Page:History of Greece Vol XII.djvu/541

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ASIA MINOR. 509 ATIIENIA><. >..ii. 2G9 ; how far really Ilellenizcd, xii. 270. Asia Minor, Greeks in, ii. 235 ; non- . Hellenic people of, iii. 203, 205 seq. : features of the country of, iii. 205 ; Phrygian music and worship among Greeks in, iii. 212 ; predominance of female influence in the legends of, iii. 222 ; Cimmerian invasion of, iii. 245 seq. ; conquest of, by the Persians, iv. 201 ; arrival of Cvrus tke Younger in viii. 135, 137. Asia, Upper, Scvlhian invasion of, iii. 253. Asiatic customs and religion blended with Hellenic in the Troad, i. 338. Asiatic Dorians, iii. 201, 202. Asiatic frenzy grafted on the joviality of the Grecian Dionysia, i. 35. Asiatic Grcjce, deposition of despots of, by Aristagoras, iv. 245. Asiatic Greeks, conquest of, by Croe- sus, iii. 259 seq. ; state of, after Cyrus's conquest of Lydia, iv. 198 : application of, to Sparta, b. c. 546, iv. 199; alliance with, against Per- sia, abandoned by the Athenians, iv. 291 ; successes of Persians a- gainst, iv. 294 ; reconquest of, after the fall of Miletus, iv. 30G ; first step to the ascendency of Athens over, V. 198 ; not tributary to Per- sia between b. c. 477 and 412, v. 339 n. ; surrender of, to Persia, by Sparta, ix. 205 ; and Tissaphernes, X. 20G ; ix. 207; application of to Sparta for aid against Tissa- phernes. ix. 207 ; after the peace of AntalUidas, x. 26 seq. ; Spar- tan project for the rescue of, x. 44. Asidutes, ix. 172. Askalaphus and lalmenus, i. 130. AskJepiades of Myrlea, legendary dis- coveries of, i. 247 n. 4. Asklepiads, i. 181. Aside pius, i. 178 seq. Asopius, son of Phormio, vi. 231. Asopus, Greeks and Persians at, be- fore the battle of PlatiEa, v. 158 seq. Aspasia, vi. 98 seq. 4s/jenc?»s, Phenician fleet at. b. c. 411, viii. 99, 100, 114; Alkibiades at, viii. 99; Alkibiades. return from, to 43* Samos, viii. IIC; Alexande>-at. xil 100. Aspis, xii. 421. Assembli/, Spartan jiopular, ii. 345, 356 ; Athenian judicial, iv. 137, 140 se^. ; Athenian political, iv. 139. Assyria, relations of, with Egypt, iii. 324. Assyrian kings, their command of human labor, iii. 302. Assyrians and Medes, iii. 224 seq., 290 seq.; contrasted with Phenicians, Greeks, and Egyptians, iii. 303; and Phenicians, effect of, on tho Greek mind, iii. 343 sey. Astakus, vi. 135, 141. Aster ia, i. 6. Asterius, i. 220. Asti-ceus, i. 6 ; and Eos, children ot, i. 6. Astronomy, physical, thought impious by ancient Greeks, i. 346 n. ; and physics, knowledge of, among tho early Greeks, ii. 114. Astyayes, story of, iv. 182 se<i. Astyanax, death of, i. 305. Aslyochus, expedition of, to Ionia, vu. 383 ; at Lesbos, vii. 384 ; at Chios and the opposite coast, vii. 391 ; accidental escape of, vii. 392 ; and Pedaritus, vii. 393, 394 ; and Tissa- phernes, treaty between, vii. 395 seq. ; mission of Lichas and others respecting, vii. 397 ; victory of, over Charminus, and junction with Antisthenes, vii. 397; at Rhodes, viii. 94 ; at Miletus, viii. 97 ; re- call of, viii. 98. Atalanta, i. 56, 145 seq. Atarneiis captured and garrisoned by Derkyllidas, i.x 219; Ilermeias of, xi. 441, and n. 3. Ale, i. 7. Athamas, i. 123 seq. Athenagoras, vii. 184 se<^ Athene, birth of, i. 10; various repre- sentations of, i. 54 ; her dispute with Poseidon, i. 56, 191 : Chalkioe- kus, temple of, and Pausanias, v. 272 ; Polias, reported prodigy in the temple of, on Xerxes's ap- proach, V. 109. Athenian victims for the Minotaur, i. 221 ; ceremonies commemorative of the destruction of tlic Minotaur,