Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/583

 INDEX. 575 der, iv. 246 ; Artaxerxes, v. 448, 449,4ul-4on. Ht-isAnTAXEIiXEsllI. OcTAViA, sister of Aujjustus, Poplirola, i. 220 ; Mavcellus, ii. 274, 275 ; An- tony, v. 184, 186, 188, 189, 206,212, 226, 235, 238, 239. OcTAViAN (OcTAViANUs), Augustus Caesar, Antony, v. 165. See CA:8Ait. OcTAVius, i. e. OcTAViANUS, Brutus, V. 334. See the note. OcTAVius, father of Augustus, Cicero, V. 83. Caius Octavius, a pretended con- spirator, Cffisar, iv. 325. Cn.kus Octavius, who took Perseus, ^m. Paulus, ii. 182, 183. Octavius, consul with Cinna (87 «. c), Marius, iii. 95-97, 101 ; Sylla, iii. 159 ; Sertorius, iii. 386. Octavius, governor of Cilicia, Lucul- lus, iii. 234. Lucius Octavius, lieutenant of Pom- pey, in Crete, Pompey, iv. 85, 86. Maucus Octavius, tribune of the people, Ti. Gracchus, iv. 516-520, 522 ; C. Gracchus, iv. 535. Marcus Octavius, at Actium with Antony, Antony, v. 218. Marcus Octavius, in Africa with Cato, Cato the Younger, iv. 437. Octavius, lieutenant of Crassus, Cras- sus, iii. 366, 368-371. Octavius, of African descent, Cicero, v. 62. CEa, Attic township, Pericles, i. 330. OEdipus, in Sophocles, Demetrius, v. 146. (Edipus's well, Sylla, iii. 169. CEnanthes, an Egyptian, Cleomenes, iv. 498. ffiN.ARUS, priest of Bacchus, Theseus, i. 18. CEnkis, Cimon's tribe, Cimon, iii. 222. CE.NiADvE, people of Acarnania, Peri- cles, i. 346 ; Alexander, iv. 223. CEnopion, son of Theseus and Ari- adne, Theseus, i. 18. CEnus, river of Sparta, Lycurgns, i. 91. CEt^ans, Pericles, i. 344. Lucretius Ofei.la, Sylla, iii. 182, 186 ; Comparison, iii. 193. Olbians, in Mauritania, Sertorius, iii. 392. Oi.uius, servant of Nicogenes, TLemi- stocles, i. 259. Oligyrtus, a fortress in Arcadia, Cleomenes, iv. 192. Omzon, opjjosite Artcmisium, Themi- stoi-les, i. 240. Olocrum (Mount Olocrus), in Macedonia, JUm. Paulus. ii. 1 76. Olorus, king of Thrace, Cimon, iii, 202. Oloriis, father of Thucydides, ibid. Oltiiacus, chief of the Dandarians, Lucullus, iii. 246, 247. Olympia and The Olympic Cfames, Theseus, i. 25 ; Lycurgus, i. 83, 1 1 1, 114 (usage for Spartan conquerors); Numa, i. 127 (visit of Pythagoras), 137; Solon, i. 191 (usage for Athenian conquerors); compare ii. 314 ; The- mistocles, i. 236, 250, 258 (Hiero's tent); Alcibiades, ii. 11, 12; comjiare V. 1 ; Mm. Paulus, ii. 185 (Phidias's Jove) ; Pelopidas, ii. 235 ; Aristides, ii. 295, 314: Cato the Elder, ii. 323 (Cimon's horses); Sylla,iii. 157; Age- silaus, iv. 16, 23 (Cynisca) ; Alexan- der, iv. 162 (Philip's victory) ; Cato the Younger, iv. 417; Agis, iv. 456 (the oracle) ; Demosthenes, v. 1, 9 ; Demetrius, V. 106; Otho,v. 493. The Olympic truce, Lycurgus, i. 83, 115. Lists of victors, Nnma, i. 128. Olympias, wife of Philip of Macedon, Eumcnes, iii. 430, 431 ; Alexander, iv. 160, 161, 164, 169, 171, 191, 210, 245, 254, 255 ; Demetrius, v. 116. Olympic Games. See Olympia. Olympiodorus, serving with Aristi- des, Aristides, ii. 297. Olympus, mountain in Thessaly, -Sm. Paulus, ii. 167, 168, 170. Olympus, in Cilicia or Lycia, Pom- pey, iv. 79. Olympus, Cleopatra's physician, An- tony, v. 234. Omises, a Persian, Artaxer.xes, v. 424. Omphale, queen of Lydia, Theseus, i. 6; Pericles, i. 351 ; Comparison of Antony and Demetrius, v. 242. Onea, mountains in Megaris, Cleo- menes, iv. 485. Onesicritus, Alexander's historian, Alexander, iv. 168, 176, 218, 236, 238, 242, 243. Onomarchus, with Antigonus, Eu- menes, iii. 439. ONOMARCiius,the Phocian, Timoleon, ii. 144. Onomastus, Otho's freedman, Galba, V. 479, 480. Ophf,lt.s, a king of the Boeotians, Ci- mon, iii. 198.