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 1     Pre     |           an eminent man among the Athenians, it was thought no disgrace
 2 Miltiad     |         known, it chanced that the Athenians wished to send colonists
 3 Miltiad     |      island under the power of the Athenians, and requesting the Lemnians
 4 Miltiad     |            perform his duty to the Athenians, from whom he had come.
 5 Miltiad     |             under the power of the Athenians. ~III. About the same period,
 6 Miltiad     |        that he was an enemy to the Athenians, because, with their aid,
 7 Miltiad(18) |            subject, and, with some Athenians and Eretrians, had burned
 8 Miltiad     |        Athens about ten miles. The Athenians, though alarmed at this
 9 Miltiad     |         bold, if they saw that the Athenians would venture to oppose
10 Miltiad     |       state gave assistance to the Athenians, except that of Plataea,
11 Miltiad     |            his colleagues, for the Athenians, incited by his authority,
12 Miltiad     |       battle. In the encounter the Athenians, through their valour, had
13 Miltiad     |          it formerly was among the Athenians. For to this very Miltiades,
14 Miltiad     |         VII. After this battle the Athenians gave Miltiades a fleet of
15 Miltiad(23) |          again to the power of the Athenians. ~
16 Miltiad     |          his condemnation; for the Athenians, in consequence of the tyranny
17 Themist     |         thus, he both supplied the Athenians with wealth, and made them
18 Themist     |            through Greece, and the Athenians, on account of the battle
19 Themist     |            hundred belonged to the Athenians, engaged the king's fleet
20 Themist     | distinguished in peace; for as the Athenians used the harbour of Phalerum,
21 Themist     |           attempted to prevent the Athenians from building them. This
22 Themist     |            to be apparent; for the Athenians, by their two victories
23 Themist     |          They therefore wished the Athenians to be as weak as possible. ~
24 Themist     |     happened that the walls of the Athenians were constructed of materials
25 Themist     |            boldly stated that "the Athenians, by his advice, had enclosed
26 Themist     |        lest the Lacedaemonians and Athenians should declare war against
27 Themist     |           publicly demanded by the Athenians and Lacedaemonians, he did
28 Themist     |       Naxos, where the army of the Athenians then lay, Themistocles felt
29 Aristid     |    increases the popularity of the Athenians, II.----Has the care of
30 Aristid     |          324 also commander of the Athenians at Plataeae, in the battle
31 Aristid     |          the Lacedaemonians to the Athenians; for before that time the
32 Aristid     |        themselves as allies to the Athenians, and chose them as their
33   Cimon     |            than by custom; for the Athenians are allowed to marry their
34   Cimon     |           others eminent among the Athenians; for by the votes of the
35   Cimon     |             Of this proceeding the Athenians repented sooner than himself;
36   Cimon     |           declared war against the Athenians, a desire for his well-known
37   Cimon     |           town of Citium. ~IV. The Athenians long felt regret for him,
38  Lysand     |              Lysander conquers the Athenians, and establishes a decemvirate
39  Lysand     |         merit. That he subdued the Athenians, when they were at war with
40  Lysand     |  consequence of which disaster the Athenians submitted to the Lacedaemonians. ~
41  Lysand     |         overbearing tyranny of the Athenians, Lysander, after he had
42  Lysand     |          favoured the party of the Athenians, he made choice of ten men
43  Lysand     |        eminent for fidelity to the Athenians, to corrupt them,56 as if
44  Lysand(56) |    fidelity of the Thasians to the Athenians, and afterwards, when he
45   Alcib     |         the Peloponnesian war, the Athenians, by his advice and persuasion,
46   Alcib     |           public opinion among the Athenians, was regarded as impious;
47   Alcib(68) |            fickle character of the Athenians, ~
48   Alcib     |         from its alliance with the Athenians, and after this was done,
49   Alcib     |       seeing that the power of the Athenians, from the ill success of
50   Alcib     |    Philocles, the commander of the Athenians, had stationed his fleet
51   Alcib     |             while to the exhausted Athenians, on the other hand, nothing
52   Alcib     |            came to the army of the Athenians, and there, in the presence
53   Alcib     |          IX. Alcibiades, after the Athenians were defeated, not thinking
54   Alcib     |           the other tyrants of the Athenians, despatched at the same
55   Alcib     |       cities, he surpassed all the Athenians in grandeur and magnificence
56 Thrasib     |          of the deliverance of the Athenians, such the dependence of
57 Thrasib     |         came to the support of the Athenians. He made peace between Thrasybulus
58   Conon     |             when the forces of the Athenians were defeated by Lysander
59   Conon     |            in those days, that the Athenians, if he had been present,
60   Conon     |            when the affairs of the Athenians were in a calamitous condition,
61   Conon     |          Lacedaemonians, after the Athenians were subdued, did not adhere
62   Conon     |   consequence of the Boeotians and Athenians having declared war against
63   Conon     |            Ionia and Aeolia to the Athenians. But as this proiect was
64  Iphicr     |           Seuthes, the ally of the Athenians, to his throne. At Corinth 107
65  Iphicr(107)|  Corinthian war, carried on by the Athenians, Thebans, and Argives, against
66  Iphicr     |            of Egypt, 109 asked the Athenians to allow Iphicrates to be
67  Iphicr(113)|     leagued themselves against the Athenians, from their alliance with
68   Chabr     |           the public charge by the Athenians in the forum, made in that
69   Chabr     |         when he was general of the Athenians, carried on many wars in
70   Chabr     |         from which achievement the Athenians obtained great glory. ~In
71   Chabr     |   Egyptians and Persians, when the Athenians formed an alliance with |
72   Chabr     |         side of the Egyptians. The Athenians then prescribed a certain
73   Chabr     |          the following manner. The Athenians were besieging Chios; Chabrias
74   Chabr     |          sea, for the fleet of the Athenians was at hand to take him
75  Timoth     |             in a previous war, the Athenians |364 had spent twelve hundred
76  Timoth     |     Corcyra under the power of the Athenians, and attached to them, as
77  Timoth     |          sovereignty at sea to the Athenians, making peace upon these
78  Timoth     |        upon these terms, "that the Athenians should be commanders by
79  Timoth     |        gave so much delight to the Athenians, that altars were then first
80  Timoth     |            to hold any office, the Athenians began to be pressed with
81  Epamin     |            the ambassador from the Athenians, who excelled all men of
82  Epamin     |           had been received by the Athenians." 155 ~But his eloquence
83  Epamin(155)|          they were received by the Athenians, who, by sheltering them,
84  Agesil     |           to acquaint him that the Athenians and Boeotians had declared
85  Agesil     |         from the Peloponnesus, the Athenians and Boeotians, and others
86 Phocion     |    criminals, by the custom of the Athenians, are wont to be consigned.
87   Attic     |        goes to Athens; assists the Athenians with money; his popularity
88   Attic     |            much beloved by all the Athenians; for, in addition to his
89   Attic     |          the public affairs of the Athenians, he nevertheless afforded
90    Summ     |                    prevails on the Athenians to rebuild the walls of
91    Summ     |        Syracuse. Dion. 5.~356. The Athenians, under Chares, Iphicrates,
92    Summ     |             Timotheus fined by the Athenians. Tim. 3. ~355. Dion assassinated
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