Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 2.djvu/477

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INDEX 469 Italy (cottt.) — goes to Thiirii and Tarentum, vi. 104 ; the second Athenian ex- pedition reaches Italy, vii. 33 ; Italian allies of the Athenians before Syracuse, iO. 57 fin. ; tiic Syracusans retain their Italian, Sicilian, and Athenian prisoners after the others are sold, tb. 87 fin. ; Italian vessels join the Lace- daemonians, viii. 91 init. Itamenes, a Persian commander, iii. 34 init. Ifhome, mount, seized by the He- lots, i. loi init., iii. 54 fin. ; be- sieged by the Lacedaemonians, i. 102 init. ; surrendered, ib. 103. Itonaeans, colonists of the Italian Locrians, v. 5 fin. Itys, the legend of, ii. 29 init. Justice, an idle word to the strong, i. 76 fin., V. 89 fin. ; justice and expediency, i. 36, 42 init., 76, iii, 40 med., 44, 56, 82 fin., v. 90, 98, 107 ; the Lacedaemonian con- ception of, a ' do-nothing ' policy, i. 71 init. K. Kindness, a little, done in season may cancel a greater previous wrong, i. 42 fin. Kings of Lacedaemon, common mistake that they have two votes in council, i. 20 fin. ; could be imprisoned by the Ephors, ib. 131 fin. