Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/607

 INDEX. J09 iii. 57, 63, 66, 70, 74; Sertorius, iii. 384 ; CiEsar, iv. 275. Thais, mistress of Ptolemy, Alexan- der, iv. 208. THAL.EA, wife of Pinarius, Compari- son of Numa and Lycurgus, i. 165. THALAM.E, town of Lacoula, Agis, iv. 453. Thai.es, a Cretan, Lycurgus, i. 87 ; Agis, iv. 455. Thales of Miletus, the wise man, So- lon, i. 170-173, 179. Thallus, an Athenian, Phocion, iv. 342. Thapsacus, town of Mesopotamia, Ale.ander, iv. 245. Thapsus, town of Africa, field of bat- tle, Csesar, iv. 310 ; Cato the Young- er, iv. 430. Thapsus, town of Sieilv, Nicias, iii. 312. Thargelia, an Ionian woman, Peri- cles, i. 350. Tharrhypas, king of Epirus, Pyr- rhus, iii. 1. Thasos and Thasians, island in the .lEgean Sea, Cimon, iii. 217; Cato the Younger, iv. 380 (Thasian mar- ble) ; Demetrius, v. 113 (Thasian wine) ; Bi-utus, v. 343, 351. Theagenes, a Theban, Alexander, iv. 173. Theangela, town of Caria, Alexan- der, iv. 218. Theano, daughter of Menon, Athe- nian priestess, Alcibiades, ii. 27. Thearidas of Megalopolis, Cleome- nes, iv. 490. Thearides, brother of Dionysius the Elder, Dion, v. 250. Thebe, daughter of Jason, wife of Alexander of Phera;, Pelopidas, ii. 228, 232, 236. Thebes and Thebans, of Boeotia, Theseus, i. 30 (his expedition thith- er) ; Lycurgus, i. 100, 121, 125 ; So- lon, i. 171 ; Themistooles, i. 254; Ca- millus, i. 288 (date of its destruction by Alexander) ; Fabius, i. 405 (fu- neral of Epaniinondas) ; Alcibiades, ii. 3 (flute playing) ; Pelopidas and the Comparison throughout; Aristi- des, ii. 300, 304 ; Fiamininus, ii. 391 (his entrance) ; Lvsander, iii. 120, 134-137 (his death) ; Sylla, iii. 169 ; Agesilaus, iv. 8 (where the transla- tion has Boeotians), and generally, 19-43, and the Comparison; Alex- ander, iv. 172-174 ; Phocion, iv. 346, 356 ; Demosthenes, v. 9, 18, 19, 21, 24, 25 ; Demetrius, v. 103, 137, 138, 145; Dion, v. 260; Arta.xerxcs, v. 444. The Thebans' sacred band, Pelopidas, ii. 218-220; Alexander, iv. 169. Themiscyua, a town of Pontus, Lu- cuUus, iii. 243. Themistooles, Life, i. 231 ; Theseus, i. 6 ; Pericles, i. 326; Alcibiades, ii. 49; Comparison, ii. 102; Pelopidas, ii. 204, 221 ; Aristide.s, ii. 282, 284- 286, 288, 290, 292, 308, 311-313; Cato the Elder, ii. 325, 326 ; Com- parison, ii. 354, 358; Fiamininus, ii. 410; Lysander, iii. 119; Ciraon, iii. 204, 205, 208, 210, 212, 219, 224; Comparison, iii. 287 ; Comparison of Crassus and Nicias, iii. 378 ; Pom- pey, iv. 129; Comparison, iv. 156; Phocion, iv. 332 ; Comparison of Cicero and Demosthenes, v. 93 ; An- tony, V. 190. Themistocles, an Athenian, friend of Plutarch, Themistocles, i. 268. Theocritus the augur, Pelopidas, ii. 222. Theodectes of Phaselis, the philoso- pher, Alexander, iv. 180. Theodorus the atheist, Phocion, iv. 369. Theodorus the high-priest, Alcibia- des, ii. 43. Theodorus, tutor of Antyllus, Anto- ny, V. 233. Theodorus of Phegaea, companion of Alcibiades, Alcibiades, ii. 21, 26. Theodorus, a Tarentine, Alexander, iv. 186. Theodotes, uncle of Heraclides, Dion, V. 255, 288, 290, 291. Theodotus of Chios, a rhetorician in Egypt, Pompey, iv. 147, 148, 151; CiEsar, iv. 306 ; Brutus, v. 338. Theodotus the prophet, Pyrrhus, iii. 7. Theogiton the Megarian, Aristides, ii. 305. Theomnestus the Academic philoso- pher, Brutus, V. 327. Theoph.^^nes the Lesbian, Pompey, iv. 97, 103, 113, 146, 148; Cicero, V. 75. Theophilus, Antony's steward, An- tony, V. 221.