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Melibea, a city of Magnesia, vii. 188.
Melians, or Malians, vii. 182.
Melissa, wife of Periander, iii. 50; v. 92.
Membliarus, son of Pæciles, iv. 147.
Memnon, city of, vii. 151.

Memphis, a city of Egypt, ii. 8, 10, 99.
Menares, father of Leotychides, vi. 65, 71;
viii. 131.

Menda, a city of Pallene, vii. 123.
Mendes, Egyptian Pan, ii. 42, 46.
Mendesian plain, ii. 42, 46, 166.
Mendesian mouth of the Nile, ii. 17.
Menelaus, husband of Helen, ii. 119.
Menes, first king of Egypt, ii. 4, 99.
Menius, brother of Eurydamé, vi. 71.
Merbal, son of Agbal, vii. 98.
Mercury, ii. 51, 138.

Mermnades, kings of Sardis, i. 7, 14.

Mercury, Thracian, v. 7.

Meroë, a city of Ethiopia, ii. 29.

Molossians, a people of Epirus, i. 146; vi.
127.
Molpagoras, father of Aristogoras, v. 30.
Momemphis, a city of Egypt, ii. 163.
Mophi, a mountain of Upper Egypt, ii. 28.
Moschians, a people of Asia, iii. 94; vii.
78.

Mosynœci, a people of Asia, iii. 94; vii.

78.

Munychia, a port of Attica, viii. 76.
Murichides, a Hellespontine, ix. 4.
Musæus, a seer, vii. 6; viii. 96; ix. 4.
Mycale, a promontory opposite Samos, i.
148; vi. 16; vii. 80; ix. 90; 96, 98, 104,
107.
Mycenæans, a people of Argolis, vii. 202;
ix. 27, 28.

Mycerinus, king of Egypt, ii. 129, 132, 134.
Mycians, a people of Asia, iii. 93; vii. 68.
Myconos, an island near Delos, vi. 118.

Mesambria, a city of Thrace, iv. 93; vi. Myecphoris, a district in Egypt, ii. 166.

33; vii. 108.

Messana, a city of Sicily, vii. 164.
Messapian Japyges, vii. 170.

Messenians of Peloponnesus, ix. 35, 64.
Metapontines of Italy, iv. 15.
Methymnæ, a city of Lesbos, i. 151.
Metiochus, son of Miltiades, vi. 41.
Metrodorus, tyrant of Proconnesus, iv.
138.

Micythus, servant of Anaxilaus, vii. 170.
Midas, king of Phrygia, i. 14, 35; viii. 188.
Miletus and Milesians, of Ionia, i. 14, 15,
17-22, 142, 143; ii. 33; v. 28-30, 86,
120; vi. 5, 18, 20, 21; ix. 97.
Milo, a wrestler, iii. 137.

Miltiades, son of Cypselus, vi. 34-38.
Miltiades, son of Cimon, tyrant of the
Chersonese, iv. 137; vi. 83-41, 104,
109, 132-137, 140.

Milyas, a province of Asia, i. 175; iii. 90;
vii. 77.

Minerva, Egyptian, ii. 62, 83, 175, 182.
Minerva, Grecian, i. 19, 22, 62, 92, 160,
175; iii. 59; iv. 180, 188, 189; v. 45, 59,
72, 82, 83, 95; vii. 48, 72; viii. 67, 69,
55, 94, 104; ix. 70.
Minerva, Libyan, iv. 189.

Minoa, a colony from Selinus, v. 46.
Minos, of Cnossus, iii. 122.

Minos, son of Europa, i. 176; vii. 169-
171.

Minyans, descendants of the Argonauts, i.
146; iv. 145-148.

Mitra, the Persian Venus, i. 181.
Mitradates, foster father of Cyrus, i. 110,
111.

Mitrobates, a Persian prince, iii. 120-127.
Mitylene, capital of Lesbos, i. 27, 160; ii.
78; v. 94.

Mnesarchus, father of Pythagoras, iv. 95.
Mnesiphilus, friend of Themistocles, viii.
57.

Moris, king of Egypt. ii. 13, 101.
Moris, lake of, ii. 4, 69, 148, 149; iii. 91.
Molois, a stream of Boeotia, ix. 57.

Mygdonia, a district of Macedonia, vii. 123,
124, 127.

Mylasa, a Carian town, i. 171; v. 87, 121.
Mylitta, Assyrian Venus, i. 131, 199.
Myndian ship, v. 33.

