Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Τόπος και Χρόνος Θανάτου Κύρι
... his friends preferred to fled far away from Miletus and Ionia and to settle in Myrkinos, the Thracian city Histiaios once received from Darius. There he died in a battle against the Thracians. Many debates have been conducted on Aristagoras’ and Histiaios’ reasons of the Ionian Revolt, for which we ...
... his friends preferred to fled far away from Miletus and Ionia and to settle in Myrkinos, the Thracian city Histiaios once received from Darius. There he died in a battle against the Thracians. Many debates have been conducted on Aristagoras’ and Histiaios’ reasons of the Ionian Revolt, for which we ...
Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Τόπος και Χρόνος Θανάτου Κύρι
... his friends preferred to fled far away from Miletus and Ionia and to settle in Myrkinos, the Thracian city Histiaios once received from Darius. There he died in a battle against the Thracians. Many debates have been conducted on Aristagoras’ and Histiaios’ reasons of the Ionian Revolt, for which we ...
... his friends preferred to fled far away from Miletus and Ionia and to settle in Myrkinos, the Thracian city Histiaios once received from Darius. There he died in a battle against the Thracians. Many debates have been conducted on Aristagoras’ and Histiaios’ reasons of the Ionian Revolt, for which we ...
Evidence Pericles
... o Elected 16 times as strategos o Never ostracised, despite evidence of Ostracon with his name inscribed What reasons do sources give for his popularity? o Personal skills (oratorical skills) common agreement between Plutarch and Thucydides o Plutarch cornered his opponents in a method of ques ...
... o Elected 16 times as strategos o Never ostracised, despite evidence of Ostracon with his name inscribed What reasons do sources give for his popularity? o Personal skills (oratorical skills) common agreement between Plutarch and Thucydides o Plutarch cornered his opponents in a method of ques ...
Herodotus, The Histories, Book 6. 94
... disposed towards them, and had often helped them in times past, and would do so again in time to come?" The Athenians, entirely believing in the truth of this report, as soon as their affairs were once more in good order, set up a temple to Pan under the Acropolis, and, in return for the message whi ...
... disposed towards them, and had often helped them in times past, and would do so again in time to come?" The Athenians, entirely believing in the truth of this report, as soon as their affairs were once more in good order, set up a temple to Pan under the Acropolis, and, in return for the message whi ...
Lelantine War
The Lelantine War is the modern name for a military conflict between the two ancient Greek city states Chalcis and Eretria in Euboea which took place in the early Archaic period, between c. 710 and 650 BC. The reason for war was, according to tradition, the struggle for the fertile Lelantine Plain on the island of Euboea. Due to the economic importance of the two participating poleis, the conflict spread considerably, with many further city states joining either side, resulting in much of Greece being at war. The historian Thucydides describes the Lelantine War as exceptional, the only war in Greece between the mythical Trojan War and the Persian Wars of the early 5th century BC in which allied cities rather than single ones were involved.Ancient authors normally refer to the War between Chalcidians and Eretrians (ancient Greek: πόλεμος Χαλκιδέων καὶ Ἐρετριῶν pólemos Chalkidéon kaì Eretriōn).""The war between Chalcis and Eretria was the one in which most cities belonging to the rest of Greece were divided up into alliances with one side or the other."" —Thucydides (I. 15, 3)↑ ↑ 2.0 2.1