Plutarch's Lives, Volume 4 (of 4)
Part 66
Oligyrtus, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 26.
Olizon, i. Themistokles, ch. 8.
Olokrus, a mountain, i. Æmilius, ch. 20.
Olorus, the name, ii. Kimon, ch. 4. A Thracian king, _ibidem_. Olorus the father of Thucydides, _ibidem_.
Olthakus, chief of the Dandarii, ii. Lucullus, ch. 16.
Olympia and the Olympic games, i. Theseus, ch. 25; Lykurgus, chs. 1 (Olympic truce), 21 (usage for Spartan victors, compare iii. Agesilaus, ch. 28), 22 (Olympic truce); Numa, ch. 1, institution of the games and visit of Pythagoras, ch. 8; Solon, ch. 23 (reward for Athenian victors compare ii. Aristeides, ch. 27); Themistokles, chs. 5, 17, 25, (Hiero's tent); Alkibiades, ch. 12; compare iv. Demosthenes, ch. 1; Æmilius, ch. 28 (Pheidias's Zeus); ii. Pelopidas, ch. 34; Aristeides, chs. 11, 27; Cato Major, ch. 5 (Kimon's race-horses); Sulla, ch. 12; iii. Agesilaus, chs. 13, 20 (Kyniske); Alexander, chs. 3, 4 (Philip's victory); Cato Minor, ch. 46; iv. Agis, ch. 11 (the oracle); Demosthenes, chs. 1, 9; Demetrius, ch. 11; List of victors, i. Numa, ch. 1.
Olympias, wife of Philip, mother of Alexander, iii. Eumenes, chs. 12, 13; Alexander, chs. 2, 3, 9, 10, 25, 39, 68, 77; iv. Demetrius, ch. 22.
Olympic games. _See_ Olympia.
Olympiodorus, an Athenian, ii. Aristeides, ch. 14.
Olympus, a mountain in Thessaly, i. Æmilius, chs. 13, 14, 15.
----, in Cilicia or Lycia, iii. Pompeius, ch. 24.
----, a physician, iv. Antonius, ch. 82.
Olynthus, iv. Demosthenes, ch. 9.
Omises, a Persian, iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 4.
Omestes, Dionysus, ii. Aristeides, ch. 9; iv. Antonius, ch. 24.
Omphale, i. Theseus, ch. 6; Perikles, ch. 24.
Onatius, Aurelius, iii. Crassus, ch. 12.
Oneia, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 20.
Onesikritus, Alexander's, historian, iii. Alexander, chs. 8, 15, 46, 60, 61, 65, 66.
Onomarchus, with Antigonus, iii. Eumenes, ch. 18.
----, a Phokian, i. Timoleon, ch. 30.
Onomastus, Otho's freedman, iv. Galba, ch. 24.
Opheltas, a king of the Boeotians, ii. Kimon, ch. 1.
----, king of Cyrene, iv. Demetrius, ch. 14.
Opimius, L. consul B.C. 121, iv. C. Gracchus, chs. 11, 13, 14, 16, 17.
Oppius, C., Cæsar's friend, iii. Pompeius, ch. 10; Cæsar, ch. 17.
Opuntian Lokrians, ii. Flamininus, ch. 5.
Orchalian hill, ii. Lysander, ch. 29.
Orchomenus, in Arcadia, iv. Kleomenes, chs. 4, 7, 23, 26; Aratus, chs. 38, 45.
----, in Boeotia, ii. Pelopidas, chs. 16, 17, 18; Comparison, ch. 1; Lysander, ch. 28; Sulla, chs. 20, 21, 22, 26; Kimon, ch. 2; Lucullus, chs. 3, 11; iii. Agesilaus, ch. 18.
Oreitæ, iii. Alexander, ch. 66.
Orestes, ii. Aristeides, ch. 10.
----, L. Aurelius, consul B.C. 126, iv. C. Gracchus, chs. 1, 2.
Oreus, in Euboea, i. Æmilius, ch. 9.
Orexartes, river in Scythia, iii. Alexander, ch. 45.
Orfidius, iv. Otho, ch. 12.
Oricum, i. Æmilius, ch. 30; iii. Pompeius, ch. 65; Cæsar, ch. 37.
Orneus, i. Theseus, ch. 3.