Myrcinus, a town of Edonia, v. 11, 23, 124.
Myriandrian gulf, iv. 38.

Myrina, a Æolian city, i. 149.

Myrinæans, a people in Lemnos, vi. 140.
Myrmex, a rock near Sciathus, vii. 183.
Myron, father of Aristonymus, vi. 126.
Myrsilus-Candaules, i. 7.

Myrsus, father of Candaules, i. 7.
Myrsus, son of Gyges, iii. 122; v. 121.
Mys, of Europus, viii. 133-135.
Mysians, a people of Asia Minor, i. 28, 160,
171; iii. 90; v. 122; vii. 20, 42, 74.
Mytilene, see Mitylene.

Myus, a town of Ionia, i. 142; v. 36; vi. 8.

Naparis, a river of Scythia, iv. 48.
Nasamones, a people of Libya, ii. 32; iv.
172, 182, 190.

Natho, an island of the Nile, ii. 165.
Naucratis, a port of the Delta, ii. 97, 185,
178, 179.

Nauplia, a port of Argolis, vi. 76.
Naustrophus, father of Eupalinus, iii. 60.
Naxos, one of the Cyclades, i. 64; v. 28,
30; vi. 96; vii. 154; viii. 46.
Neapolis, a town of Pallene, vii. 123.
Neapolis, a city of Egypt, ii. 91.
Neco, father of Psammitichus, ii. 152.
Neco, king of Egypt, ii. 158, 159; iv. 42.
Neleus, son of Codrus, v. 65; ix. 97.
Neocles, father of Themistocles, vii. 173.
Neon, a town of Phocis, viii. 62, 63.
Neon-Teichos, an Æolian town, i. 149.
Neptune, i. 148; ii. 50; iv. 59, 180, 188;
vii. 129, 192; viii. 55, 123, 129; ix. 81.
Nereids, vii. 191.

Nestor, father of Pisistratus, v. 65.
Nestus, a river near Abdera, vii. 109, 126.
Neurians, a Scythian people, iv. 17, 51,
100, 105.

Nicander, king of Sparta, viii. 181.
Nicandra, priestess at Dodona, ii. 55.
Nicodromus, of Ægina, vi. 88.
Nicolaus, son of Bulis, vii. 187.
Nile, a river of Egypt, ii. 10-34, 61, 99;
iv. 45, 53; vi. 50.

Nineveh, ii. 102, 103, 106, 150, 185, 193;
iii. 155.

Ninus, son of Belus, i. 7.
Nipsæan Thracians, i. 59.

Nisæa, a town of Megara, iii. 106; vii. 40.
Nisæan plain, vii. 40.

Nisyros, an island near Rhodes, vii. 99.
Nitetis, daughter of Apries, iii. 1.
Nitocris, queen of Babylon, i. 185, 187.
Nitocris, queen of Egypt, ii. 100.
Noës, a river of Thrace, iv. 49.
Nonacris, a town of Arcadia, vi. 74.
Nothon, father of Æschines, vi. 100.
Notium, an Eolian town, i. 149.
Nudium, a town of the Minyans, ii. 148.
Nymphodorus, son of Pytheas, vii. 157.
Nysa, a town of Ethiopia, ii. 146; iii. 111.

Oarizus, father of Massages, vii. 71.
Oarus, a river of Scythia, iv. 123.
Oasis, a city of Libya, iii. 26.
Ocean, a supposed river, encompassing the
earth, ii. 23; iv. 8, 66.

Octamasades, brother of Scylas, iv. 80.
Ocytus, father of Adimantus, viii. 5, 59.
Odomantians, a people of Thrace, v. 16;
vii. 112.

Odrysæans, a people of Thrace, iv. 92;
Ea, a place in Ægina, v. 80, 83.
Ebares, groom of Darius, iii. 85.
Ebares, son of Megabazus, vi. 33.
Edipus, son of Laïus, iv. 149; v. 60.
Enoë, a town of Attica, v. 74.

Enone, ancient name of Ægina, viii. 46.
Enotria, a district of Italy, i. 167.
Enyssæ, islands off Messenia, i. 165.
Eobazus, a Persian, iv. 84.

Eobazus, a Persian slain by the Thra-
cians, ix. 115, 119.

Eobazus, father of Siromitres, vii. 68.
Oëroë, daughter of Asopus, ix. 51.
Eta, Mount, vii. 176, 217.

