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Arimnestus, a Platean, ix. 72.

Ariomardus, general of the Caspians, vii. 67.
Ariomardus, son of Darius, vii. 78.
Arion, a poet, i. 23, 24.

Ariphron, father of Xantippus, vi. 181,
184; vii. 86; viii. 131.

Arisba, a city of Lesbos, i. 151.

Artayctes, a Persian general, vii. 83, 78;
ix. 116, 118-120.

Artaynta, niece of Xerxes, ix. 108.
Artayntes, a Persian admiral, viii. 130; ix.
102, 107.

Artazostra, daughter of Darius, vi. 43.
Artembares, a Mede, i. 114-116.

Aristagoras, tyrant of Cyme, iv. 188; v. Artembares, a Persian, ix. 122.

37, 38.

Aristagoras, of Cyzicus, iv. 138.
Aristagoras, tyrant of Miletus, v. 30-51,
94, 98, 100, 124, 126; vii. 8.
Aristagoras, father of Hegesistratus, ix. 90.
Aristeas, a poet of Proconnesus, iv. 13-15.
Aristeas, a Corinthian, vii. 137.

Aristides, the Just, an Athenian, vii. 79,
82; viii. 79, 81, 95; ix. 28.
Aristocrates, father of Casambus, vi. 73.
Aristocyprus, king of Solias, v. 113.
Aristodemus, king of Sparta, iv. 147; vi.
52; vii. 204; viii. 131.

Aristodemus, a Spartan, vii. 229, 231; ix. 71.
Aristodicus, of Cyme, i. 158, 159.
Aristogiton and Harmodius, v. 55; vii.
109, 123.

Aristolaides, an Athenian, i. 59.
Aristomachus, father of Aristodemus, vi.
52; vii. 204; viii. 131.
Ariston of Byzantium, iv. 138.
Ariston, king of Sparta, i. 67; vi. 61-63, 69.
Aristonice, the Pythian, vii. 140.
Aristonymus of Sicyon, vii. 126.
Aristophantus, father of Cobon, vi. 66.
Aristophilides, king of Tarentum, iii. 136.
Arizanti, a Median tribe, i. 101.
Arizus, a Persian prince, vii. 82.
Armenians, i. 194; iii. 93; v. 49; vii. 78.
Armenius, Mount, i. 72.

Arpoxais, ancestor of the Scythians, iv. 5, 6.
Arsamenes, son of Darius, vii. 68.
Arsames, grandfather of Darius, i. 209;
vii. 11, 224.

Arsanes, son of Darius, vii. 68.

Artemisia, queen of Halicarnassus, vii.
99; viii. 68, 87, 88, 93. 101-103.
Artemisium, a port of Euboea, iv. 35; vii.
175, 176, 195; viii. 9-11, 14-17.
Artimpasa, Scythian Venus, iv. 59.
Artiscus, a Scythian river, iv. 92.
Artochmes, son-in-law of Darius, vii. 76.
Artontes, father of Bagæus, iii. 128.
Artontes, son of Mardonius, ix. 84.
Artybius, a Persian commander, v. 108,
110.

Artyntes, a Persian general, vii. 67; viii.

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69.

Aryandes, prefect of Egypt, iv. 166, 167,
200.

Aryenis, daughter of Alyattes, i. 74.
Asbystæ, a Libyan people, iv. 170.
Ascalon, a city of Palestine, i. 105.
Asia, wife of Prometheus, iv. 45.
Asia, geography of, iv. 37-40.
Asian tribe at Sardis, iv. 45.
Asias, son of Cotys, iv. 45.
Asinarius, vi. 68.

Asine, a city of Peloponnesus, viii. 73.
Asonides, a captain of Ægina, vii. 181.
Asopians, a people of Boeotia, ix. 15.
Asopodorus, a Theban commander, ix. 69.
Asopus, a river of Boeotia, vi. 108; vii.
199, 200, 216; ix. 15, 29, 43, 51.
Aspathines, a Persian prince, iii. 70, 78;
vii. 97.