Ornis, near Corinth, iv. Aratus, ch. 19.
Ornytus, i. Theseus, ch. 8.
Oroandes, of Crete, i. Æmilius, ch. 26.
Orobazus, Parthian ambassador, ii. Sulla, ch. 5.
Oromazes, or Oromasdes, Persian god, iii. Alexander, ch. 30; iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 29.
Orontes, a Persian, iv. Aratus. ch. 3; (the same?) Artaxerxes, ch. 27.
Oropus, ii. Cato Major, ch. 22; iv. Demosthenes, ch. 5.
Orpheus and Orphic rites, ii. Comparison of Kimon and Lucullus, ch. 1; iii. Alexander, ch. 2; Cæsar, ch. 9.
Orsodates, iii. Alexander, ch. 57.
Orthias, Artemis, i. Theseus, ch. 31; Lykurgus, ch. 17.
Orthagoras, a prophet, i. Timoleon, ch. 4.
Orthopagus, near Chæronea, ii. Sulla, ch. 17.
Oryssus, a Cretan, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 30.
Osca (Huesca in Spain), iii. Sertorius, ch. 13.
Oschophoria, i. Theseus, chs. 22, 23.
Ostanes, younger son of Darius Nothus, iv. Artaxerxes, chs. 1, 5, 22.
Ostia, port of Rome, ii. Marius, chs. 35, 42; iii. Cæsar, ch. 58; iv. Otho, ch. 3.
Otacilius, brother of Marcellus, ii. Marcellus, ch. 2.
Otho, Marcus Salvius, the emperor, iv. Life; Galba, chs. 19, 20, 23-28.
----, Lucius Roscius, author of the Lex Roscia, iii. Pompeius, ch. 25; iv. Cicero, ch. 13.
Otryæ in Phrygia, ii. Lucullus, ch. 8.
Ovation, ii. Marcellus, ch. 22.
Ovicula, nickname of Fabius, i. Fabius, ch. 1.
Ouliades of Samos, ii. Aristeides, ch. 23.
Oxathres, iv. Artaxerxes, chs. 1, 5.
Oxus, river in Asia, iii. Alexander, ch. 57.
Oxyartes, son of Abouletes, satrap of Susiana, iii. Alexander, chs. 58, 68.
Paccianus, C., lieutenant of Sulla, iii. Sertorius, ch. 9.
Paccius, ii. Cato Major, ch. 10.
Paches, Athenian general, ii. Aristeides, ch. 26; iii. Nikias, ch. 6.
Pachynus, promontory in Sicily, iv. Dion, ch. 25.
Pacianus, Vibius, iii. Crassus, chs. 4, 5.
Pacorus, son of Hyrodes, iii. Crassus, ch. 33; iv. Antonius, ch. 34.
Padua, or Patavium. _See_ Patavium.
Padus, the river Po, in Greek, Eridanus, i. Romulus, ch. 17; ii. Marcellus, ch. 6; Marius, ch. 24; iii. Crassus, ch. 9; Pompeius, ch. 16; Cæsar, chs. 20, 21, 25; iv. Brutus, ch. 19; Otho, chs. 5, 10.
Pæania, township of Demosthenes, iv. Demosthenes, chs. 20, 27.
Pæon of Amathus, i. Theseus, ch. 20.
Pæonia and Pæonians, i. Æmilius, ch. 18; ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 9; iii. Pompeius, ch. 41, where _see_ Mr. Long's note; Alexander, ch. 39.
Pæstum, or Poseidonia, a Greek colony in Lucania, i. Æmilius, ch. 39; ii. Kimon, ch. 18.
Pagasæ, port of Thessaly, i. Themistokles, ch. 20.
Paidaretus, i. Lykurgus, ch. 24.
Palatine hill, Palatium, or Palace, at Rome, i. Romulus, chs. 1, 18, 20, 22; Poplicola, ch. 20 (Cloelia's statue); Camillus, ch. 32 (Romulus's staff); iii. Sertorius, ch. 24; C. Gracchus, ch. 12 (his house); iv. Cicero, ch. 8 (his house), 16, 22; Galba, chs. 1, 3, 24, 25.
Palestine, ii. Lucullus, ch. 14; iii. Crassus, ch. 16; Pompeius, ch. 44.
Pallantium, in Arcadia, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 4; Aratus, ch. 35.