Etosyrus, Scythian Apollo, iv. 59.
Eolycus, i. 149.

Olen, a poet, iv. 85.

Olenus, a town of Achaia, i. 145.
Oliatus, tyrant of Mylasa, v. 87.
Olophyxus, a town of Mount Athos, vii. 22.
Olorus, king of Thrace, vi. 39, 41.
Olympia, Olympic games, ii. 7, 160; v. 22,
47, 71; vi. 70, 103, 125; vii. 206; viii.
26, 134; ix. 34, 81.

Olympiodorus, son of Lampon, ix. 21.
Olympus, Mount, of Mysia, i. 36, 43; vii.
74.

Olympus, Mount, of Thessaly, i. 56; vii.
128, 129, 172.

Olynthus, a town of Sithonia, vii. 122;
viii. 127.

Oneatæ, a tribe at Sicyon, v. 68.

Onesilus, brother of Gorgus, v. 104–115.
Onetes, son of Phanagoras, vii. 214.
Onochonus, a river of Thessaly, vii. 129,
196.

Onomacritus, a diviner, vii. 6.
Onomastus, son of Agæus, vi. 127.
Onuphis, a district of Egypt, ii. 166.
Ophrynium, a town of Troas, vii. 43.
Opis and Argé, iv. 85.

Opis, a town at the mouth of the Tigris, i.
189.

Opœa, wife of Scylas, iv. 78.
Opuntian Locrians, vii. 203.
Orbelus, Mount, of Pæonia, v. 16.
Orchomenians, of Boeotia, viii. 34.
Orchomenians, of Arcadia, vii. 202; ix. 28.
Orchomenians, Minyan, i. 146.
Ordessus, a river of Scythia, iv. 48.
Orestes, son of Agamemnon, i. 68, 69; ix.

11.

Orges, father of Antipater, vii. 118.
Oricus, a port of Apollonia, ix. 93.
Oricus, son of Ariapithes, iv. 78.
Orithyia, wife of Boreas, vii. 189.
Orneates, a people of Peloponnesus, v. 68;
viii. 73.

Oroetes, governor of Sardis, iii. 120-127.
Oromedon, father of Syennesis, vii. 98.
Oropus, a port of Boeotia, vi. 100.
Orsiphantus, a Spartan, vii. 227.
Orthocorybantians, a people of Media, iii.

92.

Orus, son of Osiris, ii. 144.

Osiris, Egyptian Bacchus, see Bacchus.
Ossa, Mount, of Thessaly, i. 56; vii. 128,
129.

Otanes, a Persian prince, iii. 67–72, 76,
83, 141, 144, 147, 149.

Otanes, son of Sisamnes, v. 25, 26, 116, 126.
Otanes, father of Amestris, vii. 61.
Otanes, father of Pitaramphes, vii. 40.
Otaspes, son of Artachæus, vii. 63.
Othryades, a Spartan, i. 82.

Othrys, Mount, of Thessaly, vii. 129.
Ozola, Locrians, viii. 32.

Pactolus, a river of Lydia, v. 101.

Pactya, a town of the Chersonese, vi. 36.
Pactyas, a Lydian, ii. 156-160.

Pactyica, a country of Asia, iii. 93, 102;
iv. 44; vii. 67, 85.

Padæan Indians, iii. 99.

Pæanians, a tribe at Athens, i. 60.

Pæonia, Pæonians, iv. 86, 49; v. 1, 12—
15, 98; vii. 124, 185.

Pæoples, a people of Thrace, v. 15; vii.
113.

Pæsus, a town of the Hellespont, v. 117.
Pætians, a people of Thrace, vii. 110.
Pæum, a town of Arcadia, vi. 127.
Pagasa, a town of Magnesia, vii. 193, 198.
Paleans of Cephallenia, ix. 28.
Palestine, i. 104, 105; ii. 106; iii. 5; vii.
69, 89.

Pallene, a peninsula of Macedonia, vii.
123; viii. 126.

Pamisus, a river of Thessaly, vii. 129.

Pammon, a Scyrian, vii. 183.

Pedasus, a town of Caria, i. 175; v. 121;
vi. 20; viii. 104.

Pamphylians, a people of Asia Minor, i. Pedieæ, a town of Phocis, viii. 36.

28; iii. 90; vii. 91.

Pamphylians of Sicyon, v. 68.

Pan, ii. 46, 145, 146; vi. 105, 106.