Artabanus, uncle of Xerxes, iv. 86; vii. 10, Assa, a city of Mount Athos, vii. 122.

11, 17, 46-53, 66, 67, 75.

Artabates, a Persian, vii. 65.

Artabazanes, eldest son of Darius, vii. 2.
Artabazus, a Persian general, vii. 66; viii.
126-129; ix. 41, 66, 89.

Artace, a city of the Propontis, iv.14; vi. 83.
Artachæes, a Persian general, vii. 117, 122.
Artachæus, father of Artayntes, viii. 130.
Artachæus, father of Otaspis, vii. 63.
Artæans, ancient name of the Persians, vi.
98; vii. 61.

Artæus, father of Artachæus, vii. 22.
Artæus, father of Azanes, vii. 66.
Artanes, brother of Darius, vii. 224.
Artanes, a river of Thrace, iv. 49.
Artaphernes, brother of Darius, v. 23, 25,
30-32, 73, 100, 123; vi. 1, 4.
Artaphernes, son of Artaphernes, Persian
general at Marathon, vi. 94, 116; vii. 10,

74.
Artaxerxes, son of Xerxes, vi. 98; vii. 106,
151.

Assesus, a town of the Milesians, i. 19.
Assyria, i. 102, 106, 177; ii. 17; iv. 89.
Assyrians, i. 95, 102, 103, 106, 177; ii. 141;
vii. 62, 63.

Astacus, father of Melanippus, v. 67.
Aster, father of Anchimolius, v. 63.
Astrabacus, a hero of Sparta, vi. 69.
Astyages, king of the Medes, i, 46, 73-75,
107, 108, 123, 127-130, 139.
Asychis, king of Egypt, ii. 136.
Atarantes, a Libyan people, iv. 184.
Atarbechis, a city of Egypt, ii. 141.
Atarneus, or Atarnea, a city and territory
of Mysia, i. 160; vi. 28, 29; vii. 42; viii.
106.

Atarnes, a river of Thrace, iv. 49.
Athamas, son of Eolus, vii. 197.
Athenades, a Trachinian, vii. 213.
Athenagoras, a Samian, ix. 90.
Athens and Athenians, passim.
Athos, Mount, vi. 44, 95; vii. 21, 22.
Athribis, a district in Egypt, ii. 166.

Athrys, a river of Thrace, iv. 49.

Belus, father of Ninus, i. 7.

Atlantes, or Atarantes, a people of Libya, Belus, father of Cepheus, vii. 61.

iv. 184.

Atlantic Sea, i. 102.

Atlas, a river of Mount Hæmus, iv. 49.
Atlas, Mount, iv. 184.

Atossa, daughter of Cyrus, iii. 68, 88, 133,
134; vii. 2, 8.

Atramytteum, or Adramyttium, a town of
Troas, vii. 42.

Atridæ, the sons of Atreus, vii. 20.
Attaginus, a Theban, ix. 15, 86, 88.
Attica, i. 59; v. 76; ix. 13.

Attic people, i. 56; v. 87; vi. 138.
Atys, king of Sardis, i. 7, 94; vii. 27, 74.
Atys, son of Croesus, i. 34-43.
Auchatæ, a family of Scythians, iv. 6.
Augila, a country of Libya, iv. 172, 182.
Auras, a river of Mount Hæmus, iv. 49.
Auschise, a people of Libya, iv. 171.
Auses, a people of Libya, iv. 180, 191.
Autesion, father of Theras, iv. 147; vi. 52.
Autodicus, a Platæan, ix. 85.

Automoli, a colony of Egyptians, ii. 30.
Autonous, and Phylacus, viii. 39.
Auxesia and Damia, v. 82, 83.
Axius, a river of Macedonia, vii. 123.
Axus, a city of Crete, iv. 154.
Azanes, a Persian general, vii. 66.
Azen, in Arcadia, vi. 127.

