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 1 Themist     |             and took no care of his property, he was disinherited by
 2 Themist     |            put themselves and their property on board their ships, for
 3 Aristid(40) |             is, abstaining from the property of others; moderation; disinterestedness. ~
 4   Cimon     |          hindered from enjoying his property as he pleased. Attendants
 5   Alcib     |             condemned to death, his property having been confiscated,
 6   Alcib     |           suffer for sacrilege. His property was in consequence good
 7 Thrasib     |           divided their confiscated property among themselves, he was
 8 Thrasib     | predecessors in cruelty; 81 that no property should be confiscated; and
 9    Dion     |          board some vessels all the property of Dion that could be removed,
10    Dion     |           with greater freedom, the property of those whom he knew to
11    Dion     |         could lay his hands but the property of his friends; a circumstance
12  Hannib     |             could overtake him. His property they confiscated; his house
13  Hannib     | Carthaginian, having thus saved his property, and deceived all the Cretans,
14   Attic     |           to Rome, IV.---- Inherits property from Quintus Caecilius;
15   Attic     |             exigencies from his own property; since, when the government
16   Attic     |        paying such attention to his property as a not unthrifty father
17   Attic(258)|           That is, to a sale of the property confiscated in the proscriptions.
18   Attic     |             never went to law about property of his own, nor was ever
19   Attic     |            make any addition to his property; for he would not even go
20   Attic     |             for them out of his own property. To Pompey himself, who
21   Attic     |           to make use of any of his property, he might avail himself
22   Attic     |          his wife Fulvia of all her property, and endeavoured even to
23   Attic     |            might have increased his property by the interest of Antony,
24   Attic     |          then managed, had sold the property of Lucius Saufeius, a Roman
25   Attic     |    messenger, that "he had lost his property and had recovered it." He
26   Attic     |      addition, too, was made to his property, he made no change in his
27   Attic     |        whole revenue arose from his property in Epirus and at Rome. Hence
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