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pecting these enemies, who came upon him by Chersonese, that the following prodigy hap surprise.

CXVII. Whilst they were prosecuting the siege, the autumn arrived. The Athenians, unable to make themselves masters of the place, and uneasy at being engaged in an expedition so far from their country, entreated their Leaders to conduct them home. They, in return, refused to do this, till they should either succeed in their enterprise, or be recalled by the people of Athens, so intent were they on the business before them.

CXVIII. The besieged, who were with Artayctes, were reduced to such extremity of wretchedness, that they were obliged to boil for food, the cords of which their beds were composed. When these also were consumed Artayctes, Eobazus, with some other Persians, fled, under cover of the night, escaping by an avenue behind the town, which happened not to be blockaded by the enemy. When the morning came, the people of the Chersonese made signals to the Athenians from the turrets, and opened to them the gates. The greater part commenced a pursuit of the Persians, the remainder took possession of the

town.

pened to one of those whose business was to guard the prisoners. This man was broiling some salt fish; having put them on the fire, they moved and skipped about like fish lately taken; the standers-by expressing their astonishment at this, Artayctes, who also beheld the prodigy, sent for the man to whom it had happened, and spoke to him as follows: "My Athenian friend, be not alarmed at this prodigy, it has no reference to you, it regards me alone. Protesilaus of Eleæos, although dead and embalmed in salt, shows that he has power from the gods to inflict vengeance on the man who injured him. I am therefore disposed to satisfy him for my ransom. In place of the money, which I took from his temple, I will give him a hundred talents; for my son's life, and my own, I will give the Athenians two hundred more." These offers had no effect upon Xanthippus the Athenian general; be was of himself inclined to put the man to death, to which he was farther importuned by the people of Eleæos, who were very earnest to have the cause of Protesilaus avenged. Conducting him therefore to the shore where the bridge of Xerxes had been constructed, they there crucified him; though some say this was done upon an eminence near the city of Madytus. The son was stoned in his father's presence.

CXIX. Eobazus fled into Thrace; but he was here seized by the Apsinthians, and sacrificed, according to their rites, to their god Pleistorus: his followers were put to death in some other manner. Artayctes and his adherents, who fled the last, were overtaken near the waters of Ægos, where, after a vigorous defence, part were slain and part taken prisoners. The Greeks put them all in chains, Artayctes and his son with the rest, and carried them to Sestos. CXX. It is reported by the people of the cified, the grandfather by the father's side was

I Pleistorus.]—This deity, barbarous as the people by whom he was worshipped, is totally unknown. The sacrifices offered him induce me to conjecture, that it was

the god of war, whom the Scythians represented under the form of a sword. These people, over a large vessel, cut the throat of every hundredth prisoner, wetting the sword with their blood. The same custom prevailed

among the Huns.-See Ammianus Marcellinus, 1. xxxi. c. 2. The Cilicians paid the god of war a worship savage like this; they suspended the victim, whether a man or an animal, from a tree, and going to a small distance, killed it with their spears.-Larcher.

Cruel as these customs may appear, yet prevailing among a rude and uncivilized people, they are more to be justified, than the unprovoked and unnatural inhumanity practised at Tauris. Here every stranger,

whom accident or misfortune brought to their coast,

was sacrificed to Diana.-See The Iphigenia in Tauris

of Euripides.-T.

CXXI. The Athenians after the above transactions, returned to Greece, carrying with them, besides vast quantities of money, the fragments of the bridge, to be suspended in their temples. During the remainder of the year they continued inactive.

CXXII. Of this Artayctes, who was cru

Artembares, who drew up an address for the Persians, which they approving, presented to Cyrus; it was to this effect: "Since, O Cyrus, Jupiter has given to the Persians, and by the degradation of Astyages to you, uncontrolled dominion, suffer us to remove from our present confined and sterile region to a better. We have the choice of many, near and at a distance; let us occupy one of these, and become exam. ples of admiration to the rest of mankind. This is a conduct becoming those whose superiority is conspicuous; we can never have a fairer opportunity of doing this, being at the head of so many people, and masters of all Asia." Cyrus, though he did not approve what they said, told them they might do so:

the produce of the same soil. The Persians yielded to these sentiments of Cyrus and abandoned their own. They chose rather a less

but he added, that by taking such a step, they must learn in future not to command but to obey. It was the operation of nature, that luxurious countries should render men effemi-pleasant country with dominion, than a faire nate, 2 2 for delicacies and heroes were seldom

2 Effeminate.]-Hippocrates confirms what is here asserted by Herodotus. After describing the advantages which the temperate parts of Asia possess over Greece; he adds, that the men there are not naturally valiant, and are unwilling to support fatigues and hardships. This sentiment is approved by experience. Grecce subdued Asia, the Romans became masters of both those countries, and if they also conquered the Gauls, the Germans, and other nations of the north, it was because these were undisciplined and ignorant of the art of war. When they became so, they in their turn subdued the lords of the world, and dismembered their empire. The Franks vanquished the Gauls, the Lombards, and the Visigoths of Spain. In a word, it is always to be observed, that the people of the north have the advantage over those of the south.-Larcher.

one with servitude.