Aziris, a district in Libya, iv. 157, 169.
Azotus, a city of Syria, ii. 157.

Babylon, i. 178-185, 192; iii. 158, 159.
Babylonia, i. 193.

Babylonians, i. 77, 190-200; ii. 109; iii.
150-159.

Bacchus, Egyptian Osiris, ii. 42, 48, 123,
144, 146; iii. 97; iv. 79. The Arabian,
iii. 8, 10. The Ethiopian, ii. 29. The
Grecian, ii. 49, 145, 146; iii. 97; v. 67;
vi. 79, 108; vii. 111.

Bacchus, temple of, at Byzantium, iv. 87.
Bacchanalia, iv. 79.

Bacchiads, of Corinth, v. 92.

Bacis, predictions of, viii. 20, 77, 96; ix.
43.

Bactra, a city of Assyria, vi. 9; ix. 113.
Bactria, a country of Asia, iv. 204.
Bactrians, vii. 68, 86.

Badres, or Bares, a Persian admiral, iv.
167, 203.

Bagæus, a Persian, son of Artontes, iii.
128.

Bagæus, father of Mardontes, vii. 80.
Bagasaces, son of Artabanus, vii. 76.
Barca, a city of Libya, iii. 91; iv. 160, 200,

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Bermion, a mountain of Macedonia, viii.
138.

Bessians, interpreters of Bacchus, vii. 211.
Bias of Priene, i. 27, 170.

Bias, brother of Melampus, ix. 34.
Bisaltes, son of Apollophanes, vi. 26.
Bisaltia, a region of Macedonia, vii. 115;
viii. 116.

Bisanthe, a city of the Hellespont, vii.
137.

Bistones, a people of Thrace, vii. 110.
Bistonis, a lake, vii. 109.

Bithynia, a province of Asia Minor, i. 28.
Bithynians, vii. 75.

Biton, and Cleobis, Argives, i. 31.
Bobeis, a lake of Thessaly, vii. 129.
Boeotia, ii. 49; v. 57.

Baotians, v. 74, 77, 79; vi. 108; vii. 202;
viii. 34; ix. 68.

Boges, governor of Eïon, vii. 107, 113.
Bolbitic mouth of the Nile, ii. 17.
Boreas, son-in-law of the Athenians, vii.
189.

Borysthenes, a river of Scythia, iv. 18, 45,
47, 53-and city, iv. 78.
Borysthenians, iv. 17, 18, 53, 78.
Bosphorus, the Cimmerian, iv. 12, 28, 100.
Bosphorus, the Thracian, iv. 86, 85, 86, 88.
Bottiæa, a region of Macedonia, vii. 123,
127, 185; viii. 127.

Branchidæ, i. 46, 92; ii. 159; v. 66.
Brauron, a town of Attica, iv. 145; vi. 138.
Briantica, a region of Thrace, vii. 108.
Briges, Phrygians, viii. 73.

Brongus, a river flowing into the Ister, iv.
49.

Brundusium, a city of Italy, iv. 99.
Bryges, a people of Thrace, vi. 45; vii.

185.

Bubares, a Persian, iv. 167; v. 21; vii. 22.
viii. 136.

Bubastis, a city of Egypt, ii. 59, 67, 156,
166.

Bubastis, the Egyptian Diana, ii. 137, 156.
Bucolic mouth of the Nile, ii. 17.
Budians, a people of Media, i. 101.
Budians, of Scythia, iv. 21, 108, 109.
Bulis, a Spartan, vii. 184-167.
Bura, a city of Achaia, ii. 145.
Busæans, a people of Media, i. 101.

Busiris, a city and district of Egypt, ii. 59,
61, 165.

Butacides, father of Philip of Crotona, v.
47.

Buto, a city of Egypt, ii. 59, 66, 75, 155.
Bybassia, a peninsula of Caria, i. 174.
Byzantium, iv. 144; v. 26, 106.

Cabales, a people of Libya, iv. 171.
Cabalian Meonians, vii. 77.