Pallas, brother of Ægeus, i. Romulus, ch. 3.
Pammenes, ii. Pelopidas, chs. 18, 26.
Pallene, i. Theseus, ch. 13.
Pamphilus, a painter of the Sikyonian school, iv. Aratus, ch. 12.
Pamphylia, in Asia Minor, ii. Kimon, ch. 12; iii. Pompeius, ch. 76; Alexander, ch. 17; iv. Brutus, ch. 3.
Pan, i. Numa, ch. 4; ii, Aristeides, ch. 11.
Panætius, a philosopher, ii. Aristeides, ch. 1; Kimon, ch. 4; iv. Demosthenes, ch. 13.
Panaitios, i. Themistokles, ch. 12.
Panaktum, in Attica, i. Alkibiades, ch. 14; iii. Nikias, ch. 10; iv. Demetrius, ch. 23.
Pandion, king of Athens, i. Theseus, ch. 13.
Pandosia, in Italy, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 16.
Pannonia and Pannonians, iv. Otho, chs. 4, 8, compare iii. Pompeius, ch. 41, note.
Panope or Panopeus, a town in Phokis, ii. Lysander, ch. 29; Sulla, ch. 16.
Panopeus, father of Ægle, i. Theseus, ch. 29.
Pansa, C. Vibius, consul B.C. 43, i. Æmilius, ch. 38; iv. Cicero, chs. 43, 45; Antonius, ch. 17.
Pantauchus, Demetrius's general, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 7; iv. Demetrius, ch. 41.
Panteus, a Spartan, iv. Kleomenes, chs. 23, 38.
Panthoides of Chios, i. Themistokles, ch. 32.
----, a Spartan, ii. Pelopidas, ch. 16.
Paphlagonia, in Asia Minor, ii. Sulla, ch. 23; Lucullus, ch. 33; iii. Eumenes, chs. 3, 6; Agesilaus, ch. 11; Pompeius, ch. 44; Alexander, ch. 18; iv. Antonius, ch. 61.
Paphos, in Cyprus, iii. Cato Minor, ch. 35.
Papiria, wife of Æmilius Paulus, i. Æmilius, ch. 5.
Papirius, Marcus, i. Camillus, ch. 22.
----, Maso, i. Æmilius, ch. 5.
Pappus, a historian, iv. Demosthenes, ch. 30.
Parætonium, iv. Antonius, ch. 69.
Paralus, son of Perikles, i. Perikles, ch. 36.
Paranæa, in Macedonia, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 6.
Parapotamii, in Phokis, ii. Sulla, ch. 16.
Paris, son of Priam, i. Theseus, ch. 34; Comparison, ch. 6; ii. Comparison of Lysander and Sulla, ch. 4; Alexander, ch. 15 (Paris's harp); iv. Comparison of Demetrius and Antonius, ch. 3; Galba, ch. 19 (under the name of Alexander).
Pariskas, attending upon Cyrus, iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 12.
Parma, a town in Italy, ii. Marius, ch. 27.
Parmenides, i. Perikles, ch. 4.
Parmenio, Alexander's general, iii. Alexander, chs. 3, 10, 19, 22, 29, 31-33, 39, 48-50.
Parnassus, ii. Sulla, ch. 15.
Parrhasius, a painter, i. Theseus, ch. 4.
Parthenon, i. Perikles, ch. 13; ii. Cato Major, ch. 5; iv. Demetrius, chs. 23, 26; Comparison, ch. 4.
Parthia and the Parthians. _See_ especially the lives of iii. Crassus, chs. 2, 16, 18, 19, 21, 23-32, with the Comparison; and iv. Antonius, chs. 25, 27, 30-55, and the Comparison; also, ii. Sulla, ch. 6 (an embassy); Lucullus, chs. 14, 30, 36; iii. Nikias, ch. 1; Eumenes, ch. 18; Pompeius, chs. 28, 36, 38, 39, 52, 53, 55, 60, 64, 66; Alexander, ch. 45; Cæsar, chs. 28 (Crassus's death), 58, 60; iv. Cicero, ch. 36; Demetrius, ch. 20; Brutus, chs. 7, 22, 43; Comparison, ch. 4.
Parysatis, wife of Darius Nothus, iv. Artaxerxes, chs. 1, 6, 14, 16, 17, 23.
