Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 2.djvu/466

 458 INDEX Endius, envoy to Athens, v. 44 fin. ; Ephor at Sparta, viii. 6 med.; an hereditary friend of Alcibiades, ib.; persuaded by Alcibiades not to give up the expedition to Chios, ib. 12. Enemies, great enemies more read- ily forgiven than small ones, iv. 19 fin. [cp. V. 91 init.]; complais- ance to an enemy a mistake, i. 34 fin. ; men neglect their own interests when attacking an ene- m}', ib. 41 fin. Engines, battering, used at the siege of Plataea, ii. 76 med. ; engine to fire a wooden wall used at Delium, iv. 100 ; at Le- cythus, ib, 115 med. ; engine at Minoa, iii. 51 mod. Enipeus, a river of Thessaly, iv. 78 med. Ennea Hodoi, see Amphipolis and Nine Ways. Enneacrounos, a fountain at Athens, ii. 15 fin. Enomoties, the smallest divisions in the Lacedaemonian army, v. 68. Entimus, joint founder, with Anti- phemus, of Gela, vi. 4 med. Envy, does not follow the dead, ii. 45 med. Eordia, a region of Macedonia, ii. 99 fin. Ephesus, Themistocles reaches Ephesus in his flight, i. 137 med. ; Alcidas at Ephesus, iii. 32 init., 33 init.; Athenian ambassadors to the King return thence, iv. 50 fin.; a Chian ship chased by the Athenians escapes to Ephe- sus, viii. 19 med. ; Tissaphernes sacrifices to Artemis at Ephesus, ib. 199 fin. ; Ionian festival at Ephesus, iii. 104 med. Ephors, at Sparta ; their powers, i. 87 init., 131 fin. ; Sthenelaidas, ib. 85 fin.; Aenesias, ii. 2 init. ; Plcistolas, v. 19 init ; Cleobulus, ib. 36 init., 37 init.; Xenares, ib. Endius, viii. 6 med. ; Alexippi- das, «"'. 58 init. Ephyre, in Thesprotia, i. 46 med. Epicles, father of Proteas, an Athen- ian, i. 45 med., ii. 23 med. Epicles, a Lacedaemonian general, viii. 107 fin. Epicurus, father of Paches, an Athenian, iii. 18 fin. Epicydidas, a Lacedaemonian general, v. 12. Epidamnus, a colony of the Corcyr- aeans, i. 24 init. ; situation of, /'6. 26fin. ; the Epidamnians seek aid from Corcyra, ib. 24 fin.; are refused, 16.; ordered by the Oracle to apply to Corinth, ib. 25 init. ; receive colonists from Corinth, ib. 26 init. ; are besieged by the Corcyraeans, ib. fin. ; surrender their city, ib. 29 fin. ; the affair of Epidamnus one of the avov%'ed causesof the Peloponnesian War, ib. 23 fin., 146; the Corcyraean prisoners taken in it won over b}' the Corinthians, iii. 70. Epidaurus, its territory ravaged by the Athenians, ii. 56 med. [cp. vi. 31 init.] ; again, iv. 45 ; adjoins the Corinthian, viii. 10 fin. ; attacked by Argos, v. 53, 54 fin., 55 fin, 56 fin. ; garrisoned by the Lacedae- monians, ib. 56 init. ; a Pelopon- nesian fleet anchors there, viii. 92 med., 94 med. ; besieged by the Argive allies, ib. 75 fin.; the Argives agree by treaty to eva- cuate Epidaurus, /'i. 76, ii.iv; the Athenians evacuate Epidaurus, ib. 80 ; Epidaurians defeated by the Athenians at Halieis, i. 105 ; assist the Megarians to revolt, ib. 114 med. ; furnish a convoy to Corinth, ib. 27 fin.; invade Argos, V. 75 med. ; supply ships to the Lacedaemonian navy, viii. 3 fin.