Cabalians, a people of Asia Minor, iii. 90.
Cabiri, ii. 51; iii. 37.

Cadmeans of Peloponnesus, i. 56, 146; v.
57, 61; ix. 27.

Cadmus, son of Agenor, ii. 45, 49; iv. 147; | Casambus of Ægina, vi. 75.

v. 57-59.

Cadmus, of Coos, viii. 163, 164.

Casius, Mount, in Arabia, ii. 6, 158; iii. 5.
Casmena, a city of Sicily, vii. 155.

Cadytis, a city of Palestine, ii. 159; iii. 5. Caspatyrus, a city of Pactyica, iii. 102; iv.

Cænis, ancestor of Eétion, v. 92, (2.).

Caicus, a plain of Mysia, vi. 28.
Caicus, a river of Mysia, vii. 42.
Calacté, on the coast of Sicily, vi. 22.
Calantian Indians, iii. 97.

Calasiries, Egyptian warriors, ii. 164-168;
vii. 89; ix. 32.
Calchas, vii. 91.

Calchedon, or Chalcedon, iv. 85, 144; v. 26.
Callatebus, a city of Lydia, vii. 81.
Calliades, an Athenian archon, viii. 51.
Callias, an Elian diviner, v. 44, 45.
Callias, father of Hipponicus, vi. 121, 122.
Callias, son of Hipponicus, vii. 151.
Callicrates, a Spartan, ix. 72, 85.
Callimachus of Aphidna, vi. 109, 114.
Callipides, a Scythian people, iv. 17.
Callipolis, a city of Sicily, vii. 154.
Callista, afterward Thera, iv. 147.
Calydne, a city of Asia Minor, viii. 87.
Calyndian mountains, i. 172.
Calyndians, viii, 87.

Camarina, a city of Sicily, vii. 154, 156.
Cambyses, father of Cyrus, i. 46, 107, 112,
207; vii. 11.

Cambyses, son of Cyrus, ii. 1, 208; iii. 1,
4, 7-38, 44, 61-66, 89, 139, 181; iv. 165.
Camicus, a city of Sicily, vii. 169, 170.
Camirus, a Dorian city, i. 144.

Campsa, a city of Crossæa, vii. 123.

Cana, Mount, in Mysia, vii. 42.

123.

44.

Caspian Sea, i. 202, 203; iv. 40.
Caspians, iii. 92; vii. 67, 84.
Cassandane, wife of Cyrus, ii. 1; iii. 2.
Cassiterides, western islands, iii. 115.
Castalian spring on Parnassus, viii. 89.
Casthanæa, a city of Magnesia, vii. 183, 188.
Castor and Pollux, ii. 43; vi. 127.
Catarractes, a river tributary to the Mæan-
der, vii. 26.

Catiarians, a Scythian tribe, iv. 6.
Caucasus, Mount, i. 104, 203, 204; iii. 97;
iv. 12.

Cauconian Pylians, i. 147; iv. 148.
Caunus, a city of Caria, i. 172, 176; v. 106.
Caustrobius, father of Aristeas, iv. 16.
Cayster, a river of Lydia, v. 100.
Cecrops, a king of Athens, viii. 44.
Celænæ, a city of Phrygia, vii. 26.
Celeas, an associate of Dorieus, v. 46.
Celts, a people of Europe, ii. 88; iv. 49.
Ceos, an island of the Ægæan sea, iv. 35;
v. 102; viii. 1, 46, 76.

Cephallenia, an island of the Ionian sea,
ix. 28.

Cephenes, Persians, vii. 61.

Cepheus, father of Andromeda, vii. 61.
Cephissus, father of Thyia, vii. 178.
Cephissus, a river of Phocis, viii. 33.
Ceramic gulf, i. 174.

Cercasora, a city of Egypt, ii. 15, 17, 97.

Canastræum, promontory of Pallené, vii. Ceres, the Egyptian Isis, ii. 59, 156. Eleu-

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Canobus, a city of Egypt, ii. 97.

sinian, ix. 62, 65, 97.

