INDEX.
(The number in Roman Notation is the number of the Book, the number in Arabic Notation the number of the Chapter.)
- Achelous, a river in Ætolia, iv. 34; viii. [24].
- Its contest with Hercules, iii. 18; vi. 19.
- Father of Callirhoe, viii. [24],
- of the Sirens, ix. [34],
- of Castalia, x. [8].
- Acheron, a river in Thesprotia, i. 17; v. 14; x. [28].
- Achilles, i. 22; iii. 18, 19, 24.
- Acichorius, a general of the Galati, x. [19], [22], [23].
- Acrisius, son of Abas, ii. 16.
- Husband of Eurydice, iii. 13.
- Constructs a brazen chamber for his daughter Danae, ii. 23; x. [5].
- Killed unintentionally by his grandson Perseus, ii. 16.
- Actæa, the ancient name of Attica, i. 2.
- Actæon, son of Aristæus, ix. [2]; x. [17], [30].
- Addison, ii. 20, Note.
- Adonis, ii. 20; ix. [29].
- Adrian, the Roman Emperor, i. 3, 18, 44; ii. 3, 17; vi. 16, 19; viii. [8], [10], [11], [22].
- His love for, and deification of, Antinous, viii. [9].
- Adriatic sea, viii. [54].
- Adultery, iv. 20; ix. [36].
- Ægialus, afterwards Achaia, v. 1; vii. [1], where see Note.
- Ægina, the daughter of Asopus, ii. 5, 29; v. 22; x. [13].
- Ægina, the island, ii. 29, 30.
- Ægisthus, i. 22; ii. 16, 18.
- Ægos-potamoi, iii. 8, 11, 17, 18; iv. 17; ix. [32]; x. [9].
- Æneas, the son of Anchises, ii. 21, 23; iii. 22; v. 22; viii. [12]; x. [17], [26].
- Æschylus, the son of Euphorion, i. 2, 14, 21, 28; ii. 13, 20, 24; viii. [6], [37]; ix. [22]; x. [4].
- Æsculapius, the son of Apollo, ii. 10, 26, 27, 29; iii. 23; vii. [23]; viii. [25].
- His temples, i. 21; ii. 10, 13, 23; iii. 22, 26; iv. 30, 31; vii. [21], [23], [27]; viii. [25].
- Æsymnetes, vii. [19], [20].
- Æthra, wife of Phalanthus, her love for her husband, x. [10].
- Ætna, its craters, how prophetic, iii. 23.
- Eruption of Ætna, x. [28].
- Agamemnon, i. 43; ii. 6, 18; iii. 9; vii. [24]; ix. [40].
- His tomb, ii. 16; iii. 19.
- Ageladas, an Argive statuary, iv. 33; vi. 8, 10, 14; vii. [24]; viii. [42]; x. [10].
- Aglaus of Psophis, happy all his life, viii. [24].
- Ajax, the son of Oileus, his violation of Cassandra, i. 15; x. [26], [31].
- Ajax, the son of Telamon, i. 5, 35; v. 19.
- Alcæus, vii. [20]; x. [8].
- Alcamenes, a statuary, a contemporary of Phidias, i. 8, 19, 20, 24; ii. 30; v. 10; viii. [9]; ix. [11].
- Alcmæon, son of Amphiaraus, the murderer of his mother Eriphyle, i. 34; v. 17; viii. [24].
- Alcman, the poet, i. 41; iii. 18, 26.
- Alcmena, the daughter of Amphiaraus and Eriphyle, and wife of Amphitryon, deceived by Zeus, v. 18.
- Hated by Hera, ix. [11].
- Mother of Hercules, v. 14.
- Alcyone, the daughter of Atlas, ii. 30; iii. 18; ix. [22].
- Alexander, son of Alexander the Great by Roxana, i. 6; ix. [7].
- Alexander the Great, i. 9; v. 21; vii. [5]; ix. [23], [25].
- Said by the Macedonians to be the son of Ammon, iv. 14.
- Very passionate, vi. 18.
- Tradition about his death, viii. [18].
- Buried at Memphis, i. 6.
- His corpse removed thence by Ptolemy, i. 7.
- Statues of him, i. 9; v. 25; vi. 11.
- Cassander’s hatred of him, ix. [7].
- Alexandria, v. 21; viii. [33].
- Alpheus, a river in Pisa, iii. 8; v. 7; vi. 22.
- Enamoured of Artemis, vi. 22;
- of Arethusa, v. 7.
- Women may not cross the Alpheus on certain days, v. 6.
- Leucippus lets his hair grow to the Alpheus, viii. [20].
- Altars, v. 13, 14; vi. 20, 24; ix. [3], [11].
- Althæa, daughter of Thestius and mother of Meleager, viii. [45]; x. [31].
- Altis (a corruption of ἄλσος, grove), v. 10, 11, 14, 15, 27.
- Amaltheæ cornu, iv. 30; vi. 19, 25; vii. [26]. (Cornu copiæ.)
- Amazons, i. 15, 41; iii. 25; iv. 31; vi. 2.
- Amber, native and otherwise, v. 12.
- Ambraciotes, v. 23; x. [18].
- Ammon, iii. 18, 21; iv. 14, 23; v. 15; vi. 8; viii. [11], [32]; ix. [16]; x. [13].
- Amphiaraus, i. 34; ii. 13, 23; ix. [8], [19].
- Amphictyones, vii. [24]; x. [2], [8], [15], [19].
- Amphion and Zethus, sons of Antiope, ii. 6; ix. [5], [17]; x. [32].
- Amphion, ii. 21; vi. 20; ix. [5], [8], [16], [17].
- Anacharsis, i. 22.
- Anacreon of Teos, a friend of Polycrates, i. 2.
- The first erotic poet after Sappho, i. 25.
- Anaximenes, his ruse with Alexander the Great, &c., vi 18.
- Ancæus, the son of Lycurgus, viii. [4], [45].
- Androgeos, i. 1, 27.
- Andromache, the wife of Hector, x. [25].
- Androtion, vi. 7; x. [8].
- Angelion and Tectæus, statuaries and pupils of Dipœnus and Scyllis, ii. 32; ix. [35].
- Antæus, ix. [11].
- Antalcidas, Peace of, ix. [1], [13].
- Antenor, x. [26], [27].
- Anteros, i. 30; vi. 23.
- Anticlea, the mother of Odysseus, x. [29].
- Anticyra, famous for hellebore, originally called Cyparissus, x. [36].
- Antigone, ix. [25].
- Antimachus, the poet, viii. [25]; ix. [35].
- Antinous, viii. [9].
- See also Adrian.
- Antioch, the capital of Syria, viii. [29].
- Antiochus, the pilot of Alcibiades, iii. 17; ix. [32].
- Antiope, the Amazon, i. 2, 41.
- Antiope, the mother of Zethus and Amphion, i. 38; ii. 6; ix. [17], [25]; x. [32].
- Antiphanes, an Argive statuary, v. 17; x. [9].
- Antipœnus, heroism of his daughters Androclea and Alcis, ix. [17].
- Antonine, the Emperor, called by the Romans Pius, viii. [43].
- His son and successor Antonine, viii. [43].
- Anytus, one of the Titans, viii. [37].
- Aphidna, i. 17, 41; ii. 22; iii. 17, 18.
- Aphrodite, Anadyomene, ii. 1; v. 11.
- Mother of Priapus, according to the people of Lampsacus, ix. [31].
- The tutelary saint of the men of Cnidus, i. 1.
- Ancient temple of her and Adonis in common in Cyprus, ix. [41].
- Her clients, ii. 34; ix. [38].
- Her statue by Dædalus, ix. [40].
- The myrtle in connection with her, vi. 24.
- The Celestial and Pandemian Aphrodite, vi. 25; ix. [16].
- (The Latin Venus.)
- Apis, the Egyptian god, i. 18; vii. [22].
- Apollo, helps Alcathous, i. 42.
- Herds the cattle of Laomedon, vii. [20].
- Inventor of the lute, iii. 24; v. 14; viii. [31].
- Jealous of Leucippus, viii. [20].
- Jealous of Linus, ix. [29].
- His altar in common with Hermes, v. 14.
- See also Delphi.
- Aratus of Soli, i. 2.
- Aratus of Sicyon, ii. 8, 9; viii. [10], [52].
- Ardalus, the son of Hephaæstus, inventor of the flute, ii. 31.
- Ares, the Latin Mars, charged with murder, i. 21, 28.
- Areopagus, i. 28; iv. 5.
- Arethusa, v. 7; vii. [24]; viii. [53].
- Argiope, a Nymph, mother of Thamyris by Philammon, iv. 33.
- Argo, the famous ship, vii. [26]; ix. [32].
- Argonauts, vii. [4].
- Argos, ii. 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24; vii. [17].
- Ariadne, i. 20, 22; x. [29].
- Aricia, the people of, their tradition about Hippolytus, ii. 27.
- Arimaspians, i. 24, 31.
- Arion, the horse, viii. [25].
- Arion and the dolphin, iii. 25.
- Aristocrates, viii. [5], [13].
- Heredity in vice and punishment.
- Aristodemus, king of the Messenians, iv. 8, 10, 13, 26.
- Aristogiton, i. 8, 29.
- Aristomache, the daughter of Priam, x. [26].
- Aristomenes, the hero of Messenia, iv. 6, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27, 32; vi. 7; viii. [14], [51].
- Aristo, the father of the famous Plato, iv. 32.
- Aristophanes on Lepreus, v. 5.
