Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/580

 672 INDEX. MuciANtJS, governor of Syria, Otho, V. 491. The Mdcii (Mucins Scaevola, the au- gur), Cicero, v. 37. Mucius SciEVOLA, Poplifola, i. 219, 220. Mucius Scf.vola, the lawyer, Sylla, iii. 189; Ti. Gracchus, iv. 515. Mucius, father-in-law of the Younger Marius, Marius, iii. 87. Mucius, tribune with Ti. Gracchus, Ti. Gracchus, iv. 520, 526. Caius Mummius, under Sylla, Sylla, iii. 154. Lucius Mummius Achaicus, who took Corinth, Philopoemen, ii. 38.? ; Marius, iii. 48 ; Lucullus, iii. 251 ; Comparison of Nicias and Crassus, iii. 378. Mummius, lieutenant of Crassus, Cras- sus, iii. 342. MuNATius Pi, ANGUS (Titus), Pom- pev, iv. 121 ; Cato the Younger, iv. 419 ; Cicero, v. 60, 61. MuNATius Plancus (Lucius, his brother), Antony, v. 171, 211 ; Bru- tus, V. 322. MuN'.^Tius (Rufus), friend of Cato the Younger, Cato the Younser, iv. 378, 394, 397, 400, 407, 408, 423. Munda, field of battle, a town in Spain, Ciesar, iv. 312. Munychia, port of Athens, Solon, i. 179; Sylla, iii. 162; Phocion, iv. 357, 36l', 362 ; Demosthenes, v. 30 ; Demetrius, v. 102, 104, 131 ; Aratus, V. 400. MuNYCHUs, son of Demophon, These- us, i. 35. MuRccs, Galba, v. 484. MuRENA, lieutenant of Sylla, Sylla, iii. 165-168. Lucius LiciNius MuRENA, LucuUus, iii. 245, 251, 260, 262; Cato the Younger, iv. 391, 392, 398 ; Cicero, V. 49, 72 ; Comparison, v. 90. Museum, hill in Athens, Theseus, i. 27; Demetrius, v. 131. Museum at Chasronea, Sylla, iii. 166. Mus.EUS the poet, Marius, iii. 89. MuTiNA, now MoDENA, Pompey, iv. 69 ; Antony, v. 170. Mycale, where the battle was, Camil- lus, i. 288 ; Pericles, i. 321 ; Mm. Paulus, ii. 181. Mycen^, city of Argolis, Sertorius, iii. 392 ; Aratus, v. 394. Mygdonia, district of Mesopotamia, Lucullus, iii. 270. MYL.a5, a town of Sicily, Timoleon, ii. 152. Mylasa in Caria, Phocion, iv. 348. Myron of Phlya, Solon, i. 178. Myron or Myro, an olficer of Mith- ridates, Lucullus, iii. 247. Myronides, an Athenian general, Pericles, i. 342, 351 ; Comparison, i. 405 ; Aristides, ii. 293, 305. Myrsilus, a writer, Aratus, v. 370. Myrtilus, Pyrrhus's cup-bearer, Pyr- rhus, iii. 5, 6. Myrto, granddaughter of Aristides, Aristides, ii. 314. Myrto, sister of Patroclus, Aristides, ii. 307. Mysians, in Asia Minor, Theseus, i. 4. Myos, a town of Caria, Themistocles, i. 264. N. NABAT.EAN Or NaBATH/EAN AraBS, Pompey, iv. 135 ; Demetrius, v. 101 ; Antony, v. 189. N.Bis, tyrant of Lacedaemon. Philo- poemen, ii. 372-376. 381 ; Flamini- nus, ii. 401 ; Comparison, ii. 415. Naples, Jveapolis, jMeapolitans, Marcellus, ii. 24 7; Lucullus, iii. 278 ; Comparison, iii. 585 ; Pom- pev, iv. 122; Cicero, v. 43; Brutus, V. 325. N.RB0, town in Gaul, and Gallia Narbonexsis, Sertorius, iii. 396 ; (ialba, V. 466. N.RNiA, in Umbria, Flamininus, ii. 385. Narthacium or Mount Nartha- cius, in Thessaly, Agesilaus, iv. 20. PuBLius SciPio Nasica, consul with Marcius (162 B.C.), Mm. Paulus, ii. 169-173, 178, 183; Marcellus, ii. 241, 242 ; Cato the Elder, ii. 351. PuBLius Nasica, pontife.x ma.imus, Ti. Gracchus, iv. 520, 527, 529, 530. Naucr.^tes, a Lycian, Brutus, v. 335. Naupactus, on the GuLf of Corinth, Flamininus, ii. 403. N.iUPLiA, town of Argolis, Pyrrhus, iii. 43. Nausicrates the rhetorician, Cimon, iii. 225. Nausithous of Salamis, Theseus, L 15