Panatius, son of Sosimenes, viii. 82.
Panathenæa (festival), v. 56.

Pandion, father of Lycus, i. 173; vii, 92.
Pangæus, Mount, of Pæonia, v. 16; vii.
112.

Panionia (festival), i. 148.

Panionium, place of meeting of the states
general of Ionia, i. 148, 147, 148; vi. 7.
Panionius, a Chian, viii. 103-106.
Panites, a Messenian, vi. 52.
Panopians of Phocis, viii. 34, 35.
Panormus, a Milesian port, i. 157.
Pantagnotus, brother of Polycrates, iii. 89.
Pantaleon, brother of Croesus, i. 92.
Pantareus, father of Cleander, vii. 154.
Panthialæans, a tribe of Persians, i. 125.
Panticapes, a river of Scythia, iv. 18, 47,
54.

Pantimathians, a people of Asia, iii. 92.
Pantites, a Spartan, vii. 232.

Papæus, Scythian Jupiter, iv. 59.
Paphlagonians, a people of Asia Minor, i.
6, 28, 72; iii. 90; vii. 72.

Papremis, a city of Egypt, ii. 59, 63, 71,
165; iii. 12.

Paræbates, a Spartan, v. 46.
Paralates, Scythians, iv. 6.
Parapotamii, a town of Phocis, viii. 33.
Paretacenians, Medes, i. 101.

Paricanians, a people of Asia, iii. 94; vii.
68, 86.

Parium, a town of the Hellespont, v. 117.
Paris, see Alexander.

Parmys, daughter of Smerdis, iii. 88; vii.
78.

Parnassus, Mount, of Thessaly, viii. 27, 32.
Paroreatæ, a people of Peloponnesus, iv.
148; viii. 73.

Paros, one of the Cyclades, v. 28, 31; vi.
133, 135; viii. 67, 112.

Parthenius, a river of Thrace, ii. 104.
Parthenius, Mount, in Peloponnesus, vi.
105.

Parthians, a people of Asia, iii. 93, 117;
vii. 66.

Pasargadæ, a tribe of Persians, i. 125.
Pasargades, a Persian commander, iv. 167.
Pasicles, father of Philistus, ix. 97.
Pataicus, father of Enesidemus, vii. 154.
Patara, a town of Lycia, i. 182.
Patarbemis, an Egyptian prince, ii. 162.
Patiramphes, charioteer to Xerxes, vii. 40.
Patizithes, a magus, iii. 61-78.
Patræ, a town of Achaia, i. 145.
Patumos, a town of Arabia, ii. 158.
Pausanias, son of Cleombrotus, iv. 81; v.
32; vii. 204; viii. 3; ix. 10, 21, 46, 50,
53-57, 60-64, 78-82, 88.

Pausica, a people of Asia, iii. 92.
Pausiris, son of Amyrtæus, iii. 15.

Pelasgians, i. 56, 57, 146; ii. 51; iv. 145;

v. 26; vi. 187; vii. 94; viii. 44.
Peleus, king of Thessaly, vii. 191.
Pelion, Mount, of Thessaly, iv. 179; vii.
129.

Pella, a town of Bottiæa, vii. 123.

Pellena, a district of Peloponnesus, i. 145.
Peloponnesus, i. 56, 68; vii. 137, 283; viii.
31, 73; ix. 73.

Pelops, a Phrygian, vii. 8, 11.

Pelusian mouth of the Nile, ii. 17, 154;
iii. 10.

Penelope, mother of Pan, ii. 145.
Peneus, a river of Thessaly, vii. 20, 128,
129, 173, 182.

Pentapolis, a Dorian district, i. 144.
Penthylus, general of the Paphians, vii.
195.

Percalos, wife of Demaratus, vi. 65.

Percote, a town of the Hellespont, v. 117.
Perdiccas, ancestor of Amyntas, v. 22;
viii. 137-139.

Pergamus, citadel of Troy, vii. 43.
Pergamus, a fort in Thrace, vii. 112.
Perialla, Pythoness, vi. 66.

Periander, tyrant of Corinth, i. 20, 23;
iii. 48, 50, 53; v. 92, (6.).
Pericles, his parentage, vi. 131.

Perilaus, general of the Sicyonians, ix.
103.

Perinthus, a town of the Chersonese, iv.
90; v. 1, 2; vi. 33; vii. 25.
Perpherees, iv. 33.