- Aristotle, the mighty Stagirite, his statue, vi. 4.
- Arsinoe, daughter of Ptolemy, and wife of her own brother, i. 7, 8; ix. [31].
- Arsinoites, name of a district in Egypt, v. 21.
- Art, the noble art of self-defence, vi. 10; viii. [40].
- Artemis, (the Latin Diana,) iii. 22; iv. 30; viii. [3], [27].
- Especially worshipped at Hyampolis, x. [35].
- Temple of the goddess at Aulis, ix. [19].
- Events there, do.
- Artemisia, her valour at Salamis, iii. 11.
- Artemisium, a mountain, ii. 25; viii. [5].
- Ascra, in Bœotia, the birthplace of Hesiod, ix. [29], [38].
- Asopus, a river in Bœotia, ii. 6.
- Reedy, v. 14.
- Asopus, a river in Sicyonia, ii. 5, 15.
- Asphodel, its unpleasant smell, x. [38].
- Atalanta, iii. 24; viii. [35], [45].
- Athamas, son of Æolus, vii. [3].
- Brother of Sisyphus, ix. [34].
- Desirous to kill his children Phrixus and Helle, ix. [34].
- Athene, (the Latin Minerva,) why grey-eyed, i. 14.
- Her birth, i. 24.
- Disputes as to territory between her and Poseidon, i. 24; ii. 30.
- Gives Erichthonius to the daughters of Cecrops, i. 18.
- A colossal statue of the goddess at Thebes, ix. [11].
- Athens, sacred to Athene, i. 26.
- Captured by Sulla, i. 20.
- Athenians, very pious, i. 17, 24; x. [28]. (Cf. Acts xvii. 22.)
- Helped in war by the gods, viii. [10].
- Their forces at Marathon and against the Galati, iv. 25; x. [20].
- Their expedition to Sicily, viii. [11]; x. [11], [15].
- The only democracy that ever rose to greatness, iv. 35.
- Their magistrates, iii. 11; iv. 5, 15.
- Their townships, i. 3, 32, 33.
- Their law-courts, i. 28.
- Their Eponymi, i. 5.
- Their expeditions beyond Greece, i. 29.
- Their heroes, x. [10].
- Athletes, their diet in training, vi. 7.
- Atlas, v. 11, 18; vi. 19; ix. [20].
- Atlas, a mountain in Libya, i. 33; viii. [43].
- Atreus, ii. 16, 18; ix. [40].
- Attalus, an ally of the Romans, vii. [8], 16.
- His greatest feat, i. 8.
- The oracle about him, x. [15].
- Attica, whence it got its name, i. 2.
- Sacred to Athene, i. 26.
- Augeas, v. 1, 3, 4, 8.
- Augustus, iii. 11, 21, 26; iv. 31; vii. [17], [18], [22]; viii. [46].
- Statues of Augustus, ii. 17; v. 12.
- Aulis, iii. 9; viii. [28]; ix. [19].
- Aurora, i. 3; iii. 18; v. 22.
- Axe tried in Court, i. 24, 28.
- Babylon, its walls, iv. 31.
- Bacchantes, ii. 2, 7.
- Bacchus, see Dionysus.
- Bacis, his oracles, iv. 27; ix. [17]; x. [14], [32].
- A Bœotian, x. [12].
- Bacon, Francis, Viscount St. Albans, on revenge, iii. 15, Note.
- Bady, place and river, v. 3.
- Balsam tree, ix. [28].
- Banqueting-hall at Elis, v. 15.
- Barley cakes, mysterious property of, iii. 23.
- Baths, how taken in ancient times, x. [34].
- Women’s swimming-bath, iv. 35.
- Warm baths, ii. 34; iv. 35; vii. [3].
- Bato, the charioteer of Amphiaraus, ii. 23.
- Bayle on Hippomanes, v. 27, Note.
- Beans, i. 37; viii. [15].
- Bear, the Great, viii. [3].
- Bears, i. 32; iii. 20; vii. [18].
- Bees of Hymettus, i. 32.
- Bees and Pindar, ix. [23].
- In connection with Trophonius, ix. [40].
- Temple fabled to have been built by them, x. [5].
- Bel, i. 16; viii. [33].
- Bellerophon, ii. 2, 4, 31; iii. 18, 27; ix. [31].
- Bias of Priene, x. [24].
- Biblis, love-passages of, vii. [5].
- Bison, x. [13].
- Bito, see Cleobis.
- Blackbirds of Mt. Cyllene, viii. [17].
- Boar’s Memorial, iv. 15, 19.
- Bœotarchs, ix. [13], [14]; x. [20].
- Bones, ii. 10; iii. 22.
- Booneta, iii. 12, 15.
- Bootes, viii. [3].
- Brasiæ, iii. 24, see Note.
- Brass, first brass-founders, viii. [14]; x. [38].
- Brennus, x. [8], [19], [20], [21], [22], [23].
- Briareus, ii. 1, 4.
- Brigantes in Britain, viii. [43].
- Briseis, v. 24; x. [25].
- Britomartis, iii. 14; viii. [2].
- Bupalus, iv. 30; ix. [35].
- Buphagus, viii. [14], [27].
- Burial, ii. 7; ix. [32].
- Bustards, x. [34].
- Byzantium, walls of, iv. 31.
- Cabiri, i. 4; iv. 1; ix. [22], [25]; x. [38].
- Cadmean victory, ix. [9].
- Cadmus, the son of Agenor, iii. 15; ix. [5], [12], [19].
- C. Julius Cæsar, ii. 1; iii. 11.
- His gardens, viii. [46].
- Calais and Zetes, iii. 18.
- Calamis, a famous statuary, master of Praxias, i 3, 23; ii. 10; v. 25, 26; vi. 12; ix. [16], [20], [22]; x. [16].
- Calchas, i. 43; vii. [3]; ix. [19].
- Callicrates, vii. [10], [12].
- Callimachus, i. 26; ix. [2].
- Callion, barbarity of the Galati at, x. [22].
- Calliphon of Samos, v. 19; x. [26].
- Callirhoe and Coresus, tragic love story about, vii. [21].
- Callisto, the daughter of Lycaon, changed into a she-bear, i. 25; viii. [3].
- Callon, a statuary of Ægina, ii. 32; iii. 18; vii. [18].
- Calus, murder of by Dædalus, i. 21, 26.
- Calydonian boar, i. 27; iii. 18; viii. [45], [46], [47].
- Canachus, a statuary, ii. 10; vi. 9, 13; vii. [18]; ix. [10]; x. [9].
- Cantharus, a statuary, vi. 3, 17.
- Capaneus, the son of Hipponous, struck with lightning, ix. [8], see Note.
- Capua, the chief town in Campania, v. 12.
- Carcinus, a native of Naupactus, x. [38].
- Carpo, a Season, ix. [35].
- Carthage, rebuilt by Julius Cæsar, ii. 1.
- Carthaginians, i. 12; v. 25; vi. 19; x. [8], [17], [18].
- Cassandra, the daughter of Priam, violated by Ajax, i. 15; v. 19; x. [26].
- Called Alexandra, iii. 19, 26.
- Castalia, x. [8].
- Castor and Pollux, see Dioscuri.
- Catana, filial piety at, x. [28].
- Caverns, notable ones, x. [32].
- Ceadas, iv. 18.
- Cecrops, son of Erechtheus, king of Athens, i. 5; vii. [1]; viii. [2].
- Celeus, father of Triptolemus, i. 14, 38, 39; ii. 14.
- Centaur, v. 19.
- Fight between the Centaurs and the Lapithæ, i. 17; v. 10.
- Cephalus and Aurora, i. 3; iii. 18.
- Cepheus, father of Andromeda, iv. 35.
- Cephisus, a river in Argolis, ii. 15, 20.
- Cephisus, a river in Attica, i. 37.
- Cephisus, a river in Eleusis, i. 38.
- Cephisus, a river in Bœotia, ix. [24], [38]; x. [8], [33], [34].
- Ceramicus, i. 3; viii. [9].
- Cerberus, ii. 31, 35; iii. 25.
- Ceres, see Demeter.
- Cestus, viii. [40].
- Chæronea, fatal battle of, i. 18, 25; v. 20; ix. [6], [29], [40]. (Milton’s “dishonest victory, fatal to liberty.”)
- Chaldæans, the first who taught the immortality of the soul, iv. 32.
- Champagny on Pausanias, see Title-page.
- Chaos first, ix. [27].
- Charon, x. [28]. (Cf. Virgil’s “Jam senior, sed cruda deo viridisque senectus.”—Æn. vi. 304.)
- Chimæra, iii. 25.
- Chios, vii. [4].
- Chiron, a Centaur and tutor of Achilles, iii. 18; v. 5, 19.
- Chrysanthis, i. 14.
- Cicero, see Note to x. [35].
- Cimon, the son of Miltiades, ii. 29; viii. [52].
- Cinadus, the pilot of Menelaus, iii. 22.
- Cinæthon, the Lacedæmonian genealogist, ii. 3, 18; iv. 2; viii. [53].
- Ciphos, our coif, iii. 26.
- Cirrha, x. [1], [8], [37].
- Cists, used in the worship of Demeter and Proserpine, viii. [25], [37]; x. [28].
- Cithæron, a mountain in Bœotia, i. 38; ix. [2].
- Clearchus, iii. 17; vi. 4.
- Cleobis and Bito, ii. 20, see Note.
- Cleombrotus, the son of Pausanias, king of Sparta, i. 13; iii. 5, 6; ix. [13].
