cnoRic. 521 CORINl'IT. Cfioric training at Sparta and Kiote, iv. 84 scrj. Clioriertes, Alexander's cnpture of the rock of, xii. 214. Chorus, tiic Greek, iv. 83 ; improve- ments ill, by Stesichorus, iv. 87. Chronicle of Turpin, tlie, i. 475. Chronological calculation destroys the religious character of mythical ge- nealogies, i. 44G ; table from Clin- ton's Fasti Hellenici, ii. 36 se^; computations, the value of, depend- ent on the trustworthiness of the genealogies, ii. 41 ; evidence of early poets, ii. 45. Chronolorjists, modern, ii. 37. Chronologizing attempts indicative of mental progress, ii. 56. Chronology of mythical events, vari- ous schemes of, ii. 34 seq. ; Alex- andrine, from the return of the He- rakleids to the first Olympiad, ii. 304 ; of Egyptian kings from Psam- mclichus to Ainasis, iii. 330 n. 2 ; Egyptian, iii. 339 se^.; Grecian, be- tween the Persian and Pelopon- nesian wars, v. 304 n. 2 ; of the pe- riod between Philip's fortification of Elateia and the battle of Chaero- neia, xi. 494 n. 2. Chi-ysaor, i. 1,7. Chri/seis, i. 294. Chiysippits, i. 160. Chrysopolis, occupation of, by the Athenians, viii. 127. Cimmerian invasion of Asia Minor, iii. 249 seq. Cimmerians, iii. 234; driven out of their country by the Scythians, iii. 247 seq. Circe and ^etes. i. 252 Clinton's Fasti Hellenici, chronologi- cal table from, ii. 36 seq.; opinion on the computations of the date of the Trojan war, ii. 39 ; vindication of the genealogies, ii. 42 seq. Coined money, first introduction of, into Greece, ii. 318. Comedy, growth, development, and influence of, at Athens, viii. 325 seq. Comic poets, before Aristophanes, viii. 327 ; writers, mistaken esti- mate of, as witnesses and critics, viii. 332 seq. Commemorative influence of Grecian rites, i. 454 seq. 44* Congress at Corinth, B. C. 421, vii. 13 15 at Sparta, b. c. 421, vii. 24; al Mantinea, b. c. 419, vii. 67 seq. Condn on liie legend of Kadmus, i. 258. Constitutional forms, attachment of the Athenians to, viii. 41 ; moral- ity, necessity for creating, in the time of Kleisthenes, iv. 159. Corinth, origin of, i. 119 seq.; Dori- ans, at, ii. 9; early distinction of, ii. 113 ; isthmus of, ii. 216; llera- kleid kings of, ii. 306 ; Dorian set- tlers at, ii. 309 ; despots at, iii. 39 seq. : great power of, under Perian- der, iii. 43 ; Sikyon and Megara, an alogy of, ill. 47 ; voyage from, to Gades in the seventli and sixth centuries b. c , iii. 277 ; relations of Korkyra with, iii. 404 seq.; and Korkyra, joint settlements of, iii. 405 seq. ; relations between the col- onies of, iii. 407 ; decision of, respecting the dispute between Thebes and Platosa, iv. 166 ; pro- test of, at the first convocation at Sparta, iv. 175; Pan-Hellenic con- gress at the Isthmus of, v. 57 seq. ; rush of Peloponnesians to the Isth- mus of, after the battle of Thermo- pylae, v. 106 ; growing hatred of, to Athens, B. c. 461, v. 320; ope- rations of the Athenians in the Gulf of, B. c. 455, V. 332 ; and Kor- kyra, war between, vi. 51 seq. ; and Athens, after the naval battle be- tween Corinth and Korkyra, vi. 69 seq.; congress at, b. o. 421, vii. 13. 15 seq.; and Syracuse, embassy from, to Sparta, vii. 235 ; synod at, B. c. 412, vii. 368; altered feeling of, after the capture of Athens by Lysander, viii. 259, 264, 275 ; alli- ance of, with Thebes, Athens, and Argos, against Sparta, ix. 301 , anti-Spartan allies at, ix. 302; bat- tle of, ix. 307 seq., 317 ; Pharnaba- zus and the anti-Spartan allies at, ix. 320 ; philo-Laconian party at, B. C. 392, ix. 328 seq. ; coup d'etat of the government at, ix. 329 ; con- trast between political conflicts at, and at Athens, ix. 330 n. 3 ; and Argos, consolidation of, b. c. 392 ix. 332 ; victory of the Laceda>mo nianis within the Long Walls £t