Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/534

 526 INDEX. Aristockates, an Athenian, Demo- sthenes, V. 14, 16. Aristockates, son of Hipparchus, a Spartan writer; Lycurgus, i. 88, 126 ; Philopoemen, ii. 377. AKisTOCRATts, a rhetorician, Antony, V. 223. Aristocritus, Alexander, iv. 1 70. Aristodemus of Miletus, Demetrius, V. 103, 111. Aristodemus, tj-rant of Megalopo- lis, Philopoemen, ii. 360 ; Agis, iv. 448. Aristodemus, the Heraclid, founder of the roi'al houses of Sparta, Ly- curgus, i. 84 ; Agesilaus, iv. 23. Aristodicus of Tanagra, Pericles, i. 332. Aristogiton, companion of Harmo- dius, Aristides, ii. 315. Aristogitox, an Athenian syco- phant, Phocion, iv. 339-341 ; De- mosthenes, V. 16. Aristomache, wife of Dionysius the Elder, sister of Dion, Timoleon, ii. 147; Dion, v. 247, 250, 251, 257, 294, 295, 301. Aristomachus, Achcean general, Cleomenes, iv. 471. Aristomachus, tvrant of the Ar- gives, Aratus, v. 390, 400, 401, 410. Aristomachus, a Sicyonian, Aratus, V. 370. Aristomenes, the Messenian, Romu- lus, i. 70; Agis, iv. 466. Ariston of Ascalon, Academic phi- losopher, Brutus, V. 303. Ariston of Ceos, a philosopher, Themistocles, i. 234 ; Aristides, ii. 282. Ariston of Chios, a philosopher, Cato the Elder, ii. 339 ; Demosthe- nes, V. 11, 32. Ariston, a Corinthian pilot, Nicias, iii. 318, 324. Ariston, Captain of the Paeonians, Alexander, iv. 209. Ariston, friend of Pisistratus, Solon, i. 199. Aristonicus, admiral of Mithridates, LucuUus, iii. 241. Aristonicus of Marathon, Demo- sthenes, V. 31. Aristonicus of Pergamus, a son of Eumenes II. ; Flamininus, ii. 412 ; Ti. Gracchus, iv. 529. Aristonus, a musician, Lysander, iii. 124. Aristophanes, the comic poet, Tlie- mistocles, i. 253 ; Pericles, i. 353, 358 (the verses), Alcibiades, ii. 2, 18 ; Ci- mon, iii. 221 ; Nicias, iii. 291 (the verse), 294, 299; Demetrius, v. 106 ; Antony, v. 224. Aristophanes, a Macedonian, Alex- ander, iv. 225. Aristophon, archon at Athens, De- mosthenes, V. 26. Aristophon, an Athenian, Phocion, iv. 336. Aristophon, a painter, Alcibiades, ii. 18. Aristoteles, an Argive, Cleomenes, iv. 486 ; Aratus, v. 409. Aristoteles, a logician, Aratus, v. 369. Aristotle, Theseus, i. 3, 13, 24 ; Lv- curgus, i. 83, 90,91, 101, 120, 121, 125; Solon, i. 177, 193, 202; The- mistocles, i. 243 ; Camillas, i. 292 ; Pericles, i. 322, 330, 332, 353, 355 ; Comparison of Alciliiaiies and Coriolauus, ii. 103; Pelopidas, ii. 203, 219; Aristides, ii. 314; Com- parison, ii. 355; Lysander, iii. 105; Sylla, iii. 175, 176 ; Cimon, iii. 211 ; Nicias, iii. 290; Crassus, iii. 334; Alexander, iv. 166-168, 180, 226, 229, 231, 252, 254 ; Cleomenes, iv. 474; Cicero, v. 59; Dion, v. 266. Aristoxenus, a musician, Lycurgus, i. 126; Timoleon, ii. 125; Aristides, ii. 314 ; Alexander, iv. 162. Aristratus, tyrant of Sicyon, Ara- tus, v. 378, 379. Armenia and Armenians, Sylla, iii. 146 ;■ Cimon, iii. 201 ; Lucullus, iii. 244, 245, 250, and after ; Cras- sus, iii. 353, and after; Pompey, iv. 86, 92, and after; Cssar, iv. 308; Antony, v. 188, 190, and af- ter. Armilustrium, on the Aventine Mount, Romulus, i. 68. Arnaces, a Persian, Themistocles, i. 250. Arpates, a Persian, Artaxerxes, v. 454. Arpinum, town in Latinm, Marius, iii. 49 ; Cicero, v. 43. Arrhf.nides, an Athenian, Demo- sthenes, V. 2 7. ARRHiDJiUS, son of Philip, and him- self called Philip, Alexander, iv. 1 70, 254, 255 ; Compare Eumenes, iii. 430, 431, and Phorion, iv. 362.