Pasakas, iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 9.
Pasargadæ, iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 3.
Paseas, father of Kleon, despot of Sikyon, iv. Aratus, chs. 2, 3.
Pasikrates, king of Soli in Cyprus, iii. Alexander, ch. 29.
Pasiphae, wife of Minos, i. Theseus, ch. 19.
----, oracle of, iv. Agis, ch. 9; Kleomenes, ch. 19.
Pasiphon, a writer, iii. Nikias, ch. 4.
Pasitigris, the river Tigris, iii. Eumenes, ch. 14.
Passaron, in the Molossian country, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 5.
Pataikos, i. Solon, ch. 6.
Patara, iv. Brutus, chs. 2, 32.
Patavium, or Padua, iii. Cæsar, ch. 47.
Patræ, in Achaia, i. Alkibiades, ch. 15; ii. Cato Major, ch. 12; iv. Antonius, ch. 60; Aratus, ch. 47.
Patrobius, favourite of Nero, iv. Galba, chs. 17, 28.
Patrokles, friend of Seleukus, iv. Demetrius, ch. 47.
Patroklus, the hero, i. Theseus, ch. 34; ii. Aristeides, ch. 21; iii. Alexander, ch. 54; compare ch. 15.
Patron, companion of Evander, i. Romulus, ch. 13.
Patronis, in Phokis, ii. Sulla, ch. 15.
Paulinus Suetonius, Roman general, iv. Otho, chs. 5, 7, 8, 11, 13.
Paulus, Lucius Æmilius, father of Æmilius Paulus, killed at Cannæ, i. Fabius, chs. 14, 16; Æmilius, ch. 1; ii. Marcellus, ch. 10.
----, Æmilius, also Lucius, i. Life and Comparison with Timoleon; Timoleon, ch. 1; ii. Cato Major, chs. 15, 20, 24; Sulla, ch. 12; iv. Aratus, ch. 54; Galba, ch. 1.
----, consul B.C. 50, brother of Lepidus, iii. Pompeius, ch. 58; Cæsar, ch. 29; iv. Cicero, ch. 46; Antonius, ch. 19. The Basilica Pauli, iii. Cæsar, ch. 29; iv. Galba, ch. 26.
Pausanias, the assassin of Philip, iii. Alexander, ch. 10; iv. Demosthenes, ch. 22.
----, the physician, iii. Alexander, ch. 41.
----, an officer of Seleukus, iv. Demetrius, ch. 50.
----, son of Kleombrotus, regent of Sparta, i. Lykurgus, ch. 19; Themistokles, chs. 21, 23; ii. Aristeides, chs. 11, 14-18, 20, 23; Comparison, ch. 2; Kimon, ch. 6; Comparison, ch. 3; iv. Agis, ch. 3.
Pausanius, son of Pleistoanax, king of Sparta, ii. Lysander, chs. 14, 28, 29, 30; iv. Agis, ch. 3.
Pedalium, in Chersonesus, ii. Lucullus, ch. 23.
Pedum, in Latium, i. Coriolanus, ch. 28.
Pegæ, i. Perikles, ch. 19; iv. Aratus, ch. 43.
Peiræus, the port of Athens, i. Themistokles, chs. 10, 19 (its construction), 32; Perikles, ch. 8 (Ægina its eyesore); Alkibiades, ch. 26; ii. Pelopidas, ch. 14; Lysander, chs. 14, 15 (its destruction); Sulla, chs. 12, 14 (its siege and capture), 26; Comparison, ch. 4; iii. Nikias, ch. 30; Agesilaus, ch. 24; Phokion, ch. 32; iv. Demosthenes, chs. 1 (the eyesore), 6, 27; Demetrius, chs. 8 (his entrance), 34, 43; Brutus, ch. 28; Aratus, chs. 33, 34.
Peiraic gate at Athens, the, i. Theseus, ch. 27; ii. Sulla, ch. 14.
Peirithous, the hero, i. Theseus, chs. 20, 30.
Peirithois, Attic township, i. Alkibiades, ch. 13; iii. Nikias, ch. 11.
Peisander, an Athenian, i. Alkibiades, ch. 26.
----, a Platæan hero, ii. Aristeides, ch. 11.
----, the brother-in-law of Agesilaus, iii. Agesilaus, chs. 10, 17.
