Book,  Par.

 1    II,     83|         a crafty scheme against Rhescuporis, king of Thrace. That entire
 2    II,     83|      half to the king's brother Rhescuporis, half to his son Cotys.
 3    II,     83|     enemies on its frontier, to Rhescuporis. The kings too themselves
 4    II,     83|     hollow friendship, but soon Rhescuporis overstepped his bounds and
 5    II,     84|   forces which he had prepared. Rhescuporis, with assumed modesty, asked
 6    II,     84|      with a treacherous intent. Rhescuporis, to ratify the treaty, as
 7    II,     86|      Cotys was to be delivered. Rhescuporis, hesitating between fear
 8    II,     86|       the death of Pandus, whom Rhescuporis accused of being his personal
 9    II,     87| guardian to Ptolemy's children. Rhescuporis was removed to Alexandria,
10   III,     54|    implicated in the designs of Rhescuporis, when that king after the
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