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404 BC | 24 | 24 | Browse | Search |
370 BC | 23 | 23 | Browse | Search |
395 BC | 22 | 22 | Browse | Search |
406 BC | 22 | 22 | Browse | Search |
371 BC | 20 | 20 | Browse | Search |
394 BC | 18 | 18 | Browse | Search |
366 BC | 15 | 15 | Browse | Search |
369 BC | 14 | 14 | Browse | Search |
389 BC | 12 | 12 | Browse | Search |
399 BC | 12 | 12 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Xenophon, Hellenica (ed. Carleton L. Brownson). Search the whole document.
Found 13 total hits in 4 results.
399 BC (search for this): book 3, chapter 1
400 BC (search for this): book 3, chapter 1
401 BC (search for this): book 3, chapter 1
So ended the civil strife at Athens. Shortly401 B.C. after this Cyrus sent messengers to Lacedaemon and asked that the Lacedaemonians should show themselves as good friends to him as he was to them in the war against the Athenians. And the ephors, thinking that what he said was fair, sent instructions to Samius, at that time their admiral, to hold himself under Cyrus' orders, in case he had any request to make. And in fact Samius did zealously just what Cyrus asked of him: he sailed round to Ciller of Cilicia, to oppose Cyrus by land in his march against the Persian king.
As to how Cyrus collected an army and with this army made the march up country against his brother,Artaxerxes. how the battleAt Cunaxa, near Babylon, in the autumn of 401 B.C. was fought, how Cyrus was slain, and how after that the Greeks effected their return in safety to the sea—all this has been written by ThemistogenesUnknown except for this reference. It would seem that Xenophon's own Anabasis was not published a
480 BC (search for this): book 3, chapter 1