Peisianakteum, ii. Kimon, ch. 4.
Peisistratus, despot of Athens, i. Solon, chs. 1, 7, 8, 10, 29, 30, 31; Comparison of Solon and Poplicola, ch. 3; Perikles, chs. 3, 7; ii. Aristeides, ch. 2; Cato Major, ch. 24.
Pelagon, a Euboean, i. Themistokles, ch. 7.
Pelasgus, i. Pyrrhus, ch. 1.
Pelasgi, i. Romulus, ch. 1.
Peleus, i. Theseus, ch. 10; iii. Alexander, ch. 5.
Pelias, father of Akastus, ii. Sulla, ch. 36.
Peligniansin Italy, i, Æmilius, ch. 20.
Pella, town in Macedonia, i. Æmilius, ch. 23; iii. Eumenes, ch. 3; Alexander, ch. 60; iv. Demetrius, ch. 43.
----, Lucius, disgraced by Brutus, iv. Brutus, ch. 35.
Pellene, in Achaia, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 17; Aratus, chs. 31, 32, 39, 54.
----, in Laconia, iv. Agis, ch. 8.
Pelopidas, ii. Life and Comparison with Marcellus; i. Timoleon, ch. 36; ii. Aristeides, ch. 1; iii. Agesilaus, ch. 24; iv. Aratus, ch. 16; Artaxerxes, ch. 22.
Peloponnesus and the Peloponnesians, i. Theseus, chs. 3, 6, 25, and elsewhere frequent.
Peloponnesian War, the, i. Lykurgus, ch. 27 (Thucydides's history); Perikles, ch. 29; Coriolanus, ch. 14; ii. Aristeides, ch. 1; Lysander, chs. 3, 29; iv. Kleomenes, ch. 27; Antonius, ch. 70.
Pelops, son of Tantalus, i. Theseus, chs. 3, 7; Pelopidæ, ii. Marius, ch. 1.
----, of Byzantium, iv. Cicero, ch. 24.
Pelusium, in Egypt, iii. Pompeius, ch. 77; iv. Antonius, chs. 3, 74; Brutus, ch. 33.
Penelope, wife of Lysimachus, iv. Demetrius, ch. 25.
Peneus, river in Thessaly, ii. Flamininus, ch. 3.
Pentapyla, at Syracuse, iv. Dion, ch. 29.
Pentelic marble, i. Poplicola, ch. 15.
Penteleum, in Arcadia, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 17; Aratus, ch. 39.
Pentheus, king of Thebes, iii. Crassus, ch. 33.
Peparethus, in the Ægean Sea, i. Romulus, chs. 3, 8.
Perdikkas, king of Macedon, iii. Comparison of Nikias and Crassus, ch. 2.
Perdikkas, Alexander's general, iii. Eumenes, chs. 1, 3, 4, 5, 8; Alexander, chs. 15, 41, 77; iv. Demosthenes, ch. 31.
Pergamia, in Crete, i. Lykurgus, ch. 31.
Pergamus, or Pergamum, in Mysia, ii. Sulla, chs. 11, 23; Lucullus, ch. 3; iii. Cæsar, ch. 2; Cato Minor, ch. 10; iv. Tib. Gracchus, ch. 21; Antonius, ch. 58 (the library); Brutus, ch. 2.
Periander, despot of Corinth, i. Solon, chs. 4, 12; iv. Aratus, ch. 3.
Periboea, mother of Ajax, i. Theseus, ch. 29.
Perigoune, daughter of Sinis, i. Theseus, ch. 8.
Perikles, i. Life and Comparison with Fabius; i. Lykurgus, ch. 16; Themistokles, chs. 2, 10; Alkibiades, chs. 1, 3, 6, 14, 17; ii. Pelopidas, ch. 4; Aristeides, chs. 1, 24, 25, 26; Cato Major, ch. 8; Kimon, chs. 13, 14, 15, 16, 17; iii. Nikias, chs. 2, 3, 6, 9, 23; Comparison, ch. 1; Pompeius, ch. 63; Phokion, ch. 7; iv. Demosthenes, chs. 6, 9, 13, 20; Cicero, ch. 39.
Perikleides, a Spartan envoy, ii. Kimon, ch. 16.