Perrhæbians, a people of Thessaly, vii
128, 132, 173.

Perses, son of Perses, vii. 61, 150.
Perseus, son of Danae, ii. 91; iv. 82; vi.
53, 54; vii, 61, 150.
Persians, passim.

Petra, a town of the Corinthians, v. 92,
(2.).

Phædyma, daughter of Otanes, iii. 68, 69,
88.

Phænippus, father of Callias, vi. 121.
Phagres, a fort of Pieria, vii. 112.
Phalerus, the port of Athens, v. 63, 85; vi.
116; viii. 66, 91; ix. 32.

Phanagoras, father of Onetes, vii. 214.
Phanes, a Halicarnassian, iii. 4, 11.
Pharandates, son of Theaspes, vii. 79; ix.
76.

Pharbathis, a district of Egypt, ii. 166.
Pharees, a town of Achaia, i. 145.
Pharnaces, father of Artabazus, vii. 66; ix.
41.

Pharmaspes, father of Cassandane, ii. 1;
iii. 2.

Pharnazathres, a Persian general, vii. 65.
Pharnuches, general of cavalry, vii. 88.
Phaselis, a Doric town, ii. 178.

Phasis, a river of Colchis, i. 2, 104; ii. 103;
iv. 37, 38, 45, 86; vi. 84.
Phaylus of Crotona, viii. 47.

Phegeus, father of Aëropus, ix. 26.
Pheneus, a town of Arcadia, vi. 74.
Pherendates, son of Megabazus, vii. 67.
Pheretima, wife of Arcesilaus, iv. 162, 202,
205.

Pheron, king of Egypt, ii. 11.
Phidippides, a courier, vi. 105.
Phidon, tyrant of Argos, vi. 127.
Phigalia, a district of Arcadia, vi. 83.
Philæus, son of Ajax, vi. 35.
Philager, son of Cyneas, vi. 101.
Philaon, son of Chersis, viii. 11.

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Philocyprus, tyrant of Soli, v. 113.

Pisistratus, son of Nestor, v. 65.
Pisistratus, son of Hippocrates, i. 59–64;
v. 65; vi. 35, 103.

Pistyrus, a town of Thrace, vii. 109.
Pitana, an Æolian town, i. 149.

Pitane, a town of Laconia, iii. 55; ix. 53.
Pittacus of Mitylene, i. 27.

Pixodarus, son of Mausolus, v. 128.
Placia, a Pelasgian town of the Hellespont,
i. 57.

Platæa, Platæans, vi. 108; viii. 1, 44, 50;
ix. 25, 28, 29, 51, 53-85.

Platea, an island off the coast of Libya,
iv. 151, 153, 156, 169.

Pleistarchus, son of Leonidas, ix. 10.

Pleistorus, divinity of the Absinthians, ix.
119.

Plinthine, gulf of, ii. 6.

Plynus, a lake of Libya, iv. 168.

Phla, an island of the lake Tritonis, iv. Poeciles, father of Membliares, iv. 147.
178.

Phlegra, ancient name of Pallene, vii. 123.
Phlius, a town of Peloponnesus, ix. 28.
Phocæa, an Ionian city of Lydia, i. 80,
142, 152, 163-167; ii. 106, 177, 178; vi.
8, 11-17.

Phocis, Phocians, i. 146; vii. 176, 212, 215,
217; viii. 27, 30, 32; ix. 17, 31.
Phœbeum, temple of, vi. 61.

Phoenicia, ii. 44, 116; iii. 136; iv. 89.
Phoenicians, i. 1, 105; ii. 44, 104, 112; iii.

6, 19, 107, 110, 113, 115; iv. 42; v. 58,
S9; vi. 47; vii. 28, 34, 44, 89; viii. 90.
Phoenix, a river near Anthela, vii. 176,
200.

Phormus, an Athenian, vii. 182.

Phraortes, king of the Medes, i. 73, 102.
Phrataguna, wife of Darius, vii. 224.
Phriconis, Cyma, i. 149.

Phrixæ, a town of the Minyans, iv. 148.
Phrixus, father of Cytissorus, vii. 197.
Phronima, daughter of Etearchus, iv. 154.
Phrygia, Phrygians, i. 27, 28, 72; ii. 2;
iii. 90; vii. 73.

Phrynichus, an Athenian poet, vi. 21.
Phrynon, father of Attaginus, ix. 15.
Phthiotis, a region of Thessaly, i. 56; vii.
132.

