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.heroicINDEX TO ANCIENT GREECE. 511on this subject respecting Athens only,137.Gama, Vasco de, viii.Pe/ooucria, in various Grecian cities, 115.Gorgias, 201.Greece, geographical view, 1. so dividedthat one state could scarcely gam supremacy over the rest, 19. favoured "bynature and position,20.Gythium, 4.Infantry among the Greeks, 159. theiraccoutrement, 26.lonians, a branch of the Hellenes, 22. retained possession of Attica, Eubcea, andseveral islands, 23. colonized parts ofAsia Minor, and the coasts of Italy andSicily, 24. their general characteristics,{&.Isocrates, 103.Isthmian Games at Corinth, 84.Ithaca, 18.Harpalus, 189.Hecataus of Miletus, 211.Helicea, at Athens, 151.Hellanicus, the Lesbian, 211.Hellas, geographical view, 9.Hellenes, The, their earliest conditional,their power gradually increased, 22. thetribes <strong>com</strong>posing them, &. receivedtheir divinities from the Pelasgi, 28.their character was no where obliteratedamong the Greeks, 80. their unity as anation probably maintained by theHomeric poems, 81. religion anotherbond of union, to. they alone couldcontend for prizes at the festivals, 83.Heraclitus, 199.Herodotus alleges that the Grecian divinities were of Egyptian origin, 28.that Hesiod and Homer invented theGrecian theogony, 32. and designatedthe forms of the gods, 33. his history,212.Heroic Age, The, 50. the dates of its <strong>com</strong>mencement and close not clearly denned, 62.Hesiod, alleged by Herodotus to haveformed, with Homer, the divine world ofthe Greeks, 33.ffippias, 201.Hippodamus, 198.History of the Greeks, its source andprogress, 208, 211. was originallypoetical, ib. Herodotus, 212. Thucydides,214.Homer, alleged by Herodotus to haveformed, with Hesiod, the divine worldof the Greeks, 33. he established thepopular notions of the ib.gods, the bestsource of information respecting theage, 50. the obscurity of Ms history, 71. conditions, character, and influence of his poems, 72. he formed thecharacter of the Greek nation, 75. hissongs carried by Lycurgus into thePeloponnesus, 77. his influence on thelanguage, the spirit, and the politicalcharacter of the Greeks, 77, 78. Hs..poems arr-inged and <strong>com</strong>mitted towriting by Pisistratus, 79. his poemsand those of the Homeridae probablymaintained the unity of the nation, 81.Houses of the Grecian heroes, 56.Judicature, not an independent branch ofthe Grecian constitutions, 146. formedby time and circumstances, 147. thegeneral form, 148. difference of publicand private courts, 149. general processof suits, 150.Justice. In the free Grecian states the notion prevailed that citizens must takepart in the administration of justice,148.Laconia, geographical view, 3.Lada, naval battle of, 170.Laurium, its silver mines, 131.Aaroupytai, among the Greeks, 139.Leonidas, great as a man, not as a general156.Leuctra, battle of, 164.Linus, 68.Locris, geographical view, 15.Lycurgus, carried the songs of Homer intothe Peloponnesus, 77, 78. did not attempt to form a new constitution, 106.Lysander, 156.Lysias, 186.Lysippus, 231.Magistracy, The, in Grecian cities, 115.eligibility to office, 118. the differentkinds of magistracy, 1 19. its cost to thepublic, 135.Mantinea, battle of, 164.Marathon, battle of, 95. the Athenianarmy did not exceed 10,000 men, 155.the victory due to the heroic spirit ofMiltiades, 161.MarteL Charles, viiiMelos, 19.Menander, his plays, 226.Mercenaries, introduction among theGreeks, 165.Metals, abundance of, in ancient Greece,57.Micon, 232.Miletus founded, 64.Militia in the Grecian states, 154. theexcluded frompoorer classes nearlymilitary service, 155. that of Sparta resembled a standing army, 156. where amilitia exists, the political divisions areusually military in their origin, 157.Milo, the wrestler, 197.

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