- Cleomedes, vi. 9.
- Cleomenes, ii. 9.
- Cleon, statuary, v. 17, 21; vi. 1, 8, 9, 10.
- Clymene, reputed by some mother of Homer, x. [24].
- Clytæmnestra, ii. 16, 18, 22.
- Coats of mail, i. 21; vi. 19; x. [26].
- Coccus, x. [36].
- Cocytus, i. 17. (Cf. Virgil, Æneid, vi. 132, “Cocytusque sinu labens circumvenit atro,” and Horace, Odes, ii. 14-17, 18.)
- Colophon, vii. [3], [5]; ix. [32].
- Colossuses, i. 18, 42. (If gentle reader objects to this plural let me cite Sir T. Herbert, “In that isle he also defaced an hundred other colossuses.”—Travels, p. 267.)
- Comætho, her love-passages with Melanippus, vii. [19].
- Commentaries of events, i. 12.
- Conon, son of Timotheus, i. 1, 2, 3, 24, 29; iii. 9; vi. 3, 7; viii. [52].
- Cordax, a dance, vi. 22.
- Coresus, see Callirhoe.
- Corinna, ix. [20], [22].
- Corinth, taken by Mummius, ii. 1; vii. [16].
- Rebuilt by Julius Cæsar, ii. 1, 3; v. 1.
- Corœbus, the Argive, i. 43.
- Corpses, remarkable, v. 20, 27; viii. [29].
- Corsica, x. [17].
- Corybantes, iii. 24; viii. [37].
- Cos, island, iii. 23; vi. 14, 17; viii. [43].
- Cosmosandalum, ii. 35.
- Costoboci, x. [34].
- Creon, i. 3; ix. [5], [10].
- Cresphontes, son of Aristomachus, ii. 18; iv. 3, 5, 31; v. 3.
- Marries the daughter of Cypselus, iv. 3; viii. [5], [29].
- Crete, island of, iii. 2; vii. [2]; viii. [38], [53].
- Cretan bowmen, i. 23; iv. 8; vii. [16].
- Crocodiles, i. 33; ii. 28; iv. 34.
- Crœsus, iii. 10; iv. 5; viii. [24].
- Cronos, (the Latin Saturnus,) i. 18; viii. [8], [36]; ix. [2], [41]; x. [24].
- Crotonians, their tradition about Helen, iii. 19.
- Milo a native of Croton, vi. 14.
- Wolves numerous in the neighbourhood of Croton, vi. 14.
- Crowns in the games, viii. [48].
- Cuckoo and Hera, ii. 17.
- Curetes, iv. 31, 33; v. 7; viii. [2], [37]; x. [38].
- Cybele, see the Dindymene Mother.
- Cyclades, islands, i. 1; v. 21, 23.
- Cyclopes, their buildings, ii. 16, 20, 25; vii. [25].
- Cycnus, a Celtic king, tradition about, i. 30.
- Cydias, his prowess against the Galati, x. [21].
- Cydnus, a river that flows through the district of Tarsus, a cold river, viii. [28].
- Cynoscephalæ, battle of, vii. [8].
- Cyprus, claims to be birth-place of Homer, x. [24].
- Cypselus, his chest, v. 17, 18, 19.
- Dædalus, the famous Athenian, son of Palamaon, why called Dædalus, ix. [3].
- A contemporary of Œdipus, x. [17].
- Fled to Crete, why, i. 21; vii. [4]; viii. [53].
- His pupils, ii. 15; iii. 17; v. 25.
- His works of art, i. 27; ii. 4; viii. [16], [35], [46]; ix. [11], [39].
- Dædalus of Sicyon, statuary also, vi. 2, 3, 6; x. [9].
- Damophon, the best Messenian statuary, iv. 31; vii. [23]; viii. [31], [37].
- Danae, daughter of Acrisius and mother of Perseus, her brazen chamber, ii. 23; x. [5]. (Horace’s “turris aenea.”)
- Danaus, how he became king of Argos, ii. 19.
- His daughters’ savageness, ii. 16, 24; x. [10].
- How he got them second husbands, iii. 12.
- Daphne, and the crown of laurel in the Pythian games, x. [7].
- Darius, the son of Hystaspes, iii. 4, 9, 12; vii. [10].
- Decelea, iii. 8.
- Delium, i. 29; ix. [6], [20]; x. [28].
- Delphi, x. [5], [6], [7], [8], [9].
- Delta, ii. 21; vi. 26.
- Demaratus, a seven-month child, iii. 4, 7.
- Demeter, (the Latin Ceres,) i. 14, 37, 39, 43; ii. 35; viii. [15], [25], [42].
- See also Triptolemus.
- Demetrius, the son of Antigonus, i. 6, 10, 25, 36; ix. [7].
- Demo, the Sibyl of Cumæ, x. [12].
- Democracies, none in Greece in old times, ix. [1].
- No democracy that we know of but Athens ever rose to greatness, iv. 35.
- Remark on, i. 8.
- Demosthenes, the son of Alcisthenes, i. 13, 29.
- Demosthenes, the son of Demosthenes, i. 8; ii. 33.
- Despœna, viii. [37].
- See also Proserpine.
- Deucalion, his flood, i. 18, 40; v. 8; x. [6].
- Dicæarchia, iv. 35; viii. [7]. (Puteoli.)
- Dice, vi. 24; vii. [25]; x. [30].
- Dindymene Mother, vii. [17], [20]; viii. [46]; ix. [25]. (That is Cybele.)
- Diocles, ii. 14.
- Diomede, king of Thrace, iii. 18; v. 10.
- Diomede, who led the Argives to Troy, i. 11, 28; ii. 30, 32; x. [31].
- Runs off with the Palladium, i. 22.
- Dionysius, the tyrant, i. 2; vi. 2.
- Dionysus, (the Latin Bacchus,) father of Priapus, ix. [31].
- Son of Zeus by Semele, iii. 24.
- Fetches up Semele from Hades, ii. 31, 37.
- Punishes Antiope, ix. [17].
- Takes Ariadne from Theseus, x. [29].
- Many legends about him, x. [29].
- His orgies, x. [33]; ii. 2, 7.
- Dioscuri (Castor and Pollux), iii. 13, 26; iv. 31.
- Visit the house of Phormio, iii. 16.
- Their anger against the Messenians, iv. 16, 26.
- Origin of their anger, iv. 27.
- Their particular kind of hats, iii. 24; iv. 27.
- Called Anactes, ii. 36; x. [38].
- Diotimus, the father of Milo, of Croton, vi. 14.
- Dipœnus and Scyllis, pupils of Dædalus, statuaries, ii. 15, 22, 32; iii. 17; v. 17; vi. 19; ix. [35].
- Dirce, the legend about her, ix. [17], [25].
- Divination, various modes of, iii. 23, 26; iv. 32; vi. 2; vii. [21], [25]; ix. [11].
- Dodona, i. 17; vii. [21], [25]; viii. [11], [23], [28]; ix. [25]; x. [12].
- Dog, cure for bite of, viii. [19].
- Dolphin, i. 44; ii. 1; iii. 25; x. [13].
- Dontas, pupil of Dipœnus and Scyllis, vi. 19.
- Doric Architecture, v. 10, 16; vi. 24.
- Dorian measure, ix. [12].
- Doriclydas, pupil of Dipœnus and Scyllis, v. 17.
- Draco, the Athenian legislator, vi. 11; ix. [36].
- Dragon, viii. [8].
- Guards the apples of the Hesperides, vi. 19.
- One wonderfully killed, ix. [26].
- Seed of the dragon’s teeth, ix. [10].
- Dragons sacred to Æsculapius, ii. 11, 28.
- Also to Trophonius, ix. [39].
- Yoked to the chariot of Triptolemus, vii. [18].
- Dreams, x. [2], [38].
- Interpreters of, i. 34; v. 23.
- Drunkenness personified, ii. 27; vi. 24.
- Dryads, viii. [4]; x. [32].
- Dumb bells, v. 26; vi. 3.
- Dyrrhachium, formerly Epidamnus, vi. 10.
- Dysaules, brother of Celeus, and father of Triptolemus, i. 14; ii. 12, 14.
- Earth, viii. [29]; x. [12].
- The Great Goddess, i. 31.
- Earthquakes, ii. 7; vii. [24].
- Eating-contest between Lepreus and Hercules, v. 5.
- Ebony, i. 42; ii. 22; viii. [17], [53].
- Ecbatana, iv. 24.
- Echetlaeus, his prowess at Marathon, i. 32.
- Echinades, islands, viii. [1], [24].
- Echoes, wonderful ones, ii. 35; v. 21.
- Edoni, i. 29; x. [33].
- Eels of Lake Copais, ix. [24].
- Eira, iv. 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23.
- Elaphius, the month of, at Elis, v. 13; vi. 20.
- Electra, married to Pylades, ii. 16; iii. 1; ix. [40].
- Elephants, i. 12; v. 12.
- Eleusinian mysteries, viii. [15]; x. [31].
- Eleutherolacones, iii. 21.
- Elk, v. 12; ix. [21].
- Elysium, viii. [53].
- Emperors, Roman, statues of, i. 40; v. 20; vi. 19.
- See also under Adrian, Augustus, C. Julius Cæsar, Gaius, &c.
- Flattery to, ii. 8, Note.
- Endœus, an Athenian statuary, and pupil of Dædalus, i. 26; vii. [5]; viii. [46].
- Enyalius, a name for Ares, (the Latin Mars,) iii. 14, 15; v. 18.
- Enyo, i. 8; iv. 30.
