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aeschylus - Conscious Evolution TV

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Battus, king of Cyrene, Pl. 925<br />

Belierophon, F. 1051; represented as lame in the<br />

play of Euripides, A. 427, P. 148<br />

Bereschethus, a goblin, K. 635<br />

Boeotians, P. 466<br />

Brasidas, a great Spartan leader in the Peloponnesian<br />

War, killed at Amphipolis 422 B.C., W. 475,<br />

P.64°<br />

Brauron, an Attic deme, scene of a famous festival,<br />

P.874<br />

Brauronia, a feast of Artemis, L. 645<br />

Bupalus, a sculptor, had caricatured Hipponax,<br />

who lampooned him and threatened to strike<br />

him,L. 361<br />

Byzantium, the earlier city on the site of Constantinople,<br />

C.249, W.236<br />

Cadmus, founder of Thebes, F. 1225<br />

Caecias, the N.E. wind, K. 437<br />

Callias, son of Hipponicus, a spendthrift, B. 283, E.<br />

810<br />

Callimachus, a poor poet, E. 809<br />

Camarina, a town in Sicily, A.605<br />

Cannonus, a lawgiver, E. 1089<br />

Cantharus, a harbour of the Peiraeus, P. 145<br />

Carcinus, a comic poet, father of three dwarfish<br />

sons, C. 1261, W. 1508, P. 781, 866<br />

Cardopion, a scandalous fellow, W. 1178<br />

Caria, a country in southwestern Asia Minor, K.<br />

173<br />

Carthage,K. 174, 1303<br />

Carystian (Euboean) allies in Athens, L. 1058, 1182<br />

Caystrian (Lydian) plains, A. 68<br />

Cebrione, a giant, B. 553<br />

Cecrops, king of Attica, C. 301, W. 438<br />

Celeus, son of Triptolemus, A. 49<br />

Centaurs, C. 349<br />

Cephale, an Attic deme, B. 476<br />

Cephal us, a potter and demagogue, E. 248<br />

Cephisodemus, an advocate, A. 705<br />

Cephisophon, a slave of Euripides; he was credited<br />

with helping the dramatist in his tragedies, F. 939<br />

Cerameicus, the potter's quarter at Athens, where<br />

public funerals took place, K. 772, B. 395, F. 127,<br />

1093<br />

Cerberus, the dog of Hades, P. 313, F. III<br />

Chaereas, W. 687<br />

Chaerephon, a pupil of Socrates, C. 104, etc., W.<br />

1408, B. 1296, 1564<br />

Chaeretades, E. 51 .<br />

Chaeris, a wretched Theban piper, A. 16, P. 950<br />

Chalcis, Chalcidice in Thrace, K. 238<br />

Chaonia, in Epirus, A. 613, K. 78<br />

Chaos, B. 69 I<br />

Charinades, P. I 154<br />

Charites, the Graces, B. 781<br />

Charixene, a poetess, E. 943<br />

Charminius, a general, an Athenian officer, T.804<br />

Charon, ferryman of the Styx, F. 184<br />

Chersonesus, the peninsula of Gallipoli, K.262<br />

Chios, a proverb relating to, P. 171<br />

Chloe-Demeter, L. 835<br />

GLOSSARY<br />

Choae, the Pitcher feast, A. 961<br />

Chvtri, the Pitcher feast, F. 218<br />

Cicynna, an Attic deme, C. 134<br />

Cillicon, a traitor, P. 363<br />

Cimolian earth, fuller's earth, F. 712<br />

Cimon, an Athenian statesman, L. 1144<br />

Cinesias, a dithyrambic poet, constantly ridiculed<br />

for his thinness, musical perversities, and profane<br />

and dissolute conduct, B. 1372, F. 153,364, 1437,<br />

E. 330<br />

Cithaeron, mt., T. 996<br />

Cleaenetus, father of Cleon, K. 574<br />

Cleidemides, F. 791<br />

Cleigenes, F. 709<br />

Cleinarete, E. 41<br />

Cleinias, father of Alcibiades, A. 716<br />

Cleisthenes, "son ofSibyrtius," a coward and effeminate,<br />

A. 1I8, K. 1374, C. 355, W. 1I87, B. 831,<br />

F. 48, 422, L. 1092, T.235<br />

Cleocritus, an ungainly man, B. 873, F. 1437<br />

Cieomenes, king of Sparta, L. 274<br />

Cleon, son of Cleaenetus, a tanner, demagogue and<br />

popular leader after the death of Pericles in 429<br />

B.C., He opposed peace. In 424 took part in the<br />

surrender of the Spartans at Sphacteria, which he<br />

laid to his own credit. Killed by Brasidas at<br />

Amphipolis, 422, A. 6, 300, 378, 502, 659, K.137,<br />

976, C. 549, 586, 591, W. 35,62, 197, 241, 596,<br />

841, 895, 1220, 1224, 1237, 1285, P. 47, 648, F.<br />

569<br />

Cleonymus, the butt of Athens for his bulk and his<br />

appetite, who cast away his shield at Odium, A.<br />

88,844, K. 958,1293, 1372, C. 353, 450,674, W.<br />

20, 592, 822, P. 446, 672, 1295, B. 289, 1475, T.<br />

605<br />

Cleophon, a demagogue, F. 677, 1532<br />

Cobalus, K. 635<br />

Cocytus, the River of Wailing, in the lower regions,<br />

F'47 1<br />

Coesyra, a name in the great Alcmaeonid family,<br />

A. 614, C. 48, 800<br />

Colaenis, a name of Artemis, B. 872<br />

Colias, a title of Aphrodite, or of her attendant lovedeities,<br />

C. 52, L. 2<br />

Colonus, an eminence in the Agora, B. 998<br />

Conisalus, a local Attic Priapus, L. 982<br />

Connas, a drunken flute-player, K. 534, W. 675<br />

Copaic eels, from Lake Copais (A. 880) in Boeotia,.<br />

P. 1005<br />

Corinth, K. 603, B. 968<br />

Corinthians and the League, E. 199<br />

Corybants, priests of Cybele, L. 558<br />

Cothocidae, an Attic deme, T.622<br />

Cranaae-Athens, B, 123<br />

Cranaan town-Athens, L. 481<br />

Crates, a comic poet, flourished about 450 B.C. K.<br />

536<br />

Cratinus, a dandy, A. 849, 1I73; a comic poet, 519-<br />

422 B.C., K. 400, 526, P. 700, F. 337<br />

Cretan monodies, F. 849<br />

Crioa, a deme of Athens, B. 645<br />

Cronos, father of Zeus, C. 929, B. 469, 586

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