Page:History of Greece Vol XII.djvu/619

 TRADITION, GREEK. r>87 VOLSUNGA. Tradition, Greek, matter of, uncer- tified, i. 43.3 ; fictitious matter in, does not imply fraud, i. 434. Tnezen, removal of Athenians to, on Xerxes's approach, v. 108. Tnigedies, losl, of Prometheus, i. 78 n.2. Tragedy, Athenian, growth of, viii. 318; Athenian, abundant produc- tion of, viii. 319; Athenians, efl^ect of, on the public mind, viii. 321 ; Grecian, ethical sentiment in, viii. .336. Trapezus, legendary origin of, i. 175; date of the foundation of, iii. 252 n. 2; the Ten Thousand at, xi. Ill, 120 seq.; departure of the Ten Thousand from, ix. 127. Trench of Artaxerxes from the Eu- phrates to the wall of Media, ix. 40, 42 n. 1. Triballi, defeat of Philip by, xi. 462 ; victory of Alexander over, xii. 23. Trilita and demes of Kleisthenes, iv. 132 seq. Tribute of the subject-allies of Athens, vi. 5 n. 1, 6 )). 1. Trierarchic reform of Demosthenes, xi. 462 seq. Trinakria, town of, vii. 125. Triphi/lia. Minyae in, ii. 27 ; and Elis, ii. 442, X. 260, 313. Tripliylians, ii. 803. Triple theology of the pagan world, i. 439 ; partition of past time by Varro, i. 488. Tripolis, iii. 268. Trireme, equipment of a, vi. 200 n. Tritantcechnes, exclamation of, on the Greeks and the Olympic games, v. 113. Triton and the Argonauts, i. 239. Trilonis, Lake, iv. 35 n. 1 ; prophecies about, iv. 39. Tritti/es, iii. 52, 67 n. Troad, the, i. 334. Troas, Alexandrifa. i. 328. Tioas historical, and the Teukrians, i. 334. Trojan war, Thuoydides"s version of, i." 405 seq.: thedate of, ii. 38, 54. Trojans, allies of, i. 293 ; new allies of, i. 298 ; and Phrygians, i. 335. Trophonius and Agamedes, i. 130. Tr6s, i. 285. Troij, legend of, i. 284-340. Tunes, capture of, by Agath )kles, xii 414 : mutiny in the armj of Aga- thokles at, xii. 426 ; Archagatlius blocked up by the Carthaginians at, xii. 439, 442 ; the Carthaginians over Agathoklcs near, xii. 442; nocturnal panic in the Cartha- ginian camp near, xii. 442; Aga thokles deserts his army at, and they capitulate, xii. 443, 444. Turpin, chronicle of, i. 475. Ti/che, near Syracuse, vii. 245. Tndeus, i. 152, 271. Tyndareus, and Leda, i. 168 seq. Tjndarion, vii. 121. Tyndaris, foundation of xi. 4. Types, manifold, of the Homeric gods, i. 349. Typha6n and Echidna, offspring of, 1. 7. Ti/phdeus, I. 9. Tyre, iii. 266 seq. ; siege and subju- gation of, by Nebuchadnezzar, iii. 332; and Carthage, amicable re- lations between, iii. 348; siege and capture of, by Alexander, xii. 132 seq. Tyrd., different accounts of, i 107. Tyrrhenians, 0. Miiller's view of the origin of. iii. 180. Tyrtxits and the first Messenian war, ii. 422, 424, 427 ; efficiency of in the second Messenian war, ii. 431 seq. ; poetry of, iv. 82 ; age and metres of, iv. 78. U Uranos, i. 4, 5. Usury and the Jewish law, iii. 111m. Utica, iii. 271 ; capture of, by Aga- thoklcs, xii. 437. Uxii, conquest of, by Alexander, xii 170. Varro''s triple division of pagan theo- logy, i. 439 ; his triple partition of past time, i. 488. Veneti, the, i. 319. Vdlatjers regarded as inferiors by Hellens, ii. 259, 263. Villages numerous in early Greece, iL 261. Volsunga Saga, i. 479.