THRACIAN. 584 TIILCYDIDES. Mardonius into, iv. 313 ; contribu- tions levied by Xerxes on towns in, V. 41 ; Brasidas's expedition to. vi. 370, 397 seq.; war continued in, tiie one year's truce between Ath- ens and Sparta, vi. 438 ; Alkibia- des and Tiirasybulas in, b. c. 407, viii. 144: Iphikrates in, between R. c. 3S7-378, X. 106 seq.; Iphi- krates in, B. c. 368-365, x. 250 seq.; Philip in, b. c. 351, xi. 306, and B. c 346, xi. 402, 404, and b. c. 542-341, xi. 450 seq. ; Alex- ander's expedition into, xii. 22 seq. ; march of Alexander from, to Thebes, xii. 36. Thracian influence upon Greece, i. 31 ; race in the north of Asia Mi- nor, iii. 207 ; Chersonesus, iv. 27 ; subject-allies of Athens not op- pressed by her, vi. 404 seq. : mer- cenaries under Diitrephes, vii. 356 seq. Thracians in the time of Herodotus and Thucydides, ii. 88 ; and Phry- gians, affinities between, iii. 208 seq., 212 ; affinities and migrations of, iii. 208 seq. ; numbers and abode of, iv. 15; general character of, jv. 15 seq. ; Asiatic characteristics of, iv. 17 ; venality of, vi. 217 n. 2. ■JVirasius, xi. 173, 180. Thrasijbulas of Syracuse, v. 232 seq. IVirritifbulus, the Athenian, speech of, at Samos, viii. 47 ; efforts of, at Samos, in favor of Alkibiades, viii. .50; in Thrace, viii. 144; accusa- tion of the generals at Arginusse by, viii. 182 seq.; flight of, from Attica, viii. 242 ; occupation of Phyle, and repulse and defeat of the Thirty by, viii. 265 ; occupa- tion of Peirasus by, viii. 268 ; vic- tory of, over the Thirty at Peirasus, viii. 269 seq. ; increasing strength of, at Peir33us, vii. 273 ; straitened condition of, in Peirajus, viii. 274 ; at Peiraeus, king Pausanias's attack upon, viii. 276 ; and the Ten at Alliens, peace between, viii. 277 ; and the exiles, restoration of, to Athens, viii. 279; assistance of, to Evander and others, viii. 306 n. 2 ; honorary reward to, viii. 309 ; aid to the Thebans by, ix. 295 ; acqui- sitions of, in the Hellespont and Bosporus, ix. 360 ; victory of, in Lesbos, ix. 367 : death and cliar:io terof, ix. 367. Thrasi/dceus, v. 226 ; cruel govern- ment, defeat, and death of, v. 228, ix. 223, 226. Tlirasijldts and Strombichides, expe- dition of, to Chios, vii. 374. Thrasyllus, vii. 73, 74; at Samos, b C. 411, viii. 46, 48; at Lesbos, viii. 101 ; eluded by Mindarus, viii. 102; at Elaius, viii. 109; repulse of Agis by, viii. 128; expedition of, to Ionia, viii. 129 ; and Alkibi- ades, at the Hellespont, viii. 130. Thrnstjlochus and Demosthenes, xi. 268 n. 2. Thrasymachus, rhetorical precepts of, viii. 370; doctrine of, in Plato's Republic, viii. 390 seq. Three thousand, nominated the Thirty at Athens, viii. 246. Thucydides, altered intellectual and ethical standard in the age of, i. 366 ; his treatment of ancient mythes, i. 391, 405 seq.; his ver sion of the Trojan war, i. 405 seq. on the dwellings of the earliest Greeks,ii. 109; his date forthe return of the Herakleids, ii. 13 ; silence of, on the treaty between Athens and Persia, v. 336 ; descent of, vi. 12 n. 2; various persons named, vi. 28 n. 2 ; his division of the year, vi. 114 n. 2; his judgment respecting Perikles, vi. 173, 176; first men- tion of Kleon by, vi. 244 ; reflec- tions of, on the Korkyrasan massa- cre, b. c. 427, vi. 278 seq.; struc- ture of his history, vi. 309 n. ; judgment of, on Ivleon's success at Pylus, vi. 347 seq. ; on Kythera, vi. 364 n. ; and the capitulation of Amphipolis to Brasidas, vi. 409, 410, 412 seq.: banishment of, vi 413 seq.; on Kleon's views ami motives in desiring war, b. c. 422, vi. 456 seq., 459 ; passages of, on the battle of Amphipolis, vi. 405 nn., 466 n., 468 n. ; feelings of, to- wards Brasidas and Kleon, vi. 474 ; treatment of Kleon by, vi. 474, 477 seq. ; dialogue set forth by, between theAthenian envoys and Execu- tive Council of Melos, vii. 109 seq 115 seq.; his favorable judgment