The ninth cannot be thought the least interesting of the books of Herodotus. The battles of Platea and Mycale would alone claim attention, without those beautiful moral sentiments which we find every where interspersed in it. The behaviour of Pausanias after his victory, his dignity, moderation, and modesty, are admirably describ. ed; his continence, with respect to the mistress of Pharandates, may, for any thing I see to the contrary in either history, well be put on a par with the so much vaunted temperance of Scipio on a similar occasion. The concluding sentiment, which teaches that the dispositions of men should be conformed to the nature of the soil and climate in which they are born, is alike admirable for the simplicity with which it is conveyed, and the philosophic truth which it inculcates.-T.

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INDEX.

A

Abantes, why they cut off their hair before, 46, n.
Abaris, story of, 199.

Abdera, many singularities related of, 51, n.-stigmatized
by Juvenal, 347, n.

Abderites, Xerxes makes a treaty of friendship with, 410.
Abrocomus and Hyperanthes brothers of Xerxes, fall in
contending for the body of Leonidas, 376.
Abyssinia, lapidation a punishment in, 420, n.
Abyssinians, said to eat raw flesh from the living ox,
170, n.

Acanthians presented by Xerxes with a Median vest, 319.
Acephali have their eyes in their breasts, 240.

Aces, the river, its passage prevented by the Persians, 176.
Achæmenes, son of Darius, 138-is intrusted by Xerxes
with the government of Egypt, 323-his advice relative
to the Grecian war is pursued by Xerxes, 380-treats
the body of Leonidas with barbarity, ib.-is slain by
Inarus, 323.

Achelous, a river in Egypt, 70.

Acheron, 391, n.

Ægineta, their resentment to the Samians, 155-assist
the Thebans against the Athenians, 269-occasion of
their enmity with the Athenians, ib.-by their compli-
ance with the demands of Darius, give great offence
to the Athenians, 293-are accused by the Athenians
at Sparta of betraying the liberties of Greece, 294-
oppose and repulse Cleomenes, who endeavoured to
seize the persons of the accused, ib.-send hostages to
Cleomenes, 301-commit an act of violence on the
Athenians at Sunium, 306-are betrayed to the Athe-
nians by Nicodromus, ib-for their impiety against
the temple of Ceres Thesmophoros are driven from
Egina, ib.-are defeated by the Athenians, and denied
assistance by the Argives, 307-obtain a victory over
the Athenian fleet, ib.-supply the Greeks with thirty
vessels, 390-are Dorians, ib.-distinguish themselves
in the battle at Salamis, 403-their offering at Delphi,
410-become exceedingly rich by their purchases of
the spoil after the battle of Platea, 440.
Egis, derivation of the word, 239.

Ægium, answer of the oracle to the people of, 46, n.

Adimantus, the Athenian, had an honourable epitaph Eolians subdued by Croesus, 3-their offer of allegiance

inscribed on his tomb, 381, n.

Adimantus, the Corinthian, is prevented by Themis-
tocles from flying before the Persians, 381-is reproved
by Themistocles, 393-said to have fled at the com-
mencement of the battle of Salamis, 403.
Adonis, his rites in Phrygia represented the access and
recess of the sun, 421, n.

presence

Adoption always performed by the Spartans in
of the king, 296-more frequent amongst the Romans
than amongst the Greeks, ib. n.

Adrastus, son of Gordius, having unwillingly killed his
brother, receives expiation from Cræsus, 12—is in-
trusted by Croesus with the care of his son Atys in the
bunting of a wild boar, 13-missing his aim at the boar
kills Atys, ib.-kills himself on the tomb of Atys, 14.
Adrastus, the son of Talaus, sacrifices and festivals ap-
propriated to him by the Sicyonians, assigned by Clis-
thenes to Melanippus, 261.

