EGYPTIANS 530 EPAMINONDAS. revolt and reconquest of, under Xerxes, v. 3 ; defeat and losses of tlie Athenians in, v. 333 ; unavail- ing efforts of Persia to reconquer. X. 13; Agesilaus and Chabrias in, X. 362 seq.; reconquest of, by Oclius, xi. 439 ; march of Alex- ander towards, xii. 141, 142, 145; Alexander in, xii. 146 seq. ILgijptians^ ethnography of, iii. 264: contrasted with Greeks, Pheni- cians, and Assyrians, iii. 304 ; and Ethiopians, iii. 313; effect of, on the Greek mind, iii. 343. Eileithyia, i. 10. Eton, capture of, by Kimon, v. 295 seq. ; defended by Thucydides a- gainst Brasidas, vi. 411 ; Kleon at, vi. 471. Ekbalana, foundation of, iii. 228 ; Da- rius at, xii. 180 ; Alexander at, xii. 181 seq. 246 seq.; Parmenio at, xii. 181, 196 seq. Ekdikus, expedition of. to Khodcs, ix 363. EhUesia, Athenian, iv. 139. Ehea, iii. 191. Elttis, escape of the Athenian squad- ron from Sestos to, viii. 106; Minda- rus and Tiirasvllus at. viii. 109, 1 13. Eleusinians, seizure and cxeculion of by the Thirty at Athens, viii 267. Eleusls, temple of, i. 40; importanca of mysteries to, i. 43 ; early inde- pendence of, iii. 71 ; retirement of the Thirty to, viii. 266 ; capture of, viii. 274. Eleutheria, institution of, at Platsea. V. 189. Ells, genealogy of, i. 137, 139; Oxy- lus and the jEtolians at, ii. 9; Pisa, Triphylia, and Lepreum, ii. 439. 440 ; formation of the city of, V. 315 ; revolt of, from Sparta to Argos, vii. 18 seq.; and Lepreum, vii. 18; and Sparta, war between, ix. 224 seq.; claim of, to Triphy- . lia and the Pisatid, x. 260 seq., 313 ; alienation of, from the Arca- dians, X. 260 ; alliance of, with Sparta and Achaia, x. 313. Elymi, iii. 349. Emigrants to Ionia, the, ii. 21 seq. Emigration, early, from Greece, iii. 349. Emigrations consequent on the Dori- an occupation of the Peloponne- sus, ii. 12 ; iEolic, Ionic, and Do- ric, ii, 19 seq. Elateia. refortification of, by V}^, Empedokles, i. 424 seq., vii. 127, xi. 483 Elatus, i. 178. Elea, Phokaean colony at, iv. 206 ; vii. 127. Elealic school, viii. 343 seq., 369. Elegiac verse of Kallinus, Tyrtaeus, and Mimnermus, iv. 78. Elcian genealogy, i. 138, 141. Eleians excluded from the Isthmian games, i. 140; and the Olympic games, ii. 10, 321 ; and Pisatans, ii. 434, 439 ; their exclusion of the Lacedajmonians from the Olympic festival, vii. 57 seq. ; desert the Ar- geian allies, vii. 76 ; and Arca- dians, X. 314 seq., 324 ; exclusion of, from the Olympic festival, b. c. 364, X. 318 seq. Eleklra and Thaumas, progeny of, i. 7. Elck-fri/6n, death of, i. 92. f^/eus('»(aii mysteries, i. 38, 41, 43 ; al- leged profanation of, by Alkibi- ades and others, vii. 175 seq., 211 seq. ; celebration of, protected by Alkibiades. viii, 150. viu. 340. EmporicE, xii. 455. Endius, viii. 122 seq. Endi/mion, stories of, i. 137. Ene'ti, the, i. 319. England, her government of her de pendencies compared with the Athenian empire, vi. 48 n. Amines, ii. 286. Enna, Dionysius at, x. 40S. Ennea Hodoi, v. 310, vi. !2. Enomoties, ii. 456 seq. Entella. Syracusan attack upon x. 490, 497. Eos, i. 6. Epaminondas, and the conspiracy against the philo Laconian oligar- chy at Thebes, x. 81, 87, 124 seq.; training and character of, x. 121 seq.; and Pelopidas, x. 121 ; and Kallistratus, x. 164, 288; and Agesilaus at the congress at Spar- ta, X. 167 seq., 173 ; at Leuktra. x. 179; and Orchomenus, x. 194: proceedings and views of, after tlio