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Pausanias, Description of Greece | 32 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of the English Nation | 16 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Diodorus Siculus, Library | 10 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Homer, The Odyssey (ed. Samuel Butler, Based on public domain edition, revised by Timothy Power and Gregory Nagy.) | 8 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Demosthenes, Speeches 21-30 | 4 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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Your search returned 108 results in 38 document sections:
Aeschines, Against Ctesiphon, section 243 (search)
Or is the man whom you have moved to crown so obscure a man as not to be known by those whom he has served, unless some one shall help you to describe him? Pray ask the jury whether they knew Chabrias and Iphicrates and Timotheus, and inquire why they gave them those rewards and set up their statues. All will answer with one voice, that they honored Chabrias for the battle of Naxos, and Iphicrates because he destroyed a regiment of the Lacedaemonians, and Timotheus because of his voyage to Corcyra, and other men, each because of many a glorious deed in war.
Demosthenes, On Organization, section 22 (search)
For truly, men of Athens, they never robbed themselves of any of their
achievements, nor would anyone dream of speaking of Themistocles' fight at
Salamis, but of the Athenians'
fight, nor of Miltiades' battle at Marathon, but of the Athenians' battle. But
now we often hear it said that Timotheus took Corcyra, that Iphicrates cut up the Spartan detachment, or that
Chabrias won the sea-fight off Naxos.In 376, 390,and 376
respectively. For you seem to waive your own right to these successes
by the extravagant honors which you have bestowed on each of these officers.
Demosthenes, On the Crown, section 234 (search)
For resources, the
city possessed the islanders—but not all, only the weakest, for
neither Chios, nor Rhodes, nor Corcyra was on our side; a subsidy of forty-five talents, all
collected in advance; and not a single private or trooper apart from our own
army. But what was most alarming to us, and advantageous to the enemy, Aeschines
and his party had made all our neighbors, Megarians, Thebans, and Euboeans, more
disposed to enmity than to friendship
Demosthenes, Against Leptines, section 84 (search)
Demosthenes, Against Aristocrates, section 198 (search)
The truth is, gentlemen, that they would not rob
themselves of their own share in any of those ancient achievements; and no man
would say that the battle of Salamis
belonged to Themistocles,—it was the battle of the Athenians; or that
the victory at Marathon belonged to Miltiades,—it was the victory of
the commonwealth. But today, men of Athens, it is commonly said that Corcyra was captured by Timotheus, that the Spartan battalion
was cut to pieces by Iphicrates, that the naval victory off Naxos was won by Chabrias. It really looks as
though you disclaimed any merit for those feats of arms by the extravagant
favours that you lavish on the several commande
Demosthenes, Against Timocrates, section 202 (search)
Demosthenes, Against Aphobus 1, section 14 (search)
and after getting this, when he was about to set sail for
Corcyra as trierarch,That is, in command of a trireme which he had
himself equipped for service. he sent Therippides a written
acknowledgement that he had these sums in his possession, and admitted that he
had received the marriage-portion. Of these matters Demophon and Therippides,
his co-trustees, are witnesses, and, besides this, his own acknowledgement of
having received these moneys is attested by Demochares, of Leuconion,Leuconion, or Leuconoe, was a deme of the tribe
Loentis. who is the husband of my aunt, and by many other witnesses.
Dinarchus, Against Demosthenes, section 14 (search)
Dinarchus, Against Demosthenes, section 75 (search)
Dinarchus, Against Philocles, section 17 (search)
Then why will you wait, Athenians? What further crimes do you wish to hear of
greater than those we have mentioned? Was it not you and your ancestors who made
no allowance for Timotheus,This passage
corresponds almost word for word with Din. 1.14.
See note on that. though he had sailed round the Peloponnese and beaten the Spartans in the
sea-fight at Corcyra, though his father
was Conon who liberated Greece and he
himself had taken Samos, Methone, Pydna, Potidaea, and twenty cities besides? You did not take
this record into consideration at all, or allow such services to outweigh the
case before you or the oaths which you swear before giving your verdict, but
fined him a hundred talents, because Aristophon said he had been bribed by the
Chians and Rhodians.