GREEKS. 53G GURYL!-ry. Danube, iv. 27 ; settlcin:-nt3 in Libya, and the nomads, iv. 38 ; cities, local festivals in, iv. 51, 67 seq : Ij'ric poelrv, iv. 73, 90 : poe- try about the middle of the seventh century b. c, iv. 74; music, about the middle of the seventh century R. c, iv. 7.T ; poetry, after Terpan- der, iv. 77 ; hexameter, new metres superadded to, iv. 79; chorus, iv. 83, 87 ; dancing, iv. 8.5 ; mind, posi- tive tendencies of, in the time of Herodotus, iv. 105 «. ; philosophy, in the sixth century b. c, 380 seq.; fleet at Artemisium, v. 79 seq., 83 <icq.; fleet at Salamis, v. Ill ; fleet at Mykale, v. 193 seq.; fleet after the battle of Mykale, v. 200 seq. ; fleet, expedition of, against Asia, B. C. 478, v. 253 ; generals and captains, slaughter of Cyreian. ix. 72 seq.; heroes, analogy of Alexander to the, xii. 71. Greeks, return of, from Troy. i. 309 fieq.; their love of antiquities, i. 353 ; their distaste for a real his- tory of the past, i. 359 ; Homeric, ii. 92, 114; in Asia Minor, ii. 235, iii. 212; e.xtra-Peloponnesian north of Attica in the first two centuries, ii. 273 seq ; advance of, in gov- ernment in the seventh and sixth centuries b. c, iii. 20 ; musical modes of, iii. 212; and Phenicians in Sicily and Cyprus, iii. 276 : con- trasted with Egyptians, Assyrians, and Phenicians, iii. 304; influence of Phenicians, Assyrians, and Egyptians on, iii. 343 seq.; and Carthaginians, first known col- lision between, iii. 348 ; Sicilian and Italian, monetary and statical scale of, iii. 369; in Sicily, pros- perity of, between b. c. 735-485, iii. 368 seq.; in Sicily and in Greece Proper, difference between, iii. 372 ; Italian, between B. c. 700 -500, iii. 392,394,398; their tal- ent for command over barbarians, iv. 1 7 ; first voyage of, to Libya, iv. 29; and Libyans at Kyrene, iv. 39 ; political isolation of, iv. 51 ; tendencies to political union among, after b. C. 560, iv. 52 ; growth of union among, between b. c. 776- 560, iv. 53 : rise of philosophy md dialectics among, iv. 9C : writing among, iv. 97 ; Asiatic, alter Cy- rus's conquest of Lydia, iv. 198 Asiatic, application of, to Sparta, 546 B. c. iv. 199; and Darius, be- fore the battle of Marathon, iv. 315 ; eminent, liable to be corrup- ted by success, iv. 375 seq ; and Persians, religious conception of history common to, v. 1 1 ; north- ern, and Xerxes, v. 64. 69 ; con- federate, engagement of, against such as joined Xerxes, v. 70; ef- fect of the battle of Thermopylae on, v. 105 seq.: and the battle of Salamis, v. 121 seq.; Medising, and Mardonius, v. 148; Medising, at Plataea, v. 161 ; at Plattea, v. 163 seq.; at Mykale, v. 194 seq.; Asi- atic, first step to the ascendency of Athens over, v. 200; Sicilian, early governments of, v. 206 ; Si- cilian, progress of, between the battle of Salamis and Alexander, V. 241 ; allied, oppose the fortifica- tion of Athens, v. 243 seq., 246; allied, transfer the headship from Sparta to Athens, b. c. 477, v. 260 seq.; allied, Aristeides assessment of, v. 263 ; allied, under Athens, substitute money-payment i'or per- sonal service, v. 298 seq ; effect of the Athenian disaster in Sicily upon, vii. 363 ; and Tissaphernes, Alkibiades acts as interpreter be- tween, viii. 4 seq.; Asiatic, surren- der of, by Sparta to Persia, ix. 205 ; Asiatic, and Cyrus the Younger, i.x. 206; Asiatic, and Tissapher- nes, ix. 207 ; the Ten Thousand, their position and circumstances, ix. 11 ; Ten Thousand, at Kunaxa. ix. 42 seq.; Ten Thousand, alter the battle of Kunaxa, ix. 52 seq., Ten Thousand, retreat of, ix. 56- 121, 181 seq.; Ten Thousand, after their return to Trapczus, ix. 121- 180; Asiatic, their application to Sparta for aid against Tissapher- nes, ix. 207; in the service of Al- exander in Asia, xii. 74: unpro- pitious circumstances for, in the Lamian war, xii. 334 ; Italian, pressed upon by enemies Irom the interior, xii. 394. Gurylls^ death of, x. 335.