Page:History of Greece Vol XII.djvu/584

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MINERAL. >52 MUSIC. 99 ; removal of, from Miletus to Chios, viii. 181 ; eludes Thrasyllus and reaches the Hellespont, viii. 102, 103 7?.; at the Hellespont, viii. 109 ; Pcloponnesian fleet summon- ed from Euboea by. viii. Ill : siege of Kyzikus bv, viii. 121 ; death of, viii. 121. ilineral productions of Greece, ii. 229. il/('(iO(i, capture of, by Nikias, vi 285. Minds, i. 219 seq. Mindlain; the, i. 220 seq. Minyce^ i. 130, ii. 26 seq. Minyas, i. 128 seq. Miraculous legends, varied interpre- tation of, i, 472 n. 2. Mistake of ascribing to an unrecord- ing age the historical sense of mod- ern times, i. 432. Milford, iiis view of the anti-mon- archical sentiment of Greece, iii. 12 seq. Mithridat.es the Persian, ix. 87 seq. Mithridales of Pontus, xii. 463. Mithrines. xii. 90, 207. Mitylenoean envoys, speech of, to the Peloponnesians at Olympia, vi. 226 seq ; prisoners sent to Athens by Paches, vi. 243. 25.5. MityJeneans at Sigeium, i. 339. Miti/lene, iii. 193; political dissen- sions and poets of, iii. 198; revolt of, from Athens, vi. 221 seq.; blockade of, by Paches, vi. 237 seq.; and the Athenian assembly, vi. 244, 246 seq.: loss and recovery of, by Athens, n. c. 412, vii. 383, 384 ; Kallikratid.as at, viii. 167 seq. ; removal of Kallikratidas from, viii. 170; Eteonikus at, viii. 170, 174, 189; blockade of, by Memnon, xii. 105 ; surrender of, by Ciiares, xii. 142. Mnassippus, expedition of, to Korky- ra, X. 142 seq. Afnemosyne, i. 5, 10. Mucsiphilus, V. 122. Mara, and Croesus, iv. 194 seq. Mceris, lake of, iii. 322 n. 1. Molionids, the, i. 140. Molossian kingdom of Epirus., xii. 395. Molossians, iii. 413 seq i olossus, i. 189. Moinus, I. 7. Monarchy, in mediajval and modem Europe, iii. 8 seq. ; aversion to, in Greece, after the expulsion of Hip- pias, iv. 176. Money, coined, not known to Ho meric or Hesiodic Greeks, ii. 116 ; coined, first introduction of, into Greece, ii. 320. Money-lending at Florence in the mid- dle ages, iii. 109 n. ; and the Jew- ish law, iii. Ill n.; and ancient philosophers, iii. 113. Money -standard, Solon's debasement of, iii. 100; honestly maintained at Athens after Solon, iii. 114. Monsters, offspring of the gods, i. 11. Monstrous natures associated with the gods, i. 1. Monts de Pifi€, iii. 1 62. Monuments of tiie Argonautic expe- dition, i. 241 seq. Moon, eclipse of, n. C. 413, vii. 315; eclipse of, B. c. 331, xii. 151. Mopsus, iii. 184. Jiora, Spartan, ii. 458 seq.; destruc- tion of a Spartan, by Ipbikrates, ix. 351 seq. Moral and social feeling in legendary Greece, ii. 79. Moralizing Greek poets, iv. 91 seq. Mosyna'ki, and the Ten Thousand Greeks, ix. 128. Mothakes, ii. 418. Motye, capture of, by Diony«ins, x. 485 seq ; recapture of, by Imilkon, X. 490 Motymn, Duketius at, vii. 123. Mountainous systems of Greece, ii. 212 seq. Mailer on Sparta as the Dorian type, ii. 342. Multitude, sentiment of a, compared with that of individuals, ix. 279. Munychiaund Peirwus, Themistoklfis' wall round, v. 249; Menyllus in, xii. 326, 339 ; Nikanor in,'xii. 339, 345. Mnse, inspiration and autliority of the, i. 355. Muses, the, i. 10. Music, ethical effect of old Grecian, ii. 433; Greek, improvements in, about the middle of the seventh centary B. c , iv. 77 ; comprehea-