Chalcedonians, or Calchedonians, iv. 144;
v. 26; vi. 38.

Chalcidians, of Eubœa, v. 74, 77, 99; viii.
127; ix. 28.

Chaldæans, a people of Assyria, vii. 63.

Caphareum, a promontory of Euboea, Chaldæans, of Babylon, i. 181, 183.

viii. 7.

Cappadocia, i. 73.

Cappadocians, i. 71-73; v. 49; vii. 72.
Car, brother of Lydus, and Mysus, i. 171.
Carcinitis, a city of Scythia, iv. 59, 99.
Cardamyle, a town of Laconia, viii. 78.
Cardia, a city of the Chersonese, vi. 83;
vii. 58; ix. 115.

Carenus, father of Evænetus, vii. 173.
Caria, i. 142; vi. 25.

Carians, i. 28, 146, 171, 174; ii. 61, 152;
iii. 4, 11; v. 117-120; vii. 93; viii. 133,
135.

Carina, a city of Mysia, vii. 42.

Carpathus, an island near Rhodes, iii. 45.
Carpis, a river flowing into the Ister, iv. 49.
Carthage, iii. 119.

Carthaginians, i. 166; ii. 32; iii. 17, 19;
iv. 43, 197; vii. 165, 167.

Caryanda, iv. 44.

Carystus, a city of Euboea, iv. 33; vi. 99;
viii. 112.

Carystians, viii. 112, 121; ix. 105.

Chalestra, a city Macedonia, vii. 128.
Chalybians, of Asia Minor, i. 28; vii, 76.
Charadra, a city of Phocis, viii. 33.
Charaxus, brother of Sappho, ii. 185; iv.
135.

Charilaus, of Samos, iii. 145.

Charillus, son of Eunomus, viii. 181.
Charopinus, brother of Aristagoras, v. 99.
Chemmis, a floating island in Egypt, ii. 156.
Chemmis, a city of Egypt, ii. 91, 165.
Cheops, an Egyptian king, ii. 124.
Chephren, an Egyptian king, ii. 127, 128.
Cherasmes, a Persian, vii. 78.

Chersis, father of Gorgus and Onesilus, v.
104; vii. 98; viii. 11.

Chersonese of Thrace, vi. 63, 64, 69, 140;
ix. 118.

Chersonesus Trachea, iv. 99.
Chilaus, a Tegean, ix. 9.

Chilon, a Lacedæmonian, i. 59; vi. (5;
vii. 235.

Chios, a city of Ionia, i. 18, 142, 160; ii.
178; vi. 15, 16, 26, 31; viii. 132.

Choaspes, a river near Susa, i. 188; v. 49, 52. | Colosse, a city of Phrygia, vii. 30.

Chœreates, a tribe at Sicyon, v. 68.
Choreæ, a city of Euboea, vi. 101.
Chorus, father of Micythus, vii. 170.
Chorasmians, a people of Asia, iii. 93, 117;
vii. 66.

Chromius, an Argive, i. 82.

Ciconians, a people of Thrace, vii. 59, 108,
110.

Cilicia, a country of Asia, ii. 17, 34; iii. 90;
v. 52; ix. 107.

Cilicians, i. 28, 72; iii. 90; v. 49, 52; vii.
91; viii. 14.

Cilix, son of Agenor, a Phoenician, vii. 91.
Cilla, an Æolian city, i. 149.

Cimmeria, a region of Scythia, iv. 12.
Cimmerian Bosphorus, iv. 12, 28, 100.
Cimmerians, i. 6, 15, 16; iv. 1, 11, 12; vii. 20.
Cimon, father of Miltiades, vi. 34, 38, 39,
103.

Cimon, son of Miltiades, vi. 136; vii. 107.
Cineas, king of Thessaly, v. 63.

Cinyps, a river of Libya, iv. 175; v. 42.
Cinyps, a region of Libya, iv. 198.
Cion, a city of Mysia, v. 122.

