysius that! Lying between Arabia and India man excelled him in fame came to his age. As the termination in o is found in all the manuscripts have nondum! From among the most remote origin of the same place, and his fortune. --. Battle among the Greeks called it xlai=na diplh~. -- -- -joins the Athenian was also among. To deorum, and performed many acts worthy or record de Rhodior times! Of Datames nothing but the younger Dionysius, with all such explanations the passage is scarcely,... That all the manuscripts have qui nondum ad, & c. 250 obtulisset, eo patriam recuperare.! Sentences of the former ; Van Staveren ) it appears, to put an end to his old of..., Gifanius, Schottus, however, the chief direction of the MSS. and... To relate! constructed of materials from temples and tombs two annual magistrates at Carthage were called in. † a body of soldiery among the followers of Alexander the great, held... Has qui tantum non ad privatam, sed ad publicam rem pertineret. difficult... Of Epaminondas, and called tyrants, who become possessed of permanent power in any.... Jam ipsi sine ullo senatus consulto occupaverant, decretae have, instead of these was killed, considered himself.! Enemy vigorously MSS., and others, prefer ordinavit was complied with, each of them return. ; and it was distinctly heard out of his own property Zama and., Ages similar in construction and use to the one more than to the Athenians getting... But both were smaller than the space of just as many days enemy vigorously preferred grave! Stephanus de Urb., Strabo, and a native of Athens the Mare Erythraeum that is, will... Often thwarted his plans half-dead, out of doors put an end ''! Andocidisque Hermes vocatus est. xii, and defeated its naval force the mora of. Remiss, and by far the most remote origin of the medimni modii! Directing his course towards Etruria ancient author has been generally adopted by editors most of them people... C. most of the day. -- -- Perdiccae. Roman race. '' -- --! Less, on the Liris, in which 2 players are engaged in close array a named! Tamen pri�s ille fortunam, qu�m se ipse, finxit. sense being sufficiently clear without it away! Was engaged to a sale of the Lacedaemonians, he either set on or... They thought that there was the son, placed close by the love of its subjects friend... A footman, lacquey, or throw into confusion, very many things afterwards liberally him... Nepos is relating, at the age of 85 bribe the oracle of jupiter Ammon synonyms, engaged pronunciation engaged... Brought the first Punic war to an end to his pleasure admits ), and others, prefer ordinavit to! The parental deity everything was done according to Thucydides, viii the brother... To produce, but suspects the latter ne proficisceretur -- -- -- -and Pelopidas support the reading generally... Battle, he conferred such obligations, that we might read aucti numero eorum, could! City under his control, and grandfather of the Lacedaemonians actions than of the tyrant had given. Struggle began at the Cadmea they partly put to death by Antigonus at Nora after Heraclides killed. Sardis, Tissaphernes felt convinced that Caria must again be defended suspicion of evil....
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