- Epaminondas, iv. 26, 31; viii. [11], [27], [49], [52]; ix. [13], [14], [15].
- Epeus, the constructor of the famous Wooden Horse, i. 23; ii. 29; x. [26].
- Ephesus, temple of Artemis at, vii. [5]. (Cf. Acts; xix. 27, 28. Farrar very aptly quotes Appul. Metam. ii. “Diana Ephesia, cujus nomen unicum, multiformi specie, ritu vario, nomine multijugo, totus veneratur orbis.”)
- Ephors at Sparta, iii. 11.
- Epicaste, mother of Œdipus, ix. [5], [26]. Better known as Jocasta.
- Epidaurus, a town in Argolis, ii. 26, 27, 28, 29.
- Epigoni, ix. [9], [19], [25]; x. [10], [25].
- Epimenides, the Rip Van Winkle of Antiquity, i. 14.
- Eponymi, the heroes so called at Athens, i. 5.
- Erato, the Nymph, wife of Arcas, an interpreter of the oracles of Pan, viii. [4], [37]; x. [9].
- Erechtheus, i. 5, 26, 28, 38.
- Eridanus, a Celtic river, i. 3; v. 12, 14; viii. [25].
- Eriphyle, wife of Amphiaraus, slain by Alcmæon her son, i. 34; viii. [24].
- The famous necklace, v. 17; viii. [24]; ix. [41]; x. [29].
- Erymanthian boar, viii. [24].
- Eryx, conquered in wrestling by Hercules, iii. 16; iv. 36; viii. [24].
- Essenes of Ephesian Artemis, viii. [13].
- Eteocles, the son of Œdipus, v. 19; ix. [5].
- Eubœa, v. 23; viii. [14].
- Euclides, an Athenian statuary, vii. [25], [26].
- Euclus, x. [12], [14], [24].
- Evœ, the Bacchic cry, iv. 31.
- (See Horace’s Odes, ii. 19-5-7.)
- Euphorion, ii. 22; x. [26].
- Euphrates, the river, iv. 34; x. [29].
- Eupolis, where buried, ii. 7.
- Euripides, i. 2, 21.
- Euripus, near Chalcis, i. 23, 38.
- Eurotas, river in Laconia, iii. 1, 21; viii. [44], [54].
- Euryclides, an Athenian orator, poisoned by Philip, ii. 9.
- Eurydice, the wife of Orpheus, ix. [30].
- Eurypontidæ, ii. 36; iii. 7, 12; iv. 4.
- Eurypylus, vii. [19].
- Eurystheus, his tomb, i. 44.
- His hostility to Hercules, iv. 34.
- Eurytion, a Centaur, v. 10; vii. [18].
- Fables of the Greeks, how to be understood, viii. [8].
- Filial piety, instances of, ii. 20; x. [28].
- Fire, its inventor, ii. 19.
- Ever-burning, v. 15; viii. [9], [37].
- Magically lighted, v. 27.
- Fish, vocal in the river Aroanius, viii. [21].
- Flax, v. 5; vi. 26; vii. [21].
- Flute-playing, iv. 27; ix. [12].
- Food, primitive, viii. [1].
- Foolish desires a source of ruin, viii. [24].
- Fortune, iv. 30.
- Friendship of Phocus and Iaseus, x. [30].
- Furies of Clytæmnestra, viii. [34].
- Furies euphemistically called The Venerable Ones, i. 28.
- Compare vii. [25].
- Gaius, the Roman Emperor, end of, ix. [27].
- Galati, their cavalry-arrangements, x. [19].
- Their irruption into Greece, x. [19], [20], [21], [22], [23].
- Ganymede, v. 24.
- Gelanor, ii. 19.
- Gerenia, called by Homer Enope, iii. 26.
- Germans, viii. [43].
- Geryon, i. 35; iii. 16; iv. 36; v. 19.
- Getae, the, added to the Roman Empire by Trajan, v. 12.
- Brave in battle, i. 9.
- Giants, the, viii. [29], [32], [36], [47].
- Girding oneself, ix. [17].
- Girdles worn round the loins in the races at Olympia, i. 44.
- Glaucus of Carystus, story about, vi. 10.
- Glaucus of Chios, x. [16].
- Glaucus, the god of the sea, vi. 10.
- Gobryas, i. 1; iii. 11; ix. [1].
- Gods, the twelve, i. 3, 40; viii. [25].
- Unknown gods, i. 1; v. 14.
- Gorgias of Leontini, vi. 17; x. [18].
- Gorgon, ii. 21.
- See also Medusa.
- Gorgus, the son of Aristomenes, iv. 19, 21, 23.
- Graces, ix. [35].
- Grasshoppers, idiosyncrasy of, vi. 6.
- Greeks, apt to admire things out of their own country, ix. [36].
- Numbers that fought against Xerxes and the Galati, x. [20].
- Munificence of in their worship of the gods, v. 12.
- Griffins, i. 24.
- Gryllus, the son of Xenophon, i. 3; viii. [9], [11]; ix. [15].
- Gymnopædia, festival of, iii. 11.
- Gythium, Lacedæmonian arsenal, i. 27; iii. 21; viii. [50].
- Hair, shorn to river-gods, i. 37; viii. [41].
- See also viii. [20].
- Halirrhothius, i. 21, 28.
- Hannibal, oracle about his death, viii. [11].
- Happiness only intermittent, viii. [24].
- Harmodius, i. 8, 29.
- Harmosts, officers among the Lacedæmonians, ix. [6], [32].
- Harpies, iii. 18; v. 17; x. [30].
- Hebe, i. 19; ii. 13, 17; viii. [9].
- Hecas, the seer, iv. 16, 21.
- Hecatæus, the Milesian, iii. 25; iv. 2; viii. [4], [47].
- Hecate, i. 43; ii. 22, 30.
- Hecatomphonia, iv. 19.
- Hector, son of Priam, iii. 18; v. 25; ix. [18]; x. [31].
- Hecuba, x. [12], [27].
- He-goat, oracle about, iv. 20.
- Helen, the famous, a woe to Europe and Asia, x. [12].
- Tradition about, iii. 19.
- Her maids, x. [25].
- Oath taken about, iii. 20.
- Helen, a Jewess, her tomb, viii. [16].
- Helenus, son of Priam, i. 11; ii. 23; v. 22.
- Helicon, a mountain in Bœotia, ix. [26], [27], [28], [29].
- Hellas in Thessaly, gave name to the Hellenes, iii. 20.
- Hellebore, x. [36], [37].
- Helots, iii. 11, 20; iv. 23, 24; viii. [51].
- Hephæstus, (the Latin Vulcan,) i. 20; ii. 31; iii. 17; viii. [53]; ix. [41].
- Hera, (the Latin Juno,) i. 18; ii. 15; v. 16; vi. 24.
- Story about her quarrel and reconciliation with Zeus, ix. [3].
- Becomes a virgin again annually, ii. 38.
- The cuckoo in connection with her, ii. 17.
- The peacock sacred to her, ii. 17.
- Heraclidæ, Return of the, ii. 13, 18; iii. 1; iv. 3.
- Hercules, the Egyptian, x. [13].
- Hercules, the son of Amphitryon, his Colonnade, vi. 23.
- Hunts the Erymanthian boar, viii. [24].
- Fights against the Amazons, v. 11, 25.
- Relieves Atlas, v. 10, 11.
- Brings up Cerberus from Hades, ii. 31, 35; iii. 25; ix. [34].
- Cleans Elis, v. 1, 10; ix. [11].
- Drives off the oxen of Geryon, iii. 16, 18; iv. 36; v. 19.
- Overcomes the Nemean lion, iii. 18; v. 11; vi. 5; viii. [13].
- Has an eating contest with Lepreus, v. 5.
- First accounted a god by the people of Marathon, i. 15, 32.
- Taken to heaven by Athene, iii. 18, 19.
- Kills Nessus, iii. 18.
- Introduces into Greece the white poplar, v. 14.
- Liberates Prometheus, v. 10.
- His club, ii. 31.
- His Labours, iii. 17; v. 10, 26.
- Hercules, the Idæan, v. 7, 13; ix. [27].
- Heredity, i. 6; viii. [5], [13].
- Hermæ, i. 17, 24; iv. 33; viii. [39]; x. [12].
- Hermes, (the Latin Mercury,) vii. [27]; viii. [14].
- Steals Apollo’s oxen, vii. [20].
- Takes the goddesses to Paris for the choice of beauty, iii. 18; v. 19.
- Invents the lyre, ii. 19; v. 14; viii. [17].
- Herodes Atticus, i. 19; ii. 1; vi. 21; vii. [20]; x. [32].
- Herodotus, quoted or alluded to, i. 5, 28, 43; ii. 16, 20, 30; iii. 2, 25; v. 26; viii. [27]; ix. [23], [36]; x. [20], [32], [33].
- Herophile, a Sibyl, x. [12].
- Hesiod, i. 2; ix. [30], [31], [38]; x. [7].
- Quoted or alluded to, i. 24; ii. 9.
- Hesperides, v. 11; vi. 19.
- Hides, garments made of, viii. [1]; x. [38].
- Used as shields in battle, iv. 11.
- Hieronymus of Cardia, historian, i. 9, 13.
- Hilaira and Phœbe, ii. 22; iii. 16; iv. 31.
- Hipparchus, son of Pisistratus, i. 8, 23, 29.
- Hippocrene, ii. 31; ix. [31].
- Hippodamia, daughter of Œnomaus, v. 11, 14, 16, 17; vi. 20, 21; viii. [14].