Adyrmachido, a people of Africa, their customs, 233, & n.
Exces, son of Syloson, prevails on all the Samian lead-
ers, except eleven, to withdraw their assistance from
the Ionians, 281-the Phenicians ordered by the Per-
sians to replace him in Samos as a reward of his
services, 288.

Eacida, 269, 394.

rejected by Cyrus, 44-their cities, 47-send ambassa-
dors to Sparta to request assistance from the Lacedæ.
monians against Cyrus, ib.-who refuse it, and yet
threaten Cyrus for any injury to the Grecian cities,
48-Datis the Mede takes them with his army against
Eretria, 308-assist Xerxes with sixty ships, 343-
called Pelasgi at the siege of Troy, 52.
Eschylus, 125.

Esop, his conversation with Solon at Sardis, 11, n.-the
fables under his name not his, 116, n.-little concerning
him can be ascertained as fact, ib. n.-not deformed,
ib. n.-called Theta, 272, n.
Ethiopia, rain and ice unknown in, 75-rain, &c. known
in. ib-its produce, 175.
Ethiopians, 77-eighteen of them kings of Egypt, 102-
from time immemorial used circumcision, 103-not
possible to say whether they or the Egyptians first
introduced circumcision, ib.-subdued by Cambyses,
169-their customs, ib.-assist Xerxes in his expedi-
tion to Greece, 340-difference between the eastern
and western, ib.

Ethiopians, Macrobian, 141-term of their lives, 143-
their food, ib.-Cambyses marches against them with
a part of his army, and loses a considerable number
of men, 141.

Fucus, an edifice erected by the Athenians sacred to Etolians, a shocking character of them, 398, n.

him, 271-his aid entreated by the Greeks, 394.
galeos, mount, Xerxes viewed the battle of Salamis
from, 402.

Ageus, son of Pandion, 53.

Agide, whence their name, 228-build a shrine to the
Furies, ib.

Africa, first discovered by Necho, king of Egypt, to be
surrounded by the sea, 200-Sataspes desists from
sailing round it, ib.-barren of wood, 236-various
nations of, 233-its animals, 241-in some parts it
never rains, 239-in goodness of soil not comparable
to Asia or Europe, 243.

Africans, nearest to Egypt, submit to Cambyses, 139-
prevent the Greeks from seeing Irasa, 231-from
Egypt as far as lake Tritonis lead a pastoral life, and
live on flesh and milk, 239-to the west of the lake
Tritonis, not shepherds, ib.-customs of the African
shepherds with respect to their children, ib.-Africans
more exempt from disease than other men, ib.-their
mode of sacrifice, ib.-all adore the sun and moon, ib.
Agarista, daughter of Clisthenes, mode of her father's
disposing of her in marriage, 316-given by her father
to Megacles, son of Alemæon, 318.
Agarista, daughter of Hippocrates, 319.

Agasicles, of Halicarnassus, violated the custom of the
temple of Triope, 45.
Agathocrgoi, 21.
Agathyrsi, 218, 222.

Age, reverence paid to by the Egyptians and Lacedæ-
monians, 96.

Agetus, son of Alcides, his wife from being remark.
able for her ugliness, becomes exceedingly beautiful,
297-his wife is by artifice obtained by Ariston, who
by her has Demaratus, ib.

Agylla, men and cattle seized with convulsions on ap-
proaching a certain spot, 51.

Ahasuerus, the subject of much etymological investiga-
tion, 56, n.

Ajax, son of Telamon, 261-invoked by the Greeks at
Salamis, 394-a vessel consecrated to him by the
Greeks, 350.

Aimnestus slays Mardonius in the battle of Platea, 433.
Alabaster, whence its name, 141, n.

Alcaus, the son of Hercules, 3.

Altar of the twelve deities at Athens, 69, 312-at Delphi,
presented by the Chians, 116-of Hercules, 365-of
Jupiter Forensis, 257-of Orthosian Diana, 241—of
the winds, 365.

Altars, none among the Persians, 41-first erected by
the Egyptians, 68.

Alyatles, king of Sardis, 6-resumes his father's war
against the Milesians, ib.—and puts an end to it, 7—
erects two temples to Minerva, ib.-his death, 8-
his sepulchre described, 31-story of him and a Thra-
cian woman, 248.

