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A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith) | 18 | 18 | Browse | Search |
M. Tullius Cicero, De Officiis: index (ed. Walter Miller) | 4 | 4 | Browse | Search |
Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) | 3 | 3 | Browse | Search |
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Pindar, Odes (ed. Diane Arnson Svarlien) | 2 | 2 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith). You can also browse the collection for 490 BC or search for 490 BC in all documents.
Your search returned 18 results in 16 document sections:
Artaphernes
2. A son of the former.
After the unsuccessful enterprise of Mardonius against Greece in B. C. 492, king Dareius placed Datis and his nephew Artaphernes at the head of the forces which were to chastise Athens and Eretria. Artaphernes, though superior in rank, seems to have been inferior in military skill to Datis, who was in reality the commander of the Persian army.
The troops assembled in Cilicia, and here they were taken on board 600 ships.
This fleet first sailed to Samos, and thence to the Cyclades. Naxos was taken and laid in ashes, and all the islands submitted to the Persians. In Euboea, Carystus and Eretria also fell into their hands.
After this the Persian army landed at Marathon. Here the Persians were defeated in the memorable battle of Marathon, B. C. 490, whereupon Datis and Artaphernes sailed back to Asia. When Xerxes invaded Greece, B. C. 480, Artaphernes commanded the Lydians and Mysians. (Hdt. 6.94, 116, 7.10.2, 74; Aeschyl. Pers. 21.)
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), Hipponicus II. or Hipponicus Ammon (search)
Hipponicus II. or Hipponicus Ammon
3. HIPPONICUS II., surnamed Ammon, son of Callias I., is said to have increased his wealth considerably by the treasures of a Persian general, which had been entrusted to Diomnestus, a man of Eretria, on the first invasion of that place by the Persians.
The invading army being all destroyed Diomnestus kept the money; but his heirs, on the second Persian invasion, transmitted it to Hipponicus at Athens, and with him it ultimately remained, as all the captive Eretrians (comp. Hdt. 6.118) were sent to Asia.
This story is given by Athenaeus (xii. pp. 536, f., 537, a.) on the authority of Heracleides of Pontus; but it is open to much suspicion from its inconsistency with the account of Herodotus, who mentions only one invasion of Eretria, and that a successful one B. C. 490. (Hdt. 6.99-101.) Possibly the anecdote, like that of Callias lakko/tloutos below, was one of the modes in which the gossips of Athens accounted for the large fortune of the family.
Calli'machus
(*Kalli/maxos).
1. Of the tribe of Aiantis and the dh=mos of Aphidna, held the office of Polemarch, B. C. 490, and in that capacity commanded the right wing of the Athenian army at Marathon, where he was slain, after behaving with much gallantry.
In the battle he is said to have vowed to Artemis a heifer for every enemy he should slay.
By the persuasion of Miltiades he had given his casting vote for fighting, when the voices of the ten generals were equally divided on the question.
This is the last recorded instance of the Polemarch performing the military duties which his name implies. Callimachus was conspicuously figured in the fresco painting of the battle of Marathon, by Polygnotus, in the stoa\ poiki/lh. (Hdt. 6.109-114; Plut. Aristid. et Cat. Maj. 2, Sympos. 1.8.3; Schol. ad Aristoph. Eq. 658; Paus. 1.15
Cameri'nus
2. Q. Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus, consul B. C. 490 with Sp. Larcius Flavus.
He was afterwards one of the embassy sent to intercede with Coriolanus when the latter was advancing against Rome. (Dionys. A. R. 7.68, 8.22.)
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)
Cynaegei'rus
(*Kunai/geiros), son of Euphorion and brother of the poet Aeschylus, distinguished himself by his valour at the battle of Marathon, B. C. 490.
According to Herodotus, when the Persians had fled and were endeavouring to escape by sea, Cynaegeirus seized one of their ships to keep it back, but fell with his right hand cut off.
The story lost nothing by transmission.
The next version related that Cynaegeirus, on the loss of his right hand, grasped the enemy's vessel with his left; and at length we arrive at the acme of the ludicrous in the account of Justin. here the hero, having successively lost both his hands, hangs (on by his teeth, and even in his mutilated state fights desperately with the last mentioned weapons, "like a rabid wild beast!" (Hdt. 6.114; Suid. s. v. *Kunai/geiros; Just. 2.9; V. Max. 3.2.22; comp. Sueton. Jul. 68.) [E.
Datis
(*Da=tis), a Mede, who, together with Artaphernes, had the command of the forces which were sent by Dareius Ilystaspis against Eretria and Athens, and which were finally defeated at Marathon in B. C. 490. (Hdt. 6.94, &c.) [ARTAPHERNES, No. 2.] When the armament was on its way to Greece through the Aegean sea, the Delians fled in alarm from their island to Tenos; but Datis re-assured them, professing that his own feelings, as well as the commands of the king, would lead him to spare and respect the birthplace of " the two gods."
The obvious explanation of this conduct, as arising from a notion of the correspondence of Apollo and Artemis with the sun and moon, is rejected by Müller in favour of a far less probable hypothesis. (Hdt. 6.97 ; Müller, Dor. ii 5.6, 6.10; Thirlwall's Greece, vol. ii. p. 231; Spanheim, ad Callim. Hymn. in Del. 255.)
The religious reverence of Datis is further illustrated by the anecdote of his restoring the statue of Apollo which some Phoenicians in his
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith), (search)