Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/601

 INDEX. 593 Younger, iv. 370, 391, 394 ; Brutus, • V. 302, 303, 306, 307, 361. Servilia, another sister of Cato the Younger, wife of LucuUus, Lucullus, iii. 277 ; Cato the Younger, Iv. 394, 399, 425. SERVy.li, Cffisar, iv. 319. Servilius Ahala, Brutus, v. 303. Servilius the augur, Lucullus, iii. 227. [Servilius] C'^pio, Cato's half broth- er, Cato the Younger, iv. 370, 372, 377, 380. See, also, 384. [Servilius] Isauricus, Caesar, iv. 262 ; and probably Sylla, iii. 180 ; Pompey, iv. 6 7. Servilius Isauricus, son of the pre- ceding, CtBsar, iv. 295. Marcus Servilius, of consular dig- nity, J2m. Paulus, ii. 188. Servilius, praetor, Sylla, iii. 153. Servilius, lieutenant of Pompey, Pompey, iv. 94. Servilius, instead of Servius, is in one or two places attached to the name of Galba. See Galea. Servius [Tullius], king of the Ro- mans, Numa, i. 141. Servius (or Serveius), Sylla, iii. 155. Sessorium, near Rome, Galba, v. 485. Sestius, Brutus, V. 305. Sestos, town of Thrace, Alcibiades, ii. 47, 48; Lysander, iii. 112, 113, 118 ; Cimon, iii. 210. Setia, town of Latium, Caesar, iv. 315. Seuthas, a servant of Aratus, Aratus, v. 371. Sextilius's Waters (Aquae Sex- tise), in Gaul, Marius, iii. 67. Sextilius, governor of Africa, Ma- rius, iii. 94. Sextilius, lieutenant of Lucullus, Lucullus, iii. 259, 260. Sextilius, a praetor, seized by the pirates, Pompey, iv. 79. Lucius Sextius, first plebeian consul, Camillus, i. 316. PuBLius Sextius, defended by Cice- ro, Cicero, v. 62. Sextius Sylla, the Carthaginian, Romulus, i. 56. TiDius Sextius, Pompey, iv. 131. Sibyrtius, governor of Arachosia, Eumenes, iii. 440. SiBYRTius's wrestling groimd, Alcibi- ades, ii. 4. VOL. V. 38 Sicily and Sicilians. See, in gene- ral, for history, the lives of Timo- leon, Marcellus, Nicias from p. 306, Dion, and the Comparisons ; also, Alcibiades, ii. 19-23, 27, 42, 51 ; Pyrrhus, iii. 1 7, 29-34 ; Pompey, iv. 60,62, 74,82,113, 127. 133; CiEsar, iv. 309 ; Cato the Younger, iv. 424, 428 ; Cicero, v. 35, 40-42, 68, 69 ; Comparison, v. 92, 93 ; Antonv, v. 184, 185, 189, 209. For other noti- ces, Theseus, i. 17 (Daedalus's ^-isit) ; Lycurgus, i. 1 24 ; Themistodes, i. 258 (his visit) ; Camillus, i. 288 (a date) ; Pericles, i. 347, 348 ; Fabius, i. 399, 403 ; Pelopidas, ii. 232 ; Cato the Elder, ii. 320 ; Marius, iii. 93 ; Lysander, iii. 106, 121; Sylla, iii. 189 (Eunus the slave); Cimon, iii. 209 (.lEschylus there) ; Crassus, iii. 342, 365; Agesilaus, iv. 3, 40; De- metrius, v. 120. Native Sicilians or Sicels, Nicias, iii. 312. Sicilian man- ufactures, Lysander, iii. 105; Alex- ander, iv. 202. Sicihan lard, Nicias, iii. 289. SiciNius, a public speaker, Crassus, iii. 339. SiciNNius Vellutus, tribune of the people, Coi-iolanus, ii. 59, 66, 73, 74. SiciN'NUS, a Persian captive, Themisto- des, i. 245, 246. SiCYON and SiCYONiANS, in Pelopon- nesus, Numa, i. 132 (Hippolytus) ; Pericles, i. 346 ; Cato, ii. 345 ; Phi- lopcemen, ii. 360 ; Cleomenes, iv. 481, 483-486; Demetrius, v. 110, 119, 120; Antony, v. 183 (Fulvia's death) ; and Aratus throughout. The Sicyonian school of painting, Aratus, V. 378 and after. SiDOx, seaport of Syria, Demetrius, v. 129 ; Antony, v. 205. SiGLiuRiA, Poplieola, i. 218. SiGNiA, a town of Latium, Sylla, iiL 179. SiLANio, a statuary, Theseus, i. 4. Junius Silanus, husband of ServiHa, Cato's sister and Brutus's mother, Cato the Younger, iv. 391-393 ; Ci- cero, V. 49, 54-56. Marcus Silanus, driven away by Cleopatra, Antony, v. 213. SiLENUS, a youth of Pontus, Lysander, iii. 133, 134. PuBLius SiLicius, proscribed, Brutus, V. 331.