GEOGRAl IIICAL i34 GIIKCIAN. analogy between those of Greece and other nations, iii. 5S scq. ; Gre- cian, patronymic names of, iii. 63 ; ilifference between Grecian and Roman, iii. 65 ; non-members of, under Solon, iii. 133. Geoyrapliical knowledge, Ilesiodic and Homeric, ii. 114; views of Alexander, xii. 232 n. 1. Geojjraphy, fabulous, i. 245 seq. ; Ho- meric, iii. 204 ; of the retreat of the Ten Thousand, ix. 115 seq. Geological features of Greece, ii. 215. Geomori, iii. 30, 72. Gergis, iii. 197; Derkyllidas at, ix. 212. Gergithes, iii. 197. German progress iirought about by violent external influences, i. 463 ; mythes, i. 4G4. Gerontes, ii. 66. Geronthrce, conquest of, ii. 419. Geri/6n, i. 7, 249. Getce, Alexander's defeat of, xii. 24. Gigantes, birth of, i. 5, 9 n. Gil/us, iv. 258. Giskon, X. 401, 403 n., xi. 180. G.'auka, xii. 230. Glauke, i. 117. Glankon, disconr<;c of, in Plato's Re- public, viii. 391. Glaukus, i. 224. Gnomic, Greek poets, iv. 90 seq. Gnomon, whence obtained by the Greeks, iii. 345. Goddesses, and gods, twelve great, i. 10. Gods, Grecian, liow conceived by the Greeks, i. 3 Gcq., 347 seq.; and daemons, i. 425 seq. ; and men, i. 449. Golden Fleece, legend of, i. 123. Golden race, the, i. 65. Gongylus, the Corinthian, vii. 265, 271. Good, etc., meaning of, in early Greek writers, ii. 64; double sense of the Greek and Latin equivalents of, iii. 45 n. 4. Gordian knot, Alexander cuts the xii. 104. Gordium, Alexander's march from, xii. 111. Gordius, legend of, iii. 217. Gorqias of Leontini, vii. 128, 132, viii. 369, 382. Gorgons, i. 90. Goradvas at iEgina, ix. 373 scq. Government of historical and legenda- ry Greece, ii. 60 seq. ; heroic, ii. 75 ; earliest changes of in Greece, iii. 4 seq. ; kingly, iii. 5 seq ; change from monarcliical to oligar- chical in Greece, iii. 15 seq. Governments, Grecian, weakness of, iv. 152. Graces, the, i. 10. Grace, i. 7. Groeci, ii. 269. GrcEcia Magna, iii. 399. Grccco- A sialic cities, xii. 271. Granikus, battle of the, xii. 80 seq.; Atiienians captured at the, xii. 105.^ Graphe Paranomon v. 375 seq ; ab- olition of, B. C. 411, viii. 36. Grecian mythes, i. 51, 426 seq. ; gene- alogies, i. 80 seq. ; mythology, sources of our information on, i. 106; intellect, expansive force of, i. 362 ; progress between b. c. 700 and 500, i. 365 seq. ; antiquity, i. 445, 448 ; genealogies, i. 447 ; townsman, intellectual acquisitions of a, i. 458 ; poetry, matchless, i. 463 ; progress self-operated, i. 463 ; mvthology, how it would have bei-n aftpcted by the introduction of Christianity, b. c. 500, i. 467 ; mythes, proper treatment of, i. 487 seq.; computation of time, ii. 115 n. 2 ; festivals, intellectual influence of, ii. 228 ; history, first and second periods of, ii. 270 seq., iv. 52 ; opinion, change in, on the decision of disputes by champions, ii. 451 : states, growing communion of, between b. c. 600 and 547, ii. 461 ; "faith," iii. 115; settlements on the Euxine, iii. 236 ; marine and commerce, growth of, iii. 336 ; colo- nies in Southern Italy, iii. 374 seq.; world about 560 b. c, iii. 398 ; his tory, want of unity in, iv. 51, 52 games, influence of, upon the Greek mind. iv. 70 seq.; art, beginnings and importance of, iv. 98 seq. ; architecture, iv. 99 ; governments, weakness of, iv. 152 ; world, in the Thirty years' truce, vi. 47 ; and barbarian military feeling, contrast between, vi. 446 ; youtli