Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 2.djvu/457

 INDEX 449 Corcyra, mother city of Epidamnus, i. 24 init. ; formerlj' inhabited by the Phaeacians, ib. 25 fin. ; under obHgation to Themistoclcs, but afraid to shelter him, ib. 136 init.; its importance, i. 36 fin. , 44 fin., 68 fin., ii. 7 fin. ; the Sicilian expedition musters at Corcyra, vi. 30 init., 32 med., 34 med., 42, 43 init. ; Demo- sthenes sails to Corcyra with the reinforcements for Sicily', vii. 26 fin. ; collects troops there, ib. 31, 33 med. ; naval engagement be- tween the Corinthians and Cor- cyraeans [b.c. 664], ib. 13 med.; the Corcj'raeans colonists of the Corinthians, i. 25 med. ; their de- testation and disrespect to their mother city, ib., ib. 38 [cp. vii. 57 med.] ; they refuse aid to the Epidamnians, i. 24 fin. ; besiege Epidamnus, ib. 26 ; send an embassy to Corinth, ib. 28 ; con- quer the Corinthians at sea, ib. 29 ; slaughter their prisoners [except the Corinthians] after the battle, ib. 30 init. ; send an embassy to Athens, ib. 31 ; their speech, i'6. 32-36 ; obtain alliance with the Athenians, ib. 44 ; fight at sea with the aid of the Athen- ians against the Corinthians, ib. 48-51 ; offer the Corinthians battle, ib. 52 ; want to kill the Corinthian messengers, ib. 53 med.; set up a trophy on Sybota, ib. 54 init. ; claim the victory, ib. fin. ; driven from Anactorium by the Corinthians, ib. 55 init. ; the Corinthians intrigue with their Corcyraean prisoners, ib. med. ; the Corcyraeans receive an em- bassy from Athens, ii. 7 fin. ; fur- nish the Athenians with ships, »7>. 9 med. , 25 init. ; fall into sedition, iii. 6gfin. ,70 init.; the prisoners return and promote a revolt from Athens, ib. 70 init ; oligarchs worsted in a law suit by Pcithias, ib.med. ; thej'murdcrhimand his partisans, ib. fin. ; try to win over the people, ib. 71 ; on the arrival of a Corinthian trireme they attack and defeat the people, ib. 72 ; receive aid from the main- land but cannot induce the slaves to join them by oflers of freedom, ib. 73 ; the people defeat the oligarchs, ib. 74 ; Nicostratus the Athenian commander tries to efi'ect a reconciliation, ib. 75 ; on the proposal of the popular leaders five ships are manned from the opposite parly, but the crews take sanctuary, ib. med. ; the people disarm and remove the others from the temple of Here to an island, ib. fin. ; the Corcyraeans and Athenians en- gage the Lacedaemonians, and are defeated, ib. 77, 78 ; replace the prisoners in the temple of Here, z^. 79 init. ; persuade some of the aristocratic party to help to man a fleet, ib. 80 ; the Lace- daemonian fleet retires on the approach of the Athenians, and the people massacre their oppo- nents, ib. 81 ; this massacre the first example of the horrors of re- volutionary warfare in Hellas, ib. 85 init. ; the surviving oligarchs occupy Mount Istone, ib. 85, iv. 2 med., ib. 46 ; the people cap- ture Istone, ib. 46 med. ; treach- erously massacre their prisoners, ib. 46 fin.-48 ; send aid to the Athenians against Syracuse, vii. 31 fin., 44 fin., 57 med.; alarm the Athenians at Epipolae by their Dorian Paean, ib. 44 fin. Corinth,oncc inhabited by Aeolians, iv. 42 med. ; triremes first built at Corinth, i. 13 init. ; an early centre of commerce, ib. med. ; atpvuov, ib. ; its naval power, ib. 36 fin.; influence of Coiinlh among the