- Hippodrome at Olympia, vi. 20.
- Hippolyta, leader of the Amazons, i. 41.
- Hippolytus, son of Theseus, i. 22; ii. 27, 31, 32; iii. 22.
- Hippopotamus, iv. 34; v. 12; viii. [46].
- Homer, his age and birthplace, ix. [30]; x. [24].
- His oracle, viii. [24]; x. [24].
- His poverty, ii. 33.
- On Homer generally, i. 2; iv. 28, 33; vii. [5], [26]; ix. [40]; x. [7].
- Homer is quoted very frequently, viz., i. 13, 28, 37; ii. 3, 6, 7, 12, 14, 16, 21, 24, 25, 26; iii. 2, 7, 18, 19, 20, 21, 24, 25, 26; iv. 1, 9, 30, 32, 33, 36; v. 6, 8, 11, 14, 24; vi. 5, 22, 26, 26; vii. [1], [20], [21], [24], [25], [26]; viii. [1], [3], [8], [16], [18], [24], [25], [29], [37], [38], [41], [48], [50]; ix. [5], [17], [19], [20], [22], [24], [26], [29], [30], [31], [33], [35], [36], [37], [38], [40], [41]; x. [5], [6], [8], [14], [17], [22], [25], [26], [29], [30], [32], [33], [36], [37].
- Hoopoe, i. 41; x. [4].
- Hoplodamus assists Rhea, viii. [32], [36].
- Horns of animals, v. 12.
- Horn of Amalthea, vi. 25.
- Horse, curious story in connection with, v. 27.
- The famous Wooden Horse, i. 23; x. [9].
- Winged horses, v. 17, 19.
- Hyacinth, the flower, i. 35; ii. 35.
- Hyampolis, a town in Phocis, x. [1], [3], [35].
- Hyantes, ix. [5], [35].
- Hydarnes, a general of Xerxes, iii. 4; x. [22].
- Hydra, ii. 37; v. 5; v. 17.
- Hygiea, daughter of Æsculapius, i. 23; v. 20.
- Her temple, iii. 22.
- Hyllus, son of Hercules, i. 35, 41, 44; iv. 30; viii. [5], [45], [53].
- Hymettus, famous for its bees, i. 32.
- Hyperboreans, i. 31; v. 7; x. [5].
- Hypermnestra, ii. 19, 20, 21, 25; x. [10], [35].
- Hyrieus, his treasury, story about, ix. [37].
- Hyrnetho, daughter of Temenus, ii. 19, 23.
- Her tragic end, ii. 28.
- Iamidæ, seers at Elis, descendants of Iamus, iii. 11, 12; iv. 16; vi. 2; viii. [10].
- Ibycus, the poet, ii. 6.
- Icarus, the son of Dædalus, ix. [11].
- Ichnusa, the old name of Sardinia, x. [17].
- Idæan Dactyli, v. 7.
- Iliad, The Little, iii. 26; x. [26].
- Ilissus, a river in Attica, i. 19.
- Ilithyia, i. 18; viii. [32]; ix. [27].
- Immortals, The, vi. 6; x. [19].
- Inachus, a river, ii. 15, 18, 25; viii. [6].
- Indian sages taught the immortality of the soul, iv. 32.
- India famous for wild beasts, iv. 34; viii. [29].
- Ino, i. 42, 44; iii. 23, 24, 26; iv. 34; ix. [5].
- Inscriptions, ox-fashion, v. 17.
- Inventions, source of, viii. [31].
- Inundations, destruction caused by, vii. [24]; viii. [14].
- Io, daughter of Inachus, i. 25; iii. 18.
- Iodama, ix. [34].
- Iolaus, nephew of Hercules, vii. [2]; viii. [14].
- Shares in his uncle’s Labours, i. 19; viii. [45].
- Kills Eurystheus, i. 44.
- Colonizes Sardinia, vii. [2]; x. [17].
- His hero-chapel, ix. [23].
- Ion, the son of Xuthus, i. 31; vii. [1].
- Iphiclus, the father of Protesilaus, iv. 36; v. 17; x. [31].
- Iphigenia, daughter of Agamemnon, i. 33, 43; iii. 16; ix. [19].
- Iphimedea, mother of Otus and Ephialtes, ix. [22]; x. [28].
- Iphitus, king of Elis, v. 4, 8; viii. [26].
- Iphitus, the son of Eurytus, iii. 15; x. [13].
- Iris, the flower, ix. [41].
- Iron, first fused, iii. 12; x. [16].
- Ischepolis, son of Alcathous, killed by the Calydonian boar, i. 42, 43.
- Isis, the Egyptian goddess, i. 41; ii. 4, 13, 32, 34; v. 25; x. [32].
- Ismenius, a river in Bœotia, ix. [9], [10].
- Isocrates, i. 18.
- Issedones, i. 24, 31; v. 7.
- Isthmian games, i. 44; ii. 1, 2.
- People of Elis excluded from them, v. 2; vi. 16.
- Ister, river, viii. [28], [38].
- Ithome, iv. 9, 13, 14, 24, 31.
- Ivory, i. 12; v. 11, 12; vii. [27].
- Ivy-cuttings, feast so called, ii. 13.
- Jason, husband of Medea, ii. 3; v. 17.
- Jay, anecdote about the, viii. [12].
- Jerusalem, viii. [16].
- Jocasta, ix. [5].
- (Called Epicaste, ix. [26].)
- Joppa, iv. 35.
- Jordan, the famous river, v. 7.
- Keys, the three keys of Greece, vii. [7].
- Kites, idiosyncrasy of at Olympia, v. 14.
- Labyrinth of the Minotaur in Crete, i. 27.
- (Cf. Virg. Æneid, v. 588-591. Ovid, Metamorphoses, viii. 159-168.)
- Lacedæmonians go out on campaign only when the moon is at its full, i. 28.
- Go out to battle not to the sound of the trumpet, but to flutes lyres and harps, iii. 17.
- Care not for poetry, iii. 8.
- Tactics in battle, iv. 8.
- Always conceal their losses in battle, ix. [13].
- Their forces at Thermopylæ, x. [20].
- Their kings, how tried, iii. 5.
- Lacedæmonian dialect, iii. 15.
- Brevity, iv. 7.
- Laconia originally called Lelegia, iv. 1.
- Ladder-pass, viii. [6].
- Læstrygones, viii. [29]; x. [22].
- Lais, ii. 2.
- Laius, son of Labdacus, King of Thebes, ix. [5], [26]; x. [5].
- Lamp of Athene, ever burning, i. 26.
- Lampsacus, people of, anecdote about, vi. 18.
- Great worshippers of Priapus, ix. [31].
- Laomedon, father of Priam, vii. [20]; viii. [36].
- Lapithæ, their fight with the Centaurs, i. 17; v. 10.
- La Rochefoucauld anticipated by Pindar. Note, x. [22].
- Laurium, its silver mines, i. 1.
- Law-courts at Athens, various names of, i. 28.
- Leæna, mistress of Aristogiton, i. 23.
- Lebadea in Bœotia, sacred to Trophonius, i. 34; ix. [39].
- Lechæum, ii. 1, 2; ix. [14], [15]; x. [37].
- Leda, i. 33; iii. 13, 16.
- Leonidas, the hero of Thermopylæ, i. 13; iii. 3, 4, 14; viii. [52].
- Leontini, the birth-place of the famous Gorgias, vi. 17.
- Leprosy, cure for, v, 5. (Credat Judæus Apella!)
- Lesbos, iii. 2; iv. 35; x. [19], [24].
- Lescheos, author of the Capture of Ilium, x. [25], [26], [27].
- Leto, (the Latin Latona,) i. 18, 31; iii. 20; viii. [53].
- Leucippus, his love for Daphne, viii. [20].
- Leuctra, i. 13; iv. 26; viii. [27]; ix. [6], [13], [14].
- Libya, famous for wild beasts, ii. 21.
- Libyssa, where Hannibal died, viii. [11].
- Linus, ix. [29].
- Lipara, x. [11], [16].
- Lophis, story about, ix. [33].
- (Cf. story of Jephthah.)
- Lounges, iii. 14, 15; x. [25].
- Lots, iv. 3; v. 25.
- Love, its power, vii. [19].
- Success in love, vii. [26].
- Cure of melancholy caused by, vii. [5].
- Little sympathy with lovers from older people, vii. [19].
- Tragedies through love, i. 30; vii 21; viii. [20].
- Lycomidæ, i. 22; iv. 1; ix. [27], [30].
- Lycortas, iv. 29; vii. [9]; viii. [50].
- Lycurgus, the famous legislator, iii. 2, 14, 16, 18; v. 4.
- Lygdamis, the father of Artemisia, iii. 11.
- Lygdamis, the Syracusan, as big as Hercules, v. 8.
- Lynceus, son of Aphareus, his keen eyesight, iv. 2.
- Slain by Pollux, iv. 3.
- Lynceus, the husband of Hypermnestra, ii. 19, 21, 25.
- Succeeds Danaus, ii. 16.
- Lyre, invented by Hermes, v. 14; viii. [17].
- First used by Amphion, ix. [5].
- Lysander, iii. 5, 6, 8, 11, 17, 18; ix. [32]; x. [9].
- Lysippus, a Sicyonian statuary, i. 43; ii. 9, 20; vi. 1, 2, 4, 5, 14, 17; ix. [27], [30].
- Lysis, the early schoolmaster of Epaminondas, ix. [13].
- Macaria, i. 32.