Phya, a woman of Attica, i. 60.
Phylacus and Autonous, viii. 39.
Phylacus, son of Histiæus, viii. 85.
Phyllis, a region near Mount Pangæus,
vii. 113.

Pieria, a region of Macedonia, vii. 112,
131, 185.

Pigres, son of Seldomus, vii. 98.
Pigres and Mantyes, brothers, v. 12.
Pilorus, a town of Mount Athos, vii. 122.
Pindar, the poet, iii. 88.

Pindus, Mount, of Thessaly, i. 56; vii.
129.

Pirene, fountain, near Corinth, v. 92.
Piromis, ii. 143.

Pirus, a river of Achaia, i. 145.
Pisa, a town of Elis, ii. 7.

Pisistratidæ, v. 66, 65, 90; viii. 52.

Pogon, a port of the Trozenians, viii. 42.
Poliades, father of Amompharetus, ix. 53.
Polichnitæ, Cretans, vii. 170.
Pollux, see Tyndarides.
Polyas of Anticyra, viii. 21.

Polybus, ancestor of Adrastus, v. 67.
Polycrates, tyrant of Samos, iii. 39-44,
54-56, 121, 122, 125.

Polycritus of Ægina, viii. 92, 93.
Polydectes, king of Sparta, viii. 131.
Polydorus, son of Alcamenes, vii. 204.
Polydorus, grandfather of Laïus, v. 59.
Polymnestus, father of Battus, iv. 150,
155.

Polynices, father of Thersander, vi. 52,
147; ix. 27.

Pontus, see Euxine.

Porata, a river of Scythia, iv. 12, 48.
Porthmea, Cimmerian, iv. 12, 45.

Posideum, a town of Cilicia, iii. 91; vii.
115.

Posidonians, i. 167.

Posidonius, a Spartan, ix. 71, 85.

Potidæa, a city of Pallene, vii. 123; viii.
126, 129.

Præsian Cretans, vii. 170, 171.

| Prasias, a lake of Thrace, v. 16.
Praxilaus, father of Xenagoras, ix, 107.
Praxinus, a Trozenian captain, vii. 180.
Prexaspes, a Persian prince, iii. 30, 33, 84,
62, 66, 74.

Prexaspes, son of Aspathines, vii. 97.
Priam, king of Troy, i. 4; ii. 120; vii. 43.
Priene, a town of Caria, i. 15, 142, 161;
vi. 8.

Prinetades, son of Demarmenus, v. 41.
Procles, son of Aristodemus, vi. 51, 52;
viii. 161, 147.

Procles, tyrant of Epidaurus, iii. 50, 52.
Proconnesus, an island of the Propontis,
iv. 13, 14; vi. 36.

Prometheus, iv. 45.

Pronæan Minerva, i. 92; iii. 108; viii. 87,
39.

Propontis, iv. 85.

Proserpine, feast of, vii. 65. See Ceres.

Prosopitis, an island of the Nile, ii. 41, 165. | Sandoces, a Persian judge, vii. 194.

Protesilaus, a hero, vii. 33; ix. 116.
Proteus, king of Egypt, ii. 112, 116.
Protothyes, a Scythian, i. 103.
Prytanis, king of Sparta, viii. 181.
Prytaneum, at Athens, i. 146; vii. 139.
Prytaneum, of the Achæans, vii. 197.
Psammenitus, king of Egypt, iii. 10-15.
Psammis, king of Egypt, ii. 160.
Psammitichus, king of Egypt, i. 105; ii. 2,
152-157.

Psammitichus, father of Inarus, vii. 7.
Psyllians, a Libyan people, iv. 173.

Sappho, the poetess, ii. 135.

Sarangeans, a people of Asia, iii. 93; vii.
67.

Sardanapalus, king of Nineveh, ii. 150.
Sardinia, i. 170; v. 106, 124; vii. 165.
Sardis, i. 7, 15, 84, 86; v. 100, 101, 105.
Sardonian sea, i. 166.

Sarpedon and Minos, i. 173.

Sarpedon, promontory, vii. 58.

Sarta, a town of Mount Athos, vii. 122.
Saspires, a people of Asia, i. 104; iii. 94;
iv. 87; vii. 79.

Psyttalea, an island near Salamis, viii. 76, Sataspes, a Persian, iv. 43.

95.

