IIR&IONE. 539 HOMICIDE. <67; Greeks, ii. 114 scq. ; epic, ii. 119.^ iiesioiie, i. 286. tjces per ides, dragon of, i. 7. Hesperides, town of, iv. 32 n. 2, 42. Hestia, i. 6, 7, 58. Hesticea on Ilium, i. 329. Hetaroe, vi. 100. Hetoeries, at Athens, vi. 290, viii. 15. Hexameter, the ancient, i. 73; new metres superadded to, iv. 75. flier ax, ix. 373. IL'ej-o of S_>/racuse, v. 227 seq. Hieromnemoii, ii. 246. lliketctK, xi. 128 ; and the Syracusans, xi. 134 : message of, to Corinth and to Timoleon, xi. 143, 144; defeat of, at Adranum, xi. 148 ; and Ma- gon, xi. 156 seq., 159: flight of, from Syracuse to Leontini, xi. 161 ; capitulation of, with Timoleon, xi. 170; invites the Carthaginians to invade Sicily, xi. 171 ; defeat, sur- render, and death of, xi. 181, 182. Himera, iii,367 ; battle of, v. 221 seq. ; treatment of, by Thero, v. 228 ; capture of, by Hannibal, x. 410 seq. ; defeat of Agathokles at the, xii. 408 seq. Uiiidoos, rivers personified by, i. 342 «. 2 ; their belief with regard to the small pox, i. 360 7i. ; belief of, in fabulous stories, i. 430 n. ; ex- pcnsivenessof marriage among, iii. 141 n. 2; sentiment of, with regard to the discontinuance of sacrifices, xii. 43 n. 1. [liiidoo Koosh Alexander, at, xii. 200 ; Alexander reduces the country between the Indus and, xii. 224 seq. Hindostan, hoarding in, xii. 175 n. 3. Hipparchus, ii. 153 n., iv. Ill seq. Hipparinus, son of Dionysius, xi. 130. Jlippeis, Solonian, iii. 118. Ifipptas, of Elis, viii. 380 seq. Uippias, Peisistratid, iv. Ill seq., 1 20 seq., 281, 356 n. 2. Hippo, iv. 385. Hippodameia, i. 159 Hippodamns, vi. 20. Hippokleides, iii. 39. Hipiwkratcs the physician, i. 373 ; viii. 426 n. 2. HIppokrates of Gela, v. 213 seq. Hippokrales, the Athenian general, vi. 370 seq., 379, 382 scq., 388 Hippon, xi. 184. Hi pponikus, iii. 102. HipponiuiH, capture of, xi. 17; re estat)lishment of, xi. 43. Hipponoidas, vii.85,89. Histimus and the bridge over the Danube, iv. 272; and Myrkinus, iv. 273, 277 ; detention of, at Susa, iv. 277 ; and the Ionic revolt, iv. 284, 299 seq., 309. Historians, treatment of mythcs by, i, 391 seq. Historical proof, positive evidence in- dispensable to, i. 430 ; sense of modern times not to be applied to an unrccording age, i. 432 ; evi- dence, the standard of, raised with regard to England, but not with re- gard to Greece, i. 485 ; and le- gendary Greece compared, ii. 60 seq. Historicizing innovations in the tale of Troy, i. 333 ; of ancient mytlies, i. 409 seq. ; applicable to all my thes, or none, i. 422. History, uninteresting to early Greeks, i. 359 ; of England, how conceived down to the seventeenth century, i. 482 seq. ; and legend, Grecian, blank between, ii. 33 seq. ; Grecian first period of, from n. c. 776 to 560, ii. 270, 273 ; Grecian, sccoikI period of, from n. c. 560 to 300, ii. 270 seq. ; religious conception of, common to Greeks and Persians, V. 10. Homer and Hesiod, mythology of, i. 12; personality and poems of, ii. 127 seq. Homeric Zeus, i. 12 ; hymns, i. 34. 37 seq., 45, 59, 60, iii. 168 seq.; le- gend of the birth of Herakles, i. 93 seq.; Pelops, i. 159: gods, types of, i. 350; age, mythical faith of, i. 359; philosophy, i. 368; account of the inhabitants of Peloponnesus, ii. 12; Bouleand Agora, ii. 65 seq.; Greeks, social condition of, ii. 97 seq., 107 ; Greeks, unity, idea of, partially revived, ii. 162 seq.; epoch, right conception of, ii. 174 ; mode of fighting, ii. 457 ; geogra- phy, iii. 204. Homerids, the poetical gens of, ii. 132. Homicide, purification for, i. 25, 26