Hermippos, [600].
Hermotimos, [300] f.
Hero of Alexandria, [xii, 150].
Herodes Atticus, [xiv, ii, 71], [131].
Herodikos, of Perinthos, [vii, 3]; [x, 7].
Heroes, [74], [97] f., [115] f.; [iii, 46]; [254]; [416]; [xii, 121]; help in war, [136] f.; graves of, [121]; [v, 68]; games for, [116] f.; bones of, transferred and worshipped, [iv, 35]–6; [529]; as Birds, [xiv, ii, 102]; relation with θεοί and δαίμονες, [iv, 25]; become gods, [132]; Homeric “Heroes”, [iv, 26]; in Hesiod, [74] f., [118]; nocturnal sacrifice to, [iv, 9]; what falls to the ground sacred to, [v, 114]; in Pindar, [414] f.; legends of, [134] f.; later, [527] f.
ἥρως = a dead person, [v, 110], [134]; [531]; (Christian), [xiv, ii, 82]; applied to the living, [530] f.; [xiv, ii, 68]; nameless or adjectival Heroes, [126] f., [529]; [xiv, ii, 61]–2; ἡ. ἰατρός [iv, 94]–5; [xiv, ii, 45]; ἡ. συγγενείας, [v, 132].
Heroized Kings and Lawgivers, [128]; Kings of Sparta, Corinth, and Crete, [iv, 46]; Warriors of the Persian Wars, [528]; prominent men of later times, [530]; Heroizing easier in Boeotia, [v, 134]; in Thessaly, [xii, 121]; [532]; becomes common, [531] f.; substitution of descendants for original Hero, [xiv, ii, 65].
Hero-Physicians (Oracular), [133]; [xiv, ii, 45].
ἥρωες δυσόργητοι, [v, 119].