CORINTHIAN ENVOYS 522 CYRUS THE GREAT. ix. 333 seq : the Long Walls of, partly pulled clown hy the Lace- (Isemoniaiis. ix. 335 ; tlte Long Walls of, restored by liie Athe- nians, and taken by Agesilaus and Teleutias, ix. 34.5 seq.-. and the peace of Antalkidas, ix. i387, x. 12 ; application of, to Athens, for aid against Thebes, x. 23* seq. ; Iplii- krates at, x. 237 ; and the Persian rescript in favor of Thebes, x. 282 : project of the Athenians to seize, b. C.366, x. 289 ; peace of,with Thebes, B. c. 366, X. 290 seq. ; application from Syracuse to, b. c. 344, xi. 134 ; message from Hiketas to, xi. 143 ; Dionysius the Y'ounger at, xi. 151 seq. ; reinforcement from, to Timo- leon, xi 152, 155, 157; efforts of, to restore Syracuse, xi. 167, 1C8 ; Philip chosen chief of the Greeks ut the congress at, xi. 511 ; conven- tion at, under Alexander, b. c. 336, xii. 13 seq.; violations of the con- ventio'i at, by Alexander, xii. 16 seq. ; Alexander at, b. c. 335. xii. 48. Corinthian envoys, speech of, to the Athenian assembly, in reply to the Korkyrjeans, vi. 59 ; speech of, to the Spartan assembly, against Ath- ens, vi. 82 seq ; speech of, at the congress of allies at Sparta, vi. 93 seq. Corinthian genealogy of Eumelus, i. Corinthian Gulf, naval conflicts of Corinthians and Lacedaemonians in, ix. 326 ; territory, Nikias's ex- pedition against, vi. 355 seq.: war, commencement of, ix.Sdl. Corinthians, early commerce and en- terprise of, iii. 1 ; behavior of, at Salamis,v. 145 ; defeated by Myron- ides, V. 324 ; procure the refusal of of the Samians' application toSpar- ta for aid against Athens, vi. 30, 50 ; instigate Potidaia, the Chalkidians and Bottiicans to revolt from Ath- ens, vi. 65 seq.: defeat of, near Po- tidaea, vi. 73 ; strive to excite war against Athens after their defeat near PotidiBa, vi. 78 ; repudiate the peace of Nikias, vi. 493, vii. 2; in- duce Argos to head a new Pelo- ponnesian alliance, vii. 12 ; hesitate to join Argos. vii. 16, 62; join Ar- gos, vii. 18; application of, to th« Boeotians and Athenians b. c 421, vii. 20 ; and Karneia, vji. 308 n. I ; and Athenians, naval battle Ih;- tween, near Naupaktus, vii. 358 seq. ; and Laceda'monians. naval and land conflicts between, b. c. 393, ix. 333 seq. Courts of Requests, their analogy to Athenian dikasteries, v. 399 n. 1. Creditor and debtor, law of. at Atiiens before Solon, iii. 93 ; Roman law of, iii. 159. Criticisms on the first two volumes of this history, reply to. i. 408 n. Croesus and Solon, alleged interview between, iii. 149 seq ; moral of Herodotus's story about, iii. 153, reign and conquests of, iii. 258 seq. ; power and alliances of, iv. 182; and Cyrus, war between, iv. 1S3 seq.; and the oracles, iv. 189, 190, 193 ; solicits the alliance of Sparta, iv. 190; fate of, impressive to the Greek mind, iv. 195. Cumce in Campania, iii. 357 seq. Cifdades, ii. 214, iii. 163: Themisto- kles levies fines on v. 141. Cucle, epic, ii. 122 seq. Cuclic poets, ii. 122 seq. Cyclopes, i. 4, 5. Cyprus, influence of Aphrodite upon, i. 5 ; Solon's visit to, iii. 148 ; Phe- nicians and Greeks in, iii. 277 : ex- tension of the Ionic revolt to, iv. 291 ; subjugation of, by Pheni- cians and Persians, iv. 293 ; con quest of, by the Turks in 1570, iv. 293 w. ; expedition to, under Ki- mon, V. 335 ; before and under Evagoras, x. 14 seq. ; subjugation of to the Persian king Ochus. xi. 437 ; surrender of the princes of, to Alexander, xii. 137. Ci/renuica, iv. 36 ??. 3, 37 w. Cyropcedia, Xenophon's iv. 183. Cyrus tlte Great, early history and rise of, iv. 183 seq. : and Crcesas, war between, iv. 18S seq. ; and the Lacedaemonians, iv. 199; conquests of, in Asia, iv. 209 ; capture of Babylon by, iv. 211 seq.; exploits and death of, iv. 215; effects of his conquests upon the Persians, iv. 216 seq ; the tomb of, xiL 237.