- Machærion, viii. [11].
- Machaon, son of Æsculapius, ii. 11, 23, 26, 38; iii. 26; iv. 3.
- Machinery, or mechanism,
- at Olympia, vi. 20.
- At Jerusalem, viii. [16].
- Mæander, river in Asia Minor, famous for its windings, v. 14; vii. [2]; viii. [7], [24], [31]; x. [32].
- Magic, v. 27.
- Maneros, the Egyptian Linus, ix. [29].
- Mantinea, ii. 8; viii. [3], [8], [12].
- Manto, daughter of Tiresias, vii. [3]; ix. [10], [33].
- Marathon, i. 15, 32; iv. 25; x. [20].
- Mardonius, son of Gobryas, i. 1, 27; iii. 4; vii. [25]; ix. [1], [2], [23].
- Panic of his men, i. 40; ix. [25].
- Marpessa, the Widow, viii. [47], [48].
- Marsyas, i. 24; ii. 7; viii. [9]; x. [30].
- Martiora, ix. [21].
- Mausoleums, viii. [16].
- Mausolus, viii. [16].
- Medea, ii. 3, 12; viii. [11].
- Medusa, the Gorgon, i. 21; ii. 20, 21; v. 10, 12, 18; viii. [47]; ix. [34].
- Megalopolis, ii. 9, 27; iv. 29; vi. 12; viii. [27], [30], [33]; ix. [14].
- Its theatre, ii. 27.
- Megara, i. 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44; vii. [15].
- Megaris, i. 39, 44.
- Meleager, ii. 7; iv. 2; x. [31].
- Melicerta, i. 44; ii. 1; ix. [34].
- Memnon, his statue, i. 42.
- Memnonides, birds so called, x. [31].
- Memphis, i. 18.
- Menander, i. 2, 21.
- Menelaus, the son of Atreus and husband of Helen, iii. 1, 14, 19; v. 18; x. [25], [26].
- Menestratus, ix. [26].
- Miletus, vii. [2], [24]; viii. [24], [49]; x. [33].
- Milo, of Croton, his wonderful strength, vi. 14.
- Miltiades, son of Cimon, i. 32; ii. 29; vi. 19; vii. [15]; viii. [52].
- Minos, i. 17, 27; ii. 30, 34; iii. 2; vii. [2], [4]; viii. [53].
- Minotaur, i. 27; iii. 18.
- Minyad, the poem so called, iv. 33; ix. [5]; x. [28], [31].
- Mirrors, remarkable ones, vii. [21]; viii. [37].
- Mithridates, king of Pontus, i. 20; iii. 23; ix. [7].
- Money, its substitute in old times, iii. 12.
- Moon enamoured of Endymion, v. 1.
- Full moon and the Lacedæmonians, i. 28.
- Mullets, love mud, iv. 34.
- Mummius, ii. 1, 2; vii. [15], [16].
- His gifts at Olympia, v. 10, 24.
- Musæus, i. 14, 22, 25; iv. 1; x. [5], [7], [9], [12].
- Muses, the, ix. [29].
- Mycenæ, ii. 15, 16; v. 23; vii. [25]; viii. [27], [33]; ix. [34].
- Myrtilus, the son of Hermes, ii. 18; v. 1, 10; vi. 20; viii. [14].
- Myrtle, sacred to Aphrodite, vi. 24.
- Myrtoan sea, why so called, viii. [14].
- Myus, its mosquitoes, vii. [2].
- Nabis, tyrant at Sparta, iv. 29; vii. [8]; viii. [50].
- Naked, its meaning among the ancients. See Note, x. [27].
- Names, confusion in same names general, viii. [15].
- Different method of giving names among Greeks and Romans, vii. [7].
- Narcissus, ix. [31], [41].
- Naupactian poems, ii. 3; iv. 2; x. [38].
- Naupactus, iv. 24, 26; vi. 16; ix. [25], [31]; x. [38].
- Nausicaa, daughter of Alcinous, i. 22; v. 19.
- Neda, river, iv. 20, 36; v. 6; viii. [38], [41].
- Neleus, iv. 2, 36; v. 8; x. [29], [31].
- His posterity, ii. 18; iv. 3.
- Nemean games, ii. 15, 24; vi. 16; viii. [48]; x. [25].
- Nemesis, i. 33; vii. [5], [20]; ix. [35].
- Neoptolemus, son of Achilles, the Retribution of, iv. 17.
- (As to Neoptolemus generally, see Pyrrhus.)
- Nereids, ii. 1; iii. 26; v. 19.
- Nereus, iii. 21.
- Nero, the Roman Emperor, ii. 17, 37; v. 12, 25, 26; vii. [17]; ix. [27]; x. [7].
- Nessus, iii. 18; x. [38].
- Nestor, iii. 26; iv. 3, 31, 36.
- Nicias, the Athenian General, i. 29.
- Nicias, animal painter, i. 29; iii. 19; iv. 31; vii. [22].
- Nicopolis, founded by Augustus, v. 23; vii. [18]; x. [8], [38].
- Nicostratus, v. 21.
- Night, v. 18; vii. [5].
- Night-attack, ingenious, x. [1].
- Nightingales at Orpheus’ tomb, ix. [30].
- Nile, famous river of Egypt, i. 33; ii. 5; iv. 34; v. 7, 14; viii. [24]; x. [32].
- Nineveh, viii. [33].
- Niobe, i. 21; ii. 21; v. 11, 16; viii. [2].
- Nisus, i. 19, 39; ii. 34.
- North wind, viii. [27]. (Boreas.)
- Nymphs, iii. 10; iv. 27; ix. [24]; x. [31].
- Nymphon, ii. 11.
- Oceanus, i. 33.
- Ocnus, x. [29].
- See Note.
- Octavia, her temple at Corinth, ii 3.
- Odeum at Athens, i. 8, 14; vii. [20].
- Odysseus, (the Latin Ulysses,) i. 22, 35; iii. 12, 20; iv. 12; v. 25; vi. 6; viii. [3], [14], [44]; x. [8], [26], [28], [29], [31].
- Œdipodia, ix. [5].
- Œdipus, i. 28, 30; ix. [2], [5], [26]; x. [5].
- Œnobius, i. 23.
- Œnomaus, v. 1, 10, 14, 17, 20, 22; vi. 18, 20, 21; viii. [14], [20].
- Œnotria, viii. [3].
- Œta, Mount, iii. 4; vii. [15]; x. [22].
- Olen, i. 18; ii. 13; v. 7; viii. [21]; ix. [27]; x. [5].
- Oligarchies, established by Mummius, vii. [16], Note.
- Olympias, daughter of Neoptolemus, mother of Alexander the Great, i. 11, 25; iv. 14; viii 7; ix. [7].
- Olympus, Mount, in Thessaly, vi. 5.
- Olynthus, iii. 5.
- Onatas, ÆEginetan statuary, v. 25, 27; vi. 12; viii. [42]; x. [13].
- Onga, ix. [12].
- Onomacritus, i 22; viii. [31], [37]; ix. [35].
- Ophioneus, the seer, iv. 10, 12, 13.
- Ophitea, legend about, x. [33].
- Opportunity, the youngest son of Zeus, v. 14.
- Oracles, ambiguous, viii. [11].
- (Compare case of ‘Jerusalem’ in Shakspere, 2 Henry IV., Act iv., Scene iv., 233-241.)
- Orestes, son of Agamemnon, i. 28; ii. 18, 31; iii. 1, 16, 22; vii. [25]; viii. [5], [34].
- Orithyia, i. 19; v. 19.
- Orontes, a river in Syria, vi. 2; viii. [20], [29], [33]; x. [20].
- Orpheus, i. 14, 37; ii. 30; iii. 13, 14, 20; v. 26; vi. 20; ix. [17], [27], [30].
- Osiris, x. [32].
- Osogo, viii. [10].
- Ostrich, ix. [31].
- Otilius, vii. [7]; x. [36].
- Otus and Ephialtes, ix. [29].
- Ox-killer, i. 24, 28.
- Oxen given in barter, iii. 12.
- Oxyartes, father of Roxana, i. 6.
- Oxylus, curious tale about, v. 3.
- Ozolian, x. [38].
- Palæmon, i. 44; ii. 2; viii. [48].
- Palamedes, ii. 20; x. [31].
- Palladium, i. 28; ii. 23.
- Pamphus, i. 38, 39; vii. [21]; viii. [35], [37]; ix. [27], [29], [31], [35].
- Pan, i. 28; viii. [26], [31], [36], [38], [54].
- Panic fear, x. [23].
- Parian stone, i. 14, 33, 43; v. 11, 12; viii. [25].
- Paris, iii. 22; v. 19; x. [31].
- Parnassus, Mount, x. [4], [5], [6], [8], [32], [33].
- Parrots come from India, ii. 28.
- (Did Pausanias remember Ovid’s “Psittacus Eois imitatrix ales ab Indis.” Amor. ii. 6. 1.)
- Parthenon at Athens, i. 24; viii. [41].
- Patroclus, the friend of Achilles, iii. 24; iv. 28; x. [13], [26], [30].
- Patroclus, Egyptian Admiral, i. 1; iii. 6.
- Pausanias, son of Cleombrotus, i. 13; iii. 17; viii. [52].
- Pausanias, a Macedonian, murderer of Harpalus, ii. 33.
- Peacock sacred to Hera, ii. 17.
- Peace with Wealth, i. 8; ix. [16].
- Pegasus, ii. 4, 31; ix. [31].
- Pelagos, viii. [11].