Perinthus, in Thrace, iii. Alexander, ch. 70; Phokion, ch. 14; iv. Demosthenes, ch. 17.
Peripatetics, ii. Sulla, ch. 26; iv. Cato Minor, chs. 67, 69; Cicero, ch. 24; Brutus, ch. 24.
Periphemus, a hero of Salamis, i. Solon, ch. 9.
Periphetes, i. Theseus, ch. 8.
Periphoretus, name of Artemon, i. Perikles, ch. 27.
Peripoltas, a prophet, ii. Kimon, ch. 1.
----, surname of Damon, _ibidem_.
Peritas, Alexander's dog, iii. Alexander, ch. 61.
Perpenna Vento, iii. Sertorius, chs. 15, 26, 27; Pompeius, chs. 10, 18, 20.
Perrhæbia, part of Thessaly, and Perrhæbæ, its inhabitants, i. Æmilius, ch. 15; ii. Flamininus, ch. 10.
'Persæ,' of Æschylus, i. Themistokles, ch. 14.
Persæus, a philosopher, commanding in Corinth; iv. Aratus, chs. 18, 23.
Persephassia, ii. Lucullus, ch. 10.
Perseus, the hero, ii. Kimon, ch. 3.
----, king of Macedon, i. Æmilius, chs. 7, 8, 10, 12, 13, 16, 23, 24, 26, 33, 34, 37; Comparison, ch. 1; ii. Cato Major, chs. 15, 20; iv. Demetrius, ch. 53; Aratus, ch. 54.
Persis, or Persia proper, iii. Eumenes, ch. 14; Alexander, chs. 37, 69; iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 7.
Persians, the. _See_ in general the lives of i. Themistokles, ii. Aristeides, Kimon, iii. Agesilaus, Alexander, Artaxerxes and the Comparisons. Also, i. Solon, ch. 28; Camillus, ch. 19; Perikles, chs. 24, 25; Alkibiades, chs. 23, 24; ii. Æmilius, ch. 25 (Medes); ii. Pelopidas, ch. 30; Cato Major, ch. 13; Flamininus, ch. 7; Lysander, chs. 3, 4, 23, 24; iii. Comparison of Nikias and Crassus, ch. 3; Pompeius, chs. 32, 34; iv. Demosthenes, ch. 20; Antonius, ch. 37; Brutus, ch. 31. Persian women, iii. Eumenes, ch. 1; Alexander, ch. 21; iv. Demetrius, ch. 31. Persian language, i. Themistokles, ch. 29; Artaxerxes, ch. 11. Persian habits, iii. Eumenes, ch. 6; the dress, iii. Alexander, chs. 31, 45, 51; the money, ii. Kimon, ch. 10; iii. Agesilaus, ch. 15; Artaxerxes, ch. 4. Compare Media and the Medes.
Persia, Artemis, ii. Lucullus, ch. 24.
Pessinus, in Galatia, ii. Marius, ch. 17; iii. Cato Minor, ch. 15.
Petelia, in Bruttium, ii. Marcellus, ch. 29. Mountains of Petelia, iii. Crassus, ch. 11, where _see_ note. Petelian Grove, i. Camillus, ch. 36.
Peteus, son of Orneus, i. Theseus, ch. 32.
Peticius, a shipmaster, iii. Pompeius, ch. 73.
Petilia. _See_ Petelia.
Petilius, a prætor, i. Numa, ch. 22.
Petillii, two brothers, tribunes, of the people, ii. Cato Major, ch. 15.
Petinus, favourite of Nero, iv. Galba, ch. 17.
Petra, in Arabia, iii. Pompeius, ch. 41; iv. Antonius, ch. 69.
Petra, in Thessaly, i. Æmilius, ch. 15.
Petrachus, above Chæronea, ii. Sulla, ch. 17.
Petro, Granius, iii. Cæsar, ch. 16.
Petronius, lieutenant of Crassus, iii. Crassus, chs. 30, 31.
----, Turpilianus, iv. Galba, chs. 15, 17.
Peukestas, iii. Eumenes, chs. 13-16; Alexander, chs 41, 42, 63.
Phæa, or Phaia, the sow of Krommyon, i. Theseus, ch. 9.
Phæax of Salamis, i. Theseus, ch. 17.
----, son of Erasistratus, an Athenian, i. Alkibiades, ch. 13; iii. Nikias, ch. 11; Agesilaus, ch. 15.