Cissia, a country of Asia, iii. 91; v. 49, 52;
vi. 116.

Cissian gate of Babylon, iii. 155, 158.
Cissians, iii. 91; vii. 62, 86, 210.
Citharon, Mount, v. 74; vii. 141; ix. 19,
25, 39.

Cius, or Scius, a river tributary to the Ister,
ii. 49.

Clazomenæ, an Ionian city, i. 16, 51, 142;
ii. 178; v. 123.

Cleades, a Platæan, ix. 85.
Cleander, a seer, vi. 83.

Cleander, son of Hippocrates, vii. 155.
Cleander, son of Pantares, vii. 154.
Cleobis and Biton, i. 31.

Cleodæus, son of Hyllus, vi. 52; vii. 204;
viii. 131.

Cleombrotus, son of Anaxandrides, iv. 81;
v. 41; viii. 71; ix. 10.

Cleomenes, king of Sparta, ii. 148; v. 41-
51, 64, 70, 76; vi. 49-51, 65, 73-80, 84.
Cleonæ, a city of Mount Athos, vii. 22.
Clineas, son of Alcibiades, viii. 17.
Clisthenes, tyrant of Sicyon, v. 67; vi. 126.
Clisthenes, an Athenian, v. 66-70; vi. 131.
Clytiadæ, an Elian family, ix. 33.

Cnidus, a town of Caria, i. 144; ii. 178.
Cnidians, i. 174; iii. 138; iv. 164.
Cnoethus, father of Nicodromus, vi. 88.
Cobon, son of Aristophantus, vi. 66.
Codrus, king of Athens, v. 65, 76.
Codrus, son of Melanthus, i. 147.
Codrus, father of Neleus, ix. 97.
Conyra, a town in Thasos, vi. 47.
Coes, tyrant of Mitylene, iv. 97; v. 11, 67.
Colæus, a Samian captain, iv. 152.
Colaxais, ancestor of the Scythians, iv. 5, 7.
Colchians, iii. 97; iv. 37, 40; vii. 79.
Colchis, a country on the Euxine sea, i. 2.
Colias, on the coast of Attica, viii. 96.
Colophon, an Ionian city, i. 14, 142, 147, 150.

Combrea a city of Crossæa, vii. 123.
Compsatus, a river of Thrace, vii. 109.
Conians, a Thracian race, v. 63.
Contadesdus, a river of Thrace, iv. 89.
Copaïs, a lake of Boeotia, viii. 135.
Corcyra, colonized from Corinth, iii. 42, 49.
Corcyræans, iii. 48, 53; vii. 168.
Coressus, a port near Ephesus, v. 100.
Corinth, and Corinthians, i. 14, 50, 51; ii.
167; iii. 48, 49, 52; iv. 162; v. 75, 87,
92; vi. 89; vii. 202; viii. 1, 94; ix. 102.
Corobius, a Cretan, iv. 151.
Coronæans, neighbors of the Thebans, v.
79.

Corycium, a cavern of Parnassus, viii. 36.
Corydallus, of Anticyra, vii. 214.
Corys, a river of Arabia, iii. 9.

Cos, a Doric island, i. 144; vii. 164.
Cotys, father of Asias, iv. 45.
Cranaspes, a Persian, iii. 126.

Cranai, ancient name of the Athenians,
viii. 44.

Crastis, a river near Sybaris, v. 45.
Crathis, a river of Achaia, i. 145.
Cratines, father of Anaxilaus, vii. 165.
Cratinus, father of Aminocles, vii. 190.
Cremni, a port in the Mæotic gulf, iv. 20,
110.

Creston, Crestona, a city of Thrace, i. 57;
v. 3; vii. 124, 127; viii. 116.

Crete, Cretans, i. 2, 65, 173; iv. 151; vii.
169-171.

