Si:CF.SSION. 570 SiClLf. lack of Philip on, xi. 4G2, and Alexander, xii. 20G, 214. Secession of the mythical races of Greece, ii. 19. Seisachthcin, or debtors' relief-law of Solon, iii. 99 seq. Selene, i. 6, 346 n. Selevhis, alliance of, with Kassander, Lysimachus, and Ptolemy against Antigonus, xii. 367. 372, 383, 387 ; Ka»ssander, Lysimachus, and Ptol- emy, pacification of, with Antigo- nu.s, xii. 371 ; and the Pontic He- rakleia, xii. 470: death of, xii. 470. Seliniintines, defeat of, I / the Eges- tseans and Carthaginians, x. 404. Selinus, iii. 3C7 ; and Egcsta, vii. 145, X. 401, 404; application of, to Sy- racuse, X. 404 ; capture of, by Han- nibal, X. 405 seq. ; abandonment of, by the rest of Sicily, x. 408 ; Hcrniokrates at, x. 417. Selli, ii. 268. Selymbria, viii. 12G, 133, xi. 455 n. 3. Selymlris, iv. 27. Seiiiele, i. 259. Semi-historical interpretation of an- cient mythcs, i. 433. Senate and Agora subordinate in le- gendary, paramount in historical Greece, ii. 76 ; Spartan, ii. 345, 357 ; of Areopagus, iii. 73 ; powers of, enlarged by Solon, iii. 122 ; of Pour Hundred, Solon's, iii. 121 ; of Five Hundred, iv. 137 ; at Ath- ens, expulsion of, by the Four Hundred, viii. 39. Senators, addition to the oatli of Ath- enian, viii. 293. Sentiment, mingled ethical and myth- ical, in " Works and Days," i. 69 seq. Sepias Akte, Xerxefi's fleet at, v. 83 seq. Serritnde, temporary, of the gods, i. 57, 113 n. 2. Scsios, capture of, b. c. 479, v. 202 seq. ; escape of the Athenian squad- ron from, to Elseus, viii. 105 ; Der- kyllidas at, ix. 320 ; capture of, by Kotys, X. 373 ; surrender of, to Athens, b. c. 358, x. 379n. ; con- quest of, by Chares, xi. 257. Seittlies, and the Ten Thousand Greeks, ix. 154, 169 seq. Seven chiefs against Thebes, the, i. 274. Seven wise men of Greece, iv. 85, .seq Sihi/I. the Erythraean, i. 28. Sihi/line prophecies, i. 28, 338. Sicilian Greeks, prosperity of, be- tween B. C. 735 and 48.5, iii. Sf>7 seq. ; Greeks, peculiarity of their monetary and statical sea)e. iii. 309 : comedy, iii. 373 ; Greeks, ear- ly governments of, v. 206 ; Greeks, ^ and Phenicians, v. 207 ; cities, b. C. 431, vii. 127, 131 ; and Italian Do- rians, aid expected from, by Spar- ta, vii. 129; cities, general peace between, b. c. 424, vii. 138 ; aid Jo Syracuse, e. c. 413, vii. 295. Sicily, Phenicians and Greeks in, iii. 276; ante-Hellenic population of, iii. 350, 361, 372; and Italy ear)y languages and history of, iii. 354 n. ; and" Italy, date of earliest Gre- cian colony in, iii. 356; rapid mul- tiplication of Grecian colonies in, afters. C. 735, iii. 360 ; the voyage from Greece to, iii. 361 ; spot where the Greeks first landed in, iii. 361 ; Megarian, iii. 365 ; snbeolonies from, iii. 366; Sikel or Sikan cav- erns in, iii. 368 ».; mixed population of, iii. 369 ; difterence between Greeks in, and those in Greece Proper, iii. 372 ; despots in, about b. C. 500, V. 204 ; Carthaginian in- vasion of, B. C 480, v. 220; expul- sion of despots from, b. c. 465, v. 233 ; after the expulsion of the despots, B. C. 465, v. 234, 236 seq., vii. 118 ; return of Dnketius to, vii 122 ; intellectual movement in, be- tween B. C. 461-416, vii. 127 ; rela- tions of, to Athens and Sparta, al- tered by the quarrel between Cor inth and Korkyra, vii. 129; Dori- ans attack the lonians in, about b. c. 427, vii. 131 ; Ionic cities in, so- licit aid from Athens, against the Dorians, b. C. 427, vii. 132 ; Athe- nian expedition to, b. c. 427, vii. 133; Athenian expedition to, b. c. 425, vii. 133; Athenian expedition to, B.C. 422, vii. 142; Athenian expedition to, b. c. 415, vii. 148- 163, 179-191, 217-278; Athenian expedition to, b. c. 413, vii. 279- 287, 288-3.53 ; effect of the Athe- nian disaster in, upon all Greeks, vii. 363 ; intervention of Carthage