Phædimus, iii. Eumenes, ch. 16.
Phædo, archon at Athens, i. Theseus, ch. 36.
Phædra, wife of Theseus, i. Theseus, ch. 28.
Phænarete, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 5.
Phæstus, in Crete, i. Solon, ch. 12.
Phaethon, first king of the Molossians, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 1.
Phalerum, port of Athens, i. Theseus, chs. 17, 22; Themistokles, ch. 12; ii. Aristeides, ch. 27; iv. Demetrius, chs. 8, 9 (Demetrius the Phalerean).
Phalinus, a Zakynthian, iv. Artaxerxes, ch. 13.
Phanius of Eresus, historian, i. Solon, ch. 32.
----, of Lesbos, historian, i. Solon, ch. 14; Themistokles, chs. 1, 7, 13, 27, 29.
Phanippus, archon at Athens in the year of Marathon, ii. Aristeides, ch. 5.
Phanodemus, historian, i. Themistokles, ch. 13; Kimon, chs. 12, 19.
Phantasia, philosophical term, iv. Cicero, ch. 40.
Pharax, a Spartan, i. Timoleon, ch. 11; Comparison, ch. 2; iv. Dion, chs. 48, 49.
Pharmacusa, island near Miletus, iii. Cæsar, ch. 1.
Pharnabazus, a Persian satrap, i. Alkibiades, chs. 24, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 37, 39; ii. Lysander, chs. 19, 20, 24; iii. Agesilaus, ch. 9, 11, 12, 13, 17, 23; iv. Artaxerxes, chs. 21, 24, 27.
----, the son of Artabazus, iii. Eumenes, ch. 7.
Pharnakes, son of Mithridates, iii. Pompeius, ch. 41; Cæsar, ch. 50.
Pharnakia or Phernakia, ii. Lucullus, ch. 18.
Pharnapates, a Parthian, iv. Antonius, ch. 33.
Pharos, at Alexandria, iii. Alexander, ch. 26; Cæsar, ch. 49; iv. Antonius, chs. 29, 69.
Pharsalus, Pharsalia and Pharsalians, i. Perikles, ch. 36; ii. Pelopidas, chs. 27, 32; Agesilaus, ch. 16; iii. Pompeius, chs. 68, 71; Comparison, ch. 4; Cæsar, chs. 42, 52, 62; Cato Minor, chs. 55, 66; iv. Antonius, chs. 8, 62; Brutus, ch. 6; Otho, ch. 13.
Pharyges, a village in Phokis, iii. Phokion, ch. 33.
Phaselis, in Lycia, ii. Kimon, ch. 12; iii. Alexander, ch. 17.
Phasis, river, ii. Lucullus, ch. 33; Comparison, ch. 3; iii. Pompeius, ch. 34.
Phayllus, the athlete, iii. Alexander, ch. 34.
Phegæa, Attic township, i. Alkibiades, ch. 22.
Pheidias, the sculptor, i. Perikles, chs. 2, 13, 31, 32; Æmilius, ch. 28.
Pheidon, name of Demetrius, iii. Alexander, ch. 54.
Pheneum, or Pheneus, in Arcadia, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 17; Aratus, ch. 39.
Pheræ, in Achæa, iv. Kleomenes, ch. 14.
----, in Thessaly, ii. Pelopidas, chs. 26, 28, 35; iv. Galba, ch. 1.
Phereboea, i. Theseus, ch. 29.
Pherekles, at Dodona, ii. Lysander, ch. 25.
Phereklus, son of Amarsyas, i. Theseus, ch. 17.
Pherekydes, a historical writer, i. Theseus, chs. 19, 26.
----, the philosopher, ii. Pelopidas, ch. 21; Sulla, ch. 36; iv. Agis, ch. 10.
Pherendates, Persian general, ii. Kimon, ch. 12.
Pherenikus, a Theban, ii. Pelopidas, chs. 5, 7.
Pheristus of Elea, i. Timoleon, ch. 35.
Phernakia. _See_ Pharnakia.
Phila, daughter of Antipater, wife of Demetrius, chs. 14, 22, 27, 31, 32, 37, 45, 46, 53; Comparison, ch. 1.
Philadelphus, a surname, i. Coriolanus, ch. 11.
