Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/524

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INDEX.

Achilles, Theseus, i. 35; Camillus, i. 282; Alcibiades, ii. 28; Aristides, ii. 289; Philopœmen, ii. 360, 369; Pyrrhus, iii. 1, 8, 15; Comparison of Lysander and Sylla, iii. 195; Agesilaus, iv. 6; Pompey, iv. 85; Alexander, iv. 176, 177; Cleomenes, iv. 500.

Achilles, a Macedonian, Pyrrhus, iii. 3.

Achradina, or Acradina, in Syracuse, Timoleon, ii. 129, 130, 133; Marcellus, ii. 258; Dion, v. 273, 275, 280, 285.

Acilæ or Acrillæ, in Sicily, Marcellus, ii. 257.

Caius Acilius, an historian, Romulus, i. 66; Cato the Elder, ii. 346.

Manius Acilius (Glabrio), Cato the Elder, ii. 330, 333, 334 ; Philopœmen, ii. 379, 383 (under the name of Manius); Flamininus, ii. 403, 404; Sylla, iii. 158.

Acilius, friend of Brutus, Brutus, v. 326.

Acilius, a soldier of Cæsar, Cæsar, iv. 272.

Acontium, a mountain in Bœotia, Sylla, iii. 165, 168.

Acræ or Macræ, in Sicily, Dion, v. 271.

Acro-corinthus, castle or citadel of Corinth, Cleomenes, iv. 481, 485; Aratus, v. 381, and following.

Acron, king of the Ceninenses, Romulus, i. 57, 58; Comparison of Romulus and Theseus, i. 78; Marcellus, ii. 245.

Acrotatus, son of Cleomenes, king of Sparta, Agis, iv. 448.

Acrotatus, son of Areus, grandson of the first Acrotatus, Pyrrhus, iii. 36, 39; Agis, iv. 448.

Acrurium, a mountain in Phocis, Phocion, iv. 364.

Actæon, a Platæan hero, Aristides, ii. 294.

Actæon, two of that name, Sertorius, iii. 382.

Acte, coast of Argolis, Demetrius, v. 119; Aratus, v. 406.

Actium, Pompey, iv. 79 ; Antony, v. 215, 216, 221, 223, 225; Brutus, v. 361.

Acuphis, of Nysa, Alexander, iv. 234.

Ada, queen of Caria, Alexander, iv. 186.

Adæus, or Idæus, secretary to Agesilaus, Agesilaus, iv. 15.

Adiabenians, in Asia, Lucullus, iii. 260, 263.

Adige, the river, Marius, iii. 72, 73.

Adimantus, archon at Athens, Themistocles, i. 236.

Adimantus, an Athenian general, Alcibiades, ii. 47.

Admetus, beloved of Apollo, Numa, i. 132.

Admetus, king of the Molossians, Themistocles, i. 257.

Adonis, Alcibiades, ii. 21 ; Nicias, iii. 308.

Adramyttium, in Mysia, Cicero, v. 39.

Adranitans, Timoleon, ii. 122.

Adranum, a town in Sicily, Timoleon, ii. 121.

Adranus, a Sicilian deity, Timoleon, ii. 121.

Adrastean Mount, near Cyzicum, Lucullus, iii. 238.

Adrastus, king of the Argives, Theseus, i. 30.

Adrastus, a nickname, Cicero, v. 63.

Adria, a city of the Tyrrhenians, Camillus, i. 284.

Adria, a corrupt reading, Aratus, v. 377, n.

Adrianus, legate of Lucullus, Lucullus, iii. 247.

Adriatic Sea, Camillus, i. 284, 313; Æmilius Paulus, ii. 163; Antony, v. 214; Dion, v. 255; Otho, v. 502.

Adrumetum, a town in Africa, Cato the Younger, iv. 431.

Æacides, son of Arybas, king of the Molossians, father of Pyrrhus, Pyrrhus, iii. 1–3; Demetrius, v. 119.

Æacus, Theseus, i. 9; Alexander, iv. 160; Demosthenes, v. 31.

Æacidæ, Themistocles, i. 248 ; Pyrrhus, iii. 35.

Æantis, Attic tribe, Aristides, ii. 304.

Ædepsus, town of Eubœa, Sylla, iii. 176.

Ædui or Edui, a Gallic tribe, Cæsar, iv. 284.

Ægæ, a town in Æolia, Themistocles, i. 259.

Ægæ, in Macedonia, Pyrrhus, iii. 35; Alexander, iv. 213.

Ægeis, Attic tribe, Alcibiades, ii. 24; Nicias, iii. 307.

Ægesteans, people of Segesta in Sicily, Nicias, iii. 290, 306, 309.

Ægeus, father of Theseus, Theseus, i. 3, and following; Comparison of