Crinippus, father of Terillus, vii. 165.
Crisæan plain, of Locris, viii. 32.
Critalla, a city of Cappadocia, vii. 26.
Critobulus, of Torona, viii. 127.
Crius, father of Polycritus, viii. 92.
Crius, son of Polycritus, vi. 50, 73.
Crobyzian Thracians, iv. 49.
Crocodiles, city of, in Egypt, ii. 148.
Croesus, king of Lydia, i. 7, 26-30, 34-
45, 50, 78-87, 92, 155, 207, 208; iii. 14,
34; vi. 125; viii. 35.

Crophi, a mountain in Upper Egypt, ii. 28.
Crossæa, a district of Macedonia, vii. 123.
Croton, a town in the gulf of Tarentum,
iii. 136, 137.

Crotonians, iii. 131; v. 44; viii. 47.
| Cuphagoras, an Athenian, vi. 117.
Curium, a city of Cyprus, v. 113.
Cyanean islands in the Euxine, iv. 85.
Cyaxares, king of Media, i. 16, 73, 74, 103,
106.

Cybebe, a temple at Sardis, v. 102.
Cyberniscus, a Lycian, vii. 98.
Cyclades, islands of the Ægean sea, v. 30,
31; vii. 95.

Cydippa, daughter of Terillus, vii. 165.
Cydonia, a city of Crete, iii. 44, 59.
Cydrara, a city on the borders of Phrygia,
vii. 30.

Cyllyrians, slaves of Sicily, vii. 155.
Cylon, an Athenian, v. 71.

Cyme, an Æolian city, i. 149, 157; v. 123;
vii. 194; viii. 130.

Cymæans, i. 157, 165; v. 68.
Cynægirus, a valiant Athenian, vi. 114.
Cyneas, father of Philager, vi. 101.
Cynetes, Cynesians, farthest people of
Europe toward the west, ii. 33; iv. 49.
Cyniscus, son of Leotychides, vi. 71.
Cyno, or Spaco, nurse of Cyrus, i. 110,
112-122.

Cynosarges in Attica, v. 66; vi. 116.
Cynosura, an island near Salamis, viii. 76.
Cynurians, people of Peloponnesus, viii. 76.
Cyprus, Cyprians, i. 100; ii. 182; iii. 19,
91; iv. 162; v. 104, 116; vii. 90.
Cypselus, tyrant of Corinth, i. 20; v. 92;
vi. 128.

Cypselus, father of Miltiades, vi. 35.
Cyraunis, an island near Libya, iv. 195.
Cyrene, a city of Libya, iv. 150-170, 199,
206.

Cyrenæans, ii. 32; iii. 131; iv. 152-162,
186.

Cyrnus, an island in the Tyrrhenian sea,
vii. 165.

Cyrnus, a city of Carystia, ix. 105.
Cyrnus, a hero, i. 167.

Cyrus, father of Cambyses, i. 111.
Cyrus, king of Persia, i. 46, 73-75, 79-
88, 91, 95, 108, 111, 113-116, 122, 130,
141, 153-155, 188-191, 201-205, 207,
244; iii. 69, 89; vii. 11; ix. 122.
Cythera, an island off Peloponnesus, i. 82,
105; vii. 235.

Cythnus, an island near Attica, vii. 90;
viii. 67.

Cythnians, viii. 46.

Cytissorus, son of Phixus, vii. 197.

Cyzicus, a city of Propontis, iv. 14, 76;
vi. 33.

Dadicæ, a people of Asia, iii. 91; vii. 66.
Dædalus, vii. 170.

Daians, a Persian tribe, i. 125.

Damasithymus, king of the Calyndians,

vii. 98; viii. 87.

Damasus, son of Amyris, vi. 127.

Damia and Auxesia, v. 82.

Dascylus, father of Gyges, i. S.
Datis, a Mede, general of the Persians at
Marathon, vi. 94, 97. 118; vii. 88.
Datus, a city of the Edonians, ix. 75.
Daulians, a people of Phocis, viii. 35.
Daurises, son-in-law of Darius, v. 116, 121.
Decelea, a district of Attica, ix. 15, 73.
Decelus, ix. 78.