Amasis rebels against Apries king of Egypt, 127-takes
Apries prisoner, and treats him with kindness, till
the Egyptians strangle him, 128—succeeds to the
throne of Egypt, 129-instance of his political sagacity,
130—his regulation of his time, ib.-erects a magnif.
cent portico in honour of Minerva, ib.-brings an
edifice from Elephantine constructed of one entire
stone, 131-colossal statues placed by him, ib.-built
the temple of Isis at Memphis, ib.-partial to the
Greeks, ib.-gives 1000 talents of alumn towards re.
building the temple of Delphi, 132-makes an ami.
cable confederacy with the Cyrenians, ib.—inarries
Ladice, ib.-is afflicted with imbecility, but his vigour
is restored, ib.-his liberality to Greece, ib.-sends his
portrait to Cyrene, ib-the first that conquered Cyprus,
133-Cambyses leads an army against him, 133-dies
before Cambyses advances to Egypt, 138-succeeded
by Psammenitus, ib.-his dead body insulted by Cam.
byses, 140-his advice to Polycrates, 149-his motives
for withdrawing his alliance with him, 130-foretold
the death of Polycrates, 179

Alcaus, the poet, fled from the field, 274-some account Amasis, a Maraphian, intrusted by Ariandes with the
of, ib. n.

Alemæon, son of Megacles, by the permission of Crœsus
takes with him from Sardis all the gold he can
carry, 316,

Alemaonidæ, construct the temple of Delphi, 262-bribe
the Pythian to propose to every Spartan who con-
sulted her the deliverance of Athens, ib.-a shield said
to be held up by one of them as a signal to the Per-
sians on their retreat from Marathon, 314-but this an
incredible story, 316-always amongst the most distin-
guished characters of Athens, ib.—the family raised by
Clisthenes, ib.

Aleuada send messengers from Thessaly, imploring
Xerxes to invade Greece, 323-the first Greeks who
submitted to Xerxes, 351.

Alexander, son of Priam, resolves to obtain a wife from
Greece, 2.

Alexander, son of Amyntas, by stratagem procures the
death of seven Persians sent by Megabyzus to de-
mand earth and water, 250-gives his sister in mar.
riage to Bubaris, and thus prevents an inquiry into
the assassination of the seven Persians, ib.-dissuades
the Greeks from proceeding towards Thessaly to
defend the Olympic straits against Xerxes, 365-a
golden statue of him at Delphi, 410-is sent ambas.
sador by Mardonius to procure an alliance with the
Athenians, 413-his descent from Perdiccas, 411-his
speech at Athens, 415-betrays Mardonius to the
Greeks, 430.

Alexander the Great, his order to his troops to cut off
their hair, 46, n.-story of his birth similar to that of
the birth of Demaratus, 299, n.-by an act of violence on
the Pythian, obtained the answer he wished for 303, n.
Algerines, their ceremony in marriage, 235 n.
Allegory, partiality of the ancients to, 224 11.
Alliances ratified by ancient and modern nations by
drinking their own blood, 21, n.-how made by the
Arabians, 137-by the Scythians, 209.

conduct of an army against the Barceans, 233—his
stratagem at the siege of Barce, 243.

Amathusia besieged by Onesilus, 277-a name of Cyprus,
ib. n.

Amazons, by the Scythians called menslayers, 219-
subdued by the Greeks at Thermoden, 427-plunder
the Scythians, 220-conciliated to the Scythians, ib.-
their manners and customs, 221.
Ambassadors, their persons sacred, except at Constan
tinople, 156, n.

Amber carried from Europe into Greece, 175-its name
and uses, ib. n.

America, whence peopled, 206, n.

Amestris, wife of Xerxes, commanded fourteen Persian
children of illustrious birth to be interred alive, 348
-discovers the intrigue of Xerxes with Artaynta, 446
-not the same with queen Esther, ib. 447, n.-her
cruelty to the wife of Masistes, 447.
Amilcar, conquered by Gelon and Theron, disappeared
and was never seen afterwards, 362-according to
Polyænus destroyed by Gelon by stratagem, ib. n.—
honoured by the Carthaginians as a divinity, ib.
Aminias of Pallene, 403.

Aminocles, son of Cratinus, 369.
Ammon, 237, n.

Ammonians, 237—their fountain of water, ib.-derivation
of their name, ib. n.

Amompharetus, son of Poliadas, 433-behaves well at
the battle of Platea, 437.

Amphiaraus, his oracle, 14, & n.—Crœsus sends presents
to him, 16-no Theban allowed to sleep in his temple, 413
Amphictyons, 262, n. 371, n.
Amphilochus, his oracle, 168, n.

Amphytrion, his present to the temple of the Ismenian
Apollo at Thebes, 262.

Amyntas gives the Persians earth and water, 249.
Amyrtæus discovers the island Elbo, 118.

Anacharsis, the Scythian, his superior learning and ac

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