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 1 Miltiad     |         people to deliver up their city to him according to their
 2 Miltiad     |          which is distant from the city of Athens about ten miles.
 3 Miltiad     |          out their forces from the city, and pitched their camp
 4 Themist     | Thermopylae marched at once to the city, and as none defended it,
 5 Themist     |            so that it equalled the city in magnificence, and excelled
 6 Themist     |          that they had reached the city, he went to the Ephori and
 7 Themist     |       useless to Greece; for their city stood as a bulwark against
 8 Themist     |            being expelled from the city by the ostracism, through
 9 Themist     |  Themistocles, and was of the same city. Thucydides says that he
10 Themist     |         had bestowed upon him this city, expressing himself in these
11 Themist     |             his sepulchre near the city,38 in which he was buried,
12 Themist(38) |        oppidum.] That is, near the city of Athens, where we learn
13  Pausan     |       should be apprehended in the city. After they had set out
14   Cimon     | consequence held the people of the city under his control, and had
15   Cimon     |         the Thracians, founded the city of Amphipolis, and sent
16   Cimon     |          the old settlers from the city and island, and dividing
17  Lysand     |          choice of ten men in each city, on whom he conferred supreme
18  Lysand     |          thus established in every city, everything was done according
19   Alcib     |            in a most distinguished city, of a very high family,
20   Alcib     |        Mercury 63 that were in the city of Athens were thrown down,
21   Alcib     |         tumult should arise in the city to destroy the people's
22   Alcib     |           was any man in the whole city thought equal to him. They
23   Alcib     |          were enemies to their own city; for though they knew that
24   Alcib     |          to Athens. ~VI. The whole city having gone down to the
25   Alcib     |             When he arrived at the city, and an assembly of the
26   Alcib(73) |                                  A city on the isthmus of the Thracian
27 Thrasib     |        liberty of that most famous city. He was at first, indeed,
28 Thrasib     |       immediately fled back to the city. Thrasybulus, on this occasion,
29   Conon     |           he heard that his native city was besieged, he did not
30   Conon     |         country, if, coming from a city which has been accustomed
31   Conon     |            his fleet to his native city, and caused the walls of
32    Dion     |         paid a second visit to the city, induced again by the entreaties
33    Dion     |        like success he secured the city of Syracuse, except the
34    Dion     |          the stronger parts of the city, surrounded Dion's house
35    Dion     |         sepulchral monument in the city, in the most frequented
36  Timoth(121)|                           A strong city of the Propontis, on an
37  Timoth(123)|                                  A city on the Hellespont, in the
38  Timoth(123)|   introduction of the name of this city into the text is due to
39  Timoth     |      worthy of remembrance in that city. |367  ~
40  Epamin     |          forgive you: but quit the city at once, lest you should
41  Epamin     |           that he might reach that city in safety. Nor did he, indeed,
42  Epamin     |            Greece, hardly took one city in ten years; I, on the
43  Epamin     |         the force of this |380 one city of ours, and in one day,
44  Epamin     |         what sort of citizens each city had produced, from whom
45   Pelop     |         the exiles had entered the city, but this intelligence,
46   Pelop     |         only those who were in the city, but also others from all
47  Agesil     |           attacked Sparta, and the city was without walls, he proved
48  Agesil     |            an eminence without the city, Agesilaus, who saw that
49   Eumen     |          distinction in his native city, the Macedonians were nevertheless
50 Phocion     |       Demades in delivering up the city to Antipater; and, by his
51 Phocion     |        time, to take care that the city should not want provisions,
52 Phocion     |             and was brought to the city in a carriage, great crowds
53 Timoleo     |        again became master of that city, and his enemies solicited
54 Timoleo     |           had built to overawe the city, he demolished to its foundations;
55   Kings     |          when he was besieging the city of Argos in the Peloponnesus.
56  Hannib     |            Spain, took Saguntum, a city in alliance with the Romans,
57  Hannib     |       halted on the hills near the city. When he had lain encamped
58    Cato     |         was ended, remained in the city as a private person.247 ~
59   Attic     |          by taking that of another city. As long as he was among
60   Attic     |           that he was born in that city, above all others, in which
61   Attic     |        when he betook himself to a city which excelled all others
62   Attic     |           Torquatus; and the whole city of Athens observed the day
63   Attic     |            went nowhere out of the city. Whatever was needful for
64   Attic(265)|            pretext for leaving the city to avoid the fury of the
65   Attic     |           friends as fled from the city, and supplied them with
66   Attic     |        when he was absent from the city, never despatched letters
67   Attic     |           chief, not merely of the city of Rome, but of the whole
68   Attic     |           fifth milestone from the city, in the sepulchre of his
69    Summ     |         rebuild the walls of their city. Them. 6.~477. ---------------
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