----, king of Paphlagonia, iv. Antonius, ch. 61.
Philaidæ, the township of Peisistratus, so named from Philæus, son of Ajax, i. Solon, ch. 10.
Philagrus, tutor of Metellus Nepos, iv. Cicero, ch. 27.
Philargyrus, iii. Cato Minor, ch. 38.
Philarus, river in Boeotia, ii. Lysander, ch. 29.
Philathenæus, surname of Antonius, iv. Antonius, ch. 23.
Philetas, a poet, i. Perikles, ch. 2.
Philides, or Diphilides, a horse-dealer, i. Themistokles, ch. 5.
Philinna, mother of Philip Arrhidæus, iii. Alexander, ch. 77.
Philippi, town and battlefield, in Macedonia, ii. Sulla, ch. 23; iii. Cæsar, ch. 69; Cato Minor, ch. 73; iv. Antonius, ch. 69; Brutus, chs. 24, 28, 36, 37, 38, 53.
Philippides, comic poet, iv. Demetrius, chs. 12, 25.
Philip II., king of Macedonia, father of Alexander the Great. _See_ the Lives of iii. Alexander, chs. 1-6, 9, 10, 12, 16, 27, 28, 50, 53; Phokion, chs. 9, 12, 14-17, 29; iv. Demosthenes, chs. 9, 12, 14, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22; Comparison, ch. 3. Some additional particulars are given in i. Perikles, ch. 1; Timoleon, ch. 15; ii. Pelopidas, ch. 26; iii. Eumenes, ch. 1; iv. Demetrius, chs. 22, 42. He is mentioned also in i. Camillus, ch. 19; Æmilius, ch. 12; iii. Sertorius, ch. 1; Eumenes, chs. 16, 18; iv. Kleomenes, ch. 31; Demetrius, chs. 10, 20, 25; Comparison, ch. 4; Aratus, chs. 13, 23.
----, III., Arrhidæus, son of Philip II., iii. Eumenes, ch. 13; compare Alexander, chs. 10, 77.
----, IV., son of Kassander, iv. Demetrius, ch. 36.
----, V., son of Demetrius II., i. Æmilius, chs. 7, 8; ii. Cato Major, chs. 12, 17; Philopoemen, chs. 8, 12, 14, 15; Flamininus, chs. 2-10, 14; Comparison, ch. 1; iv. Demetrius, ch. 3; Aratus, chs. 16, 46-52, 54.
----, the Acarnanian, iii. Alexander, ch. 19.
----, son of Antigonus, brother of Demetrius, iv. Demetrius, ch. 23.
----, of Chalkis, iii. Alexander, ch. 46.
----, first husband of Berenike, ii. Pyrrhus, ch. 4.
Philip, the herald of festivals, iii. Alexander, ch. 46.
----, a Theban, ii. Pelopidas, chs. 5, 7, 10, 11.
----, left in India, iii. Alexander, ch. 60; he is supposed by some to be the father of Antigonus; compare, iv. Demetrius, ch. 2.
Philippus, freedman of Pompeius, iii. Pompeius, chs. 78, 80.
----, Marcius, censor, i. Æmilius, ch. 38.
----, Lucius, attached to Pompeius, iii. Pompeius, chs. 2, 17.
----, father of Marcia, and step-father of Augustus, consul B.C. 56, iii. Cato Minor, chs. 25, 39; iv. Cicero, ch. 44.
Philistus, in some places wrongly spelt Philistius, i. Timoleon, ch. 15; ii. Pelopidas, ch. 34; iii. Nikias, chs. 1, 19, 28; Alexander, ch. 8; iv. Dion, chs. 11, 14, 19, 25, 35, 36, 37.
Phillidas, a Theban, iii. Pelopidas, chs. 7, 9, 10, 11.
Philo, builder of the arsenal at Athens, ii. Sulla, ch. 14.
----, a philosopher, ii. Lucullus, ch. 42; iv. Cicero, chs. 3, 4.
----, the Theban, a writer, iii. Alexander, ch. 46.
Philoboeotus, near Elatea, ii. Sulla, ch. 16.
Philochorus, an Attic historian, i. Theseus, chs. 14, 16, 17, 19, 26, 35; iv. Nikias, ch. 23.
Philocyprus, king in Cyprus, i. Solon, ch. 26.