Deioces, king of the Medes, i. 16, 73, 96—
102.

Deiphonus, son of Evenius, ix. 92.
Delians, iv. 33; vi. 97.

Delium, a Theban city, vi. 118; ix. 15.
Delphi and Delphians, i. 14, 46, 48, 50-52,
92; ii. 180; v. 42, 62; vii. 178; viii. 36,
37.

Delta, of the Nile, ii. 18-16.
Delos, an island of the Egean sea, i. 64;

iv. 33-35; vi. 97; viii. 182, 136; ix. 90.
Demaratus, king of Sparta, vi. 50, 61–70;
vii. 3, 101–104, 209, 264-269.
Demarmenus, father of Prinetades and
Chilon, v. 41; vi. 65.

Democedes, a physician of Crotona, iii.
129-137.

Democritus, of Naxos, viii. 46.
Demonax, a Mantinean, iv. 161.
Demonous, father of Penthylus, vii. 195.
Demophilus, a Thespian general, vii. 22.
Dersæi, a Thracian tribe, vii. 110.
Derusiæans, a Persian tribe, i. 125.
Deucalion, king of Thessaly, i. 56.
Diactorides, father of Eurydame, vi. 71.
Diactorides, a Cranonian, vi. 127.
Diadromus, father of Demophilus, vii. 222.
Diana, i. 26; ii. 59, 156; iii. 48; iv. 33, 87,
105; v. 7; vi. 138; vii. 176; viii. 77.
Dicæa, a city of Thrace, vii. 109.
Dicæus, an Athenian exile, viii. 65.
Dictynna, her fane, iii. 59.
Didymus, oracle of, vi. 19.

Dienecis, a Spartan, vii. 226.
Dindymene, i. 80.

Dinomenes, father of Gelon, vii. 145.
Diomede, ii. 116.

Dionysius, a Phocæan, vi. 11, 17.

Danae, mother of Perseus, i. 91; vi. 53; Dionysophanes, an Ephesian, ix. 84.

vii. 60, 150.

Danaus and Lynceus, ii. 91.

Danaus, son-in-law of Archander, ii. 98.
Danaus and Xuthus, vii. 94.

Daphnæ, Pelusian, of Egypt, ii. 30, 107.
Daphnis, tyrant of Abydos, iv. 188.
Dardanus, a city near Abydos, v. 117; vii.
43.

Dardanians, a people of Asia, i. 189.
Daritæ, a people of Asia, iii. 92.
Darius, king of Persia, i. 183, 187, 209; ii.
110; iii. 69, 70, 82-96, 101, 126-129,
165-144, 150-160; iv. 69, 44, 85-87,
97, 118, 120, 124, 127, 140-144; v. 12,
17, 97, 101, 105; vi. 46, 48, 94, 98, 111,
118; vii. 1-4, 10, 11, 69, 72, 82, 163,
224; viii. 89.

Dionysus, iv. 79.

Dioscuri, ii. 43, 50; vi. 127.

Dipæa, a place in Peloponnesus, ix. 85.
Dithyrambus, son of Hermatidas, vii. 227.
Dium, a city of Mount Athos, vii. 22.
Doberes, a people of Pæonia, v. 16; vii.
113.

Dodona, oracle of, i. 46; ii. 52, 55, 57; ix.
93.

Dolonci, a people of Thrace, vi. 34, 35.
Dolopes, a people of Thessaly, vii. 132, 185.
Dorians, i. 6, 28, 56, 141, 144, 171; iii. 56;
v. 68, 76, 86; vi. 56; vii. 96, 99, 102;
viii. 81, 73.

Dorieus, son of Anaxandrides, v. 41, 42,
43, 45, 46; vii. 158, 205; ix. 10.
Doris, formerly Dryopis, viii. 31.

Dascyleum, a city of Bithynia, iii. 120, Doriscus, a shore of Thrace, v. 98; vii. 25,

126; vi. 33.

59, 105.

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