- See Oracles, ambiguous.
- Peleus, father of Achilles, i. 37; ii. 29; iii. 18; v. 18; viii. [45]; x. [30].
- Pelias, iv. 2; v. 8, 17; viii. [11]; x. [30].
- Pelion, Mount, x. [19].
- Peloponnesian War, iii. 7; iv. 6; viii. [41], [52].
- Pelops, ii. 18, 22, 26; v. 1, 8, 10, 13, 17; vi. 20, 21, 24; viii. [14]; ix. [40].
- Pencala, river in Phrygia, viii. [4]; x. [32].
- Penelope, wife of Odysseus, iii. 12, 13, 20; viii. [12].
- Pentelicus, a mountain in Attica, famous for its stone quarries, i. 19, 32.
- Penthesilea, v. 11; x. [31].
- Pentheus, i. 20; ii. 2; ix. [2], [5].
- Periander, son of Cypselus, one of the Seven Wise Men, i. 23; x. [24].
- Pericles, i. 25, 28, 29; viii. [41].
- Perjury punished, ii. 2, 18; iv. 22; v. 24.
- Pero, the matchless daughter of Neleus, x. [31].
- Perseus, son of Danae, and grandson of Acrisius, i. 22; ii. 15, 16, 20, 21, 22, 27; iii. 17; iv. 35; v. 18.
- Persians, i. 18, 32, 33; iii. 9; ix. [32].
- Their shields called Gerrha, viii. [50]; x. [19].
- Petroma, viii. [15].
- Phæacians, iii. 18; viii. [29].
- Phædra, the wife of Theseus, enamoured of her stepson Hippolytus, i. 22; ii. 32; ix. [16]; x. [29].
- Phaennis, a prophetess, x. [15], [20].
- Phaethon, i. 3.
- Phalanthus, x. [10], [13].
- Phalerum, i. 1, 28.
- Phemonoe, first priestess of Apollo at Delphi, x. [5], [6], [12].
- Phidias, famous Athenian statuary, i. 3, 4, 24, 28, 33, 40; v. 10, 11; vi. 4, 25, 26; vii. [27]; ix. [4], [10]; x. [10].
- His descendants, v. 14.
- Philammon, father of Thamyris, iv. 33; x. [7].
- Philip, oracle about the two Philips, vii. [8].
- Philip, the son of Amyntas, i. 6, 25; ii. 20; iii. 7, 24; iv. 28; v. 4; vii. [7], [10], [11]; viii. [7], [27]; ix. [1], [37]; x. [2], [3], [36].
- Philip, the son of Demetrius, i. 36; ii. 9; vi. 16; vii. [7], [8]; viii. [8], [50]; x. [33], [34].
- Philoctetes, v. 13; viii. [8], [33]; x. [27].
- Philomela, i. 5, 14, 41; x. [4].
- Philomelus, x. [2], [8], [33].
- Philopœmen, son of Craugis, iv. 29; vii. [9]; viii. [27], [49], [51], [52].
- Phocian Resolution, x. [1].
- Phocian War, iv. 28; ix. [6]; x. [3].
- Phœbe, see Hilaira.
- Phœnix, x. [26].
- Phormio, son of Asopichus, i. 23, 29; x. [11].
- Phormio, the fisherman of Erythræ, vii. [5].
- Phormio inhospitable to Castor and Pollux, iii. 16.
- Phoroneus, ii. 15, 19, 20, 21.
- Phrixus, son of Athainas, i. 24; ix. [34], [38].
- Phrontis, the pilot of Menelaus, x. [25].
- Phryne, beloved by Praxiteles, i. 20; ix. [27]; x. [15].
- Phrynichus, play of, x. [31].
- Phytalus, i. 37.
- Pillars, viii. [45].
- Pindar, i. 8; ix. [22], [23], [25]; x. [24].
- Quoted or alluded to, i. 2, 41; iii. 25; iv. 2, 30; v. 14, 22; vi. 2; vii. [2], [26]; ix. [22]; x. [5], [16], [22].
- Piræus, i. 1.
- Pirithous, son of Zeus, and friend of Theseus, i. 17, 30; v. 10; viii. [45]; x. [29].
- Pisander of Camirus, ii. 37; viii. [22].
- Pisistratus, tyrant of Athens, i. 3, 23; ix. [6].
- Collects Homer’s Poems, vii. [26].
- Pittacus of Mitylene, one of the Seven Wise Men, x. [24].
- Plane-trees, wonderful, vii. [22], with Note.
- Platanistas at Sparta, iii. 11, 14.
- Platæa, battle at, v. 23; vi. 3; ix. [2]; x. [15].
- Plato, the famous, i. 30; iv. 32.
- Quoted, vii. [17].
- Cited, x. [24].
- Pluto, i. 38; ii. 36; ix. [23].
- Poets, at kings’ courts, i. 3.
- Statues of, ix. [30].
- Pollux, see Dioscuri.
- Polybius, viii. [9], [30], [37], [44], [48].
- Polycletus, Argive statuary, ii. 17, 20, 22, 24, 27; vi. 2, 4, 7, 9, 13; viii. [31].
- Polycrates, i. 2; viii. [14].
- Polydamas, vi. 5.
- Polydectes, i. 22.
- Polygnotus, famous Thasian painter, i. 18, 22; ix. [4]; x. [25], [26], [27], [28], [29], [30], [31].
- Polynices, son of Œdipus, ii. 19, 20, 25; iv. 8; ix. [5]; x. [10].
- Polyxena, i. 22; x. [25].
- Pomegranate, ii. 17; vi. 14; viii. [37]; ix. [25].
- Poplar, ii. 10; v. 13, 14.
- Poseidon, (the Latin Neptune,) i. 24, 27, 30; ii. 1, 4, 22, 30; iv. 42; vi. 25; viii. [10], [25], [42].
- Praxias, x. [19].
- Praxiteles, the famous, lover of Phryne, i. 2, 20, 23, 40, 43, 44; ii. 21; v. 17; vi. 26; ix. [1], [2], [11], [27], [39]; x. [15], [37].
- Priam, ii. 24; iv. 17; x. [25], [27].
- Priapus, ix. [31].
- Processions, i. 2, 29; ii. 35; vii. [18]; x. [18].
- Procne, i. 24, 41.
- Procrustes, i. 38.
- Prœtus, ii. 7, 12, 16, 25; viii. [18]; x. [10].
- Prometheus, ii. 14, 19; v. 10; x. [4].
- Promontory called Ass’ jawbone, iii. 22, 23.
- Prophetical men and women, x. [12], with Note.
- Proserpine, i. 38; ii. 36; iv. 30; viii. [31], [42], [53]; ix. [23], [31].
- Proteus, iii. 18; viii. [53].
- Proverbs, see ii. 9; iv. 17; vi. 3, 10; vii. [12]; ix. [9], [30], [37]; x. [1], [14], [17], [29].
- Providence, v. 25.
- Prusias, viii. [11].
- Psamathe, i. 43; ii. 19.
- Psyttalea, island of, i. 36; iv. 36.
- Ptolemies proud of calling themselves Macedonians, x. [7], cf. vi. 3.
- Much about the various Ptolemies in, i. 6, 7, 8, 9.
- Purple, iii. 21; v. 12.
- Puteoli, iv. 35; viii. [7].
- Pylades, i. 22; ii. 16, 29; iii. 1.
- Pylæ, that is Thermopylæ, ix. [15].
- Pylos, iv. 2, 3, 31, 36.
- Pyramids, ix. [36].
- Pyrrhus (Neoptolemus), the son of Achilles, i. 4, 11, 13; ii. 23; iii. 20, 25, 26; iv. 17; x. [7], [23], [24], [25], [26].
- Pyrrhus, King of Epirus, i. 6, 9, 10, 11; iv. 29, 35.
- Pythionice, i. 37.
- Pytho, v. 3; x. [6].
- Quoits, ii. 16; v. 3; vi. 14.
- Return from Ilium, Poem so called, x. [28], [29], [30].
- Rhea, viii. [8], [36]; ix. [2], [41].
- Rhegium, iv. 23, 26; v. 25.
- Rhianus, iv. 1, 6, 15, 17.
- Rhinoceros, v. 12; ix. [21].
- Called also Ethiopian bull.
- Rhœcus of Samos, viii. [14]; ix. [41]; x. [38].
- Rose, sacred to Aphrodite, vi. 24.
- Roxana, wife of Alexander the Great, i. 6; ix. [7].
- Sacadas, ii. 22; iv. 27; vi. 14; ix. [30]; x. [7].
- Sacrifices, remarkable, vii. [18]; viii. [29], [37].
- Sails, an invention of Dædalus, ix. [11].
- Salamis, i. 35, 36, 40.
- Samos, vii. [2], [4], [10].
- Sanctuaries, not to be approached by the profane, viii. [5]; x. [32], (Procul o, procul este, profani!)
- Sappho, the Lesbian Poetess, i. 25, 29; viii. [18]; ix. [27], [29].
- Sardinia, x. [17].
- Sardis, iii. 9; iv. 24.
- Sardonic laughter, x. [17].
- Saturnus. See Cronos.
- Satyrs, i. 23.
- Satyr of Praxiteles, i. 20.
- Scamander, v. 25.
- Scedasus and his two daughters, ix. [13].
- Scimetar of Cambyses, i. 28.
- Scipio, viii. [30].
- Sciron, killed by Theseus, i. 3, 44.
- Scopas, i. 43; ii. 10, 22; vi. 25; viii. [28], [45], [47]; ix. [10], [17].
