[166] C.I.G. Boeot. 1760-1766.
[167] Böckh, 232, 245.
[168] Pind. Nem. vii.
[169] Bacchul. xiii., Pind. Nem. v.
[170] Wrestling, Pind. Nem. iv., vi.
[171] Anthol. ed. Jacobs, vi. 308.
[172] Sometimes earlier. Plato, Protag. 325 C.
[173] Elderly, as in the picture of Medeia and her children given in Smith’s Smaller Classical Dictionary under “Medea,” and on Douris’ Kulix, [Plates I. A] and [I. B] (if those are paidagogoi), and on other vases.
[174] So Fabius Cunctator was called Hannibal’s paidagogos, because he followed him about everywhere.
[175] There is only one for Lusis and his brothers (Plato, Lus. 223 A), for Medeia’s two children (Eur. Med.), for two boys in Lusis, 223 A, and for Themistocles’ children (Herod. viii. 75).