Pteria, a town of Cappadocia, i. 76.
Ptous, Apollo, viii. 135.
Pylæ, see Thermopyla.
Pylagori, vii. 213.

Pylians, Cauconian, i. 147; v. 65.
Pylus, a town of Laconia, vii. 168.
Pylus, a town of Elis, ix. 34.

Pyrene, a town near the Ister, ii. 33.
Pyretos, a river of Scythia, iv. 48.

Pyrgus, a town of the Minyans, iv. 148.
Pythagoras, ii. 81; iv. 94, 95.
Pythagoras, a Milesian, v. 126.
Pythagoras, tyrant of Selinus, v. 46.

Satræ, a people of Thrace, vii. 110, 111.
Sattagydæ, a people of Asia, iii. 91.
Saulius, king of Scythia, iv. 76.

Sauromatæ, a Scythian people, iv. 21, 43,
110-117.

Scæus, a pugilist, v. 60.

Scamander, a river of Troas, v. 65; vii. 42.
Scamandronymus, father of Charaxus, ii.

185.

Scapte-Hyle, a place in Thrace, vi. 46.
Sciathos, an island near Artemisium, vii.
176, 179, 182, 183; viii. 7.

Scidrus, a town of the Sybarites, vi. 21.
Sciona, a town of Pallene, vii. 123.

Pytheas, an Æginetan, vii. 181; viii. 92; Sciras, Minerva, viii. 94.

ix. 78.

Pythermus, a Phocæan, i. 152.

Pythius, a Lydian, vii. 27-29, 68, 69.
Pythogenes, a Scythian, vi. 23.

Rhampsinitus, king of Egypt, ii. 121, 122.
Rhegium, a town of Italy, vii. 170.
Rhenæa, an island near Delos, vi. 97.
Rhodes, i. 174; ii. 178; vii. 153.

Scironian road at the Isthmus, viii. 71.
Sciton, servant of Democedes, iii. 180.
Scius, a river of Scythia, iv. 49.
Scolos, a town of Boeotia, ix. 15.
Scolopoïs, a river near Mycale, ix. 97.
Scoloti, Scythians, iv. 6.

Scopades, Thessalians, vi. 127.

Scopasis, king of the Scythians, iv. 120,
128.

Rhodope, Mount, of Thrace, iv. 49; viii. Scylace, a Pelasgian town, i. 57.

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Sabacon, king of the Ethiopians, ii. 137- Scythes, of Zancla, vi. 25, 24.
139, 152.

Sabyllus, of Gela, vii. 154.

Sacæ, a people of Asia, i. 153; iii. 93; vii.
64.

Sadyattes, king of Lydia, i. 16, 18.
Sagartian Persians, i. 125; iii. 93; vii. 8.
Sais, a city of Egypt, ii. 28, 29, 62, 163, 165,
169, 170.

Saitic mouth of the Nile, ii. 17.

Sala, a town of Samothracia, vii. 59.
Salamis, vii. 166; viii. 40, 56, 83-96.
Salamis, a city of Cyprus, iv. 162; v. 104.
Salmydessus, a town of Thrace, iv. 93.
Samos, Samians, i. 70, 142; ii. 148; iii. 26,
39, 46, 47, 54, 60, 139-149; iv. 152, 162;
vi. 14, 22; ix. 90, 99.
Samothracians, ii. 51; vi. 47; vii. 108;
viii. 90.

Sana, a town of Mount Athos, vii. 22, 123.
Sandanis, a Lydian, i. 71.

Scythes, of Coos, vii. 163.

Scythia, Scythians, i. 15, 37, 73, 103, 105,
106; iv. 1-12, 17-20, 40, 46-81, 109,
114, 120, 121, 127, 181, 186; vi. 84; vii.
10, (1.), 20, 64.

Sebennys, a district of Egypt, ii. 166.
Sebennytic mouth of the Nile, ii. 17.
Seldomus, father of Pigres, vii. 98.
Selinus, a town of Sicily, v. 66.

Selybria, a town of the Chersonese, vi. 63.
Semiramis, queen of Babylon, i. 184.
Sennacherib, king of Assyria, ii. 141.
Sepia, a town of Argolis, vi. 77.
Sepias, a shore of Magnesia, vii. 183, 186,
188, 191, 195.

Serbonis, a lake of Egypt, ii. 6; iii. 5.
Seriphos, an island of the Ægean sea, viii.
44, 48.

Sermyla, a Greek town of Sithonia, vii.
122.

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