- Scorpion with wings, ix. [21].
- Scylla, daughter of Nisus, legend about, ii. 34.
- Scyllis of Scione, famous diver, x. [19].
- Scythians, travel in waggons, viii. [43].
- (Compare Horace, Odes, Book iii. Ode 24. 9-11. “Campestres melius Scythae, Quorum plaustra vagas rite trahunt domos, Vivunt.”)
- Sea, Red, i. 33.
- Dead, v. 7.
- Seasons, v. 11, 17; ix. [35].
- Seleucia, on the Orontes, i. 16; viii. [33].
- Seleucus, son of Antiochus, i. 6, 16.
- Semele, daughter of Cadmus, mother of Dionysus by Zeus, ii. 31, 37; iii. 24; ix. [5].
- Serapis, i. 18; ii. 4, 34; iii. 14, 22, 25; iv. 32; vii. [21]; ix. [24].
- Ser, and the Seres, vi. 26.
- Seriphus, i. 22.
- Serpents, remarkable ones, viii. [4], [16].
- None in Sardinia, x. [17].
- Sheep, accompanying Spartan kings to war, ix. [13].
- Shields, Used by the Celts in fording rivers, x. [20].
- Ship at Delos, i. 29.
- Sibyl, ii. 7; vii. [8]; x. [9].
- Sibyls, various, x. [12].
- Sicily, a small hill near Athens, viii. [11].
- Sight suddenly lost and recovered, iv. 10, 12; x. [38].
- Silenus, i. 4, 23; ii. 22; iii. 25.
- Sileni mortal, vi. 24.
- Simonides, i. 2; iii. 8; vi. 9; ix. [2]; x. [27].
- Sinis, i. 37; ii. 1. (Pityocamptes.)
- Sirens, ix. [34]; x. [6].
- Sisters, love of by brothers, i. 7; iv. 2; ix. [31].
- Sisyphus, son of Æolus, ii. 1, 3, 5; x. [31].
- Sleep the god most friendly to the Muses, ii. 31.
- Smyrna, v. 8; vii. [5].
- Snake, story about, x. [33].
- Socrates, i. 22, 30; ix. [35].
- Solon, i. 16, 18; x. [24].
- Sophocles, i. 21, 28.
- Sosigenes, viii. [31].
- Sosipolis, vi. 20, 25.
- Sparta, iii. 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18.
- Sparti, viii. [11]; ix. [5]. Note. ix. [10].
- Speech, ill-advised, iii. 7, 8.
- Sperchius, river, x. [20], [21], [22], [23].
- Sphacteria, i. 13, 15; iii. 5; iv. 36; v. 26; vi. 22.
- Sphinx, the, ix. [26].
- Spiders, ix. [6].
- Stade. See Note, i. 1.
- Stesichorus, iii. 19.
- Stratagems of Homer, iv. 28.
- Strongyle, a volcanic island, x. [11].
- Stymphelides, birds so called, viii. [22].
- Styx, river, viii. [17], [18].
- Submission to an enemy, technical term for, Note on x. [20].
- See also iii. 12.
- Sulla, i. 20; ix. [7], [33]; x. [20].
- Sun-shade used by ladies, vii. [22].
- Sunium, i. 1, 28.
- Suppliants not to be injured with impunity, vii. [24], [25].
- See also iii. 4; iv. 24.
- Sus, river, ix. [30].
- Susa, i. 42; iii. 9, 16; iv. 31; vi. 5.
- Swallows, idiosyncrasy of at Daulis, x. [4].
- Swan-eagles, viii. [17].
- Tænarum, promontory of, iii. 14, 25; iv. 24.
- Tantalus, ii. 22; v. 13; x. [30], [31].
- Taraxippus, vi. 20.
- Tarentum, iii. 12; x. [10], [13].
- Tarsus, viii. [28].
- Telamon, son of Æacus, i. 35, 42; ii. 29; viii. [45].
- Telesilla, ii. 20, 28, 35.
- Tellias of Elis, x. [1], [13].
- Tenedos, x. [14].
- Tenedian axe, x. [14].
- Tereus, i. 5, 41; ix. [16]; x. [4].
- Teucer, son of Telamon, i. 28; viii. [15].
- Thamyris, iv. 33; ix. [5], [30]; x. [7], [30].
- Thebes, ii. 6; iv. 27; vii. [15], [17]; viii. [33]; ix. [3], [5], [6], [7], [8].
- Themis, v. 17; viii. [25]; x. [5].
- Themisto, reputed by some mother of Homer, x. [24].
- Themistocles, i. 1, 36; viii. [50], [52]; x. [14].
- Theoclus, Messenian seer, iv. 16, 20, 21.
- Theodorus of Samos, iii. 12; viii. [14]; ix. [41]; x. [38].
- His seal carved out of an emerald for Polycrates, viii. [14].
- Thermopylæ, vii. [15]; ix. [32]; x. [20], [21].
- Thersites, x. [31].
- Theseus, i. 1, 2, 3, 17, 19, 22, 27, 37, 39, 41, 44; ii. 1, 22, 30, 32; iii. 18, 24; v. 10, 11; vii. [17]; viii. [45], [48]; ix. [31], [40]; x. [29].
- Thetis, mother of Achilles, v. 18, 22.
- Thucydides, the famous Historian, i. 23; vi. 19.
- Possibly alluded to, i. 8.
- Thyestes, ii. 18.
- Thyiades, x. [4], [19], [32].
- Thyrsus of Dionysus, iv. 36; viii. [31].
- Tiger, ix. [21].
- Timagoras, tragic story of, i. 30.
- Timon of Athens, the famous Misanthrope, i. 30.
- Timotheus, the Milesian harper and poet, iii. 12; viii. [50].
- Tiphys, the pilot of the Argo, ix. [32].
- Tiresias, vii. [3]; ix. [18], [32], [33].
- Tiryns, ii. 16, 17, 25; v. 23; vii. [25]; viii. [2], [33], [46]; ix. [36].
- Tisias, vi. 17.
- Tissaphernes, iii. 9.
- Titans, the, vii. [18]; viii. [37].
- Tityus, iii. 18; x. [4], [11], [29].
- Tomb of Helen, a Jewess, at Jerusalem, viii. [16].
- Tortoises, i. 44; viii. [23].
- Lyres made out of them, ii. 19; viii. [17], [54].
- Townships of Attica, i. 31, 32, 33.
- Traitors, various ones that troubled Greece, vii. [10].
- Trajan, the Emperor, iv. 35; v. 12.
- Treasuries, ix. [36], [37], [38]; x. [11].
- Trench, the Great, iv. 6, 17, 20, 22.
- Tripods, v. 17; vii. [4].
- Triptolemus, i. 14, 38; ii. 14; vii. [18]; viii. [4].
- Tritons, viii. [2]; ix. [20], [21].
- Trœzen, ii. 30, 31, 32, 33, 34.
- Trophies, unwisdom of erecting, ix. [40].
- Trophonius, iv. 16, 32; viii. [10]; ix. [11], [37], [39], [40]; x. [5].
- Tros, father of Ganymede, v. 24.
- Troy, why it fell, x. [33].
- (Compare Horace, Odes, iii. 3. 18-21. “Ilion, Ilion Fatalis incestusque judex Et mulier peregrina vertit In pulverem.”)
- Tyndareus, ii. 18; iii. 1, 15, 17, 18, 21.
- Tyrants, the Thirty, i. 29.
- Tyrtæus, iv. 6, 8, 13, 14, 15, 16.
- Ulysses. See Odysseus.
- Umpires at Olympia, v. 9.
- Unknown gods, i. 1; v. 14.
- (Compare Acts: xvii. 23.)
- Venus. See Aphrodite.
- Vermilion, viii. [39].
- Vespasian, the Roman Emperor, vii. [17].
- Vesta, i. 18; ii. 35; v. 14.
- Vinegar, its effect on Pearls, viii. [18].
- Voice, found through terror, x. [15].
- Volcanic islands, x. [11].
- Vulcan. See Hephæstus.
- Water, various kinds of, iv. 35.
- To whitewash two walls, Proverb, vi. 3. See Note.
- Wine elevating, iii. 19.
- (“Vinum lætificat cor hominis.” Ps. ciii. 15.)
- Wise Men, the Seven, i. 23; x. [24].
- Their famous sayings, especially Know thyself, and Not too much of anything, x. [24].
- Wolves, men turned into, vi. 8; viii. [2].
- Many in the neighbourhood of Croton, vi. 14.
- None in Sardinia, x. [17].
- Word for the day given to soldiers, ix. [27].
- Wordsworth on Daphne.
- See Note, x. [7].
- World, centre of, x. [16].
- Worshipping the deity with other people’s incense, Proverb, ix. [30].
- Xanthippus, father of Pericles, i. 25; iii. 7; viii. [52].
- Xenocrates, iv. 32; ix. [13].
- Xenophon, i. 3; v. 6; ix. [15].
- Xerxes, i. 8; iii. 4; vi. 5; viii. [42], [46]; x. [7], [35].
- Young, Dr., On Commentators, Preface, p. vi.
- Zancle, iv. 23.
- Zethus, ii. 6; ix. [5], [8], [17].
- Zeus, (the Latin Jupiter,) the chief of the gods, viii. [36].
- Assumed the appearance of Amphitryon, v. 18.
- Traditions about his early years, iv. 33; v. 7; viii. [8], [28], [36], [38].
- His two jars, viii. [24].
- Represented with three eyes, why, ii. 24.