Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 2.djvu/495

 INDEX 487 Omens eagerly sought for at the com- mencement of the War, ii. 8 med. Onasimiis, a Sicyonian. swears to the one year's Truce, iv. 1 19 med. Onetorides, father of Diemporus, a Theban, ii. 2 med. Oncum, Mount, in Corinthian ter- ritory, iv. 44 med. Onomacles, an Athenian com- mander, viii. 25 init., 30 mod. Ophioneans, an Aetolian tribe, iii. 94 fin., 96 med.; Tolophus, an Ophionean, ib. 100 init. Opici, drove the Sicels out of Italj', vi. 2 med. ; Opicia, vi. 4 med. Opus, in Locris, ii. 32. Oracle, Delphian, consulted by Cylon. i. 126 init. ; by the Epi- damnians, ib. 25 init. ; by the Lacedaemonians before begin- ning the war, ib. 118 fin., 123 med., ii. 54 med. ; before colon- ising Heraclea, iii. 92 fin. ; orders Pausanias to be buried in the temple of Athene, i. 134 fin.; provision respecting, in the one year's Truce, iv. 118, i. ; — ancient oracleabout the suppliant of Ithomacan Zeus,currentamong the Lacedaemonians, i. 103 med.; about Alcmaeon, ii. 102 fin. ; about Hesiod, iii. 96 init. ; about the Pelasgian ground, ii. 17 med.; current at Athens during the plague, ib. 54 init. ; about the restoration of Pleistoanax, v. 16 med. ; about the restoration of the Delians, ib. 32 init. ; about the thrice nine years, current at the beginning of the War, ib. 26 fin. ; the only one justified by events, ('6.;- oracles recited at the beginning of the War, ii. 8 med., 21 fin. ;— the oracles help- less in the plague, ib. 47 fin. ; often ruin those who trust them, v.io3fin.; unpopularity of oracle- mouircrs after Sicilian expedition, viii. I. VOL. II. Orchomenus, in Arcadia, besieged by the Argives and Athenians, v. 61 med.; surrenders, ib. fin. Orchomenus, in Boeotia, i. 113 init. ; earthquakes at, iii. 87 fin. ; formerly called the 'Minyan,'iv. 76 init. ; conspiracy to betray the city to the Athenians, ib. Orestes, exiled son of a Thessalian king, i. Ill init. Orestheum, in Maenalia, iv. 134 med., v. 64 init. Orestians, a people in Epirus, ii 80 fin. Oreus (=Hestiaea), the only city retained by Athens in Euboea after the second revolt, viii. 95 fin. Orneae, in Argolis, the Orneatae on the Argive side at Mantinea, V. 67 fin., 72 fin., 74 med. ; the Argive exiles settled at Orneae, vi. 7 init. ; the town treacherously captured by the Argives, ib. med. Orobiae, in Euboea, iii. 89 init. Oroedus, king of the Paravaeans, ii. 80 fin. Oropus, subject to the Athenians, ii. 23 fin, iii. 91 med., iv. 96 fin. ; on the Athenian border, iv. 91 ined., 99med.; provisions brought from Euboea to Athens through Oropus, vii. 28 init. ; betrayed to the Boeotians, viii. 60 init. ; a Peloponnesian squadron puts in at Oropus, //'. 95. Oi lygia, the original site of Syra- cuse, vi. 3 med. Oscius, a river in Thrace, ii. 96 fin. Ostracism of Themistocles, i. 135 ; of Hyperbolus, viii. 73 init. P. Paches, an Athenian commander, sent with reinforccmenls to Myti- lene, iii. 18 fin. ; obtains posses- sion of the city, ib. 27, 28; cha es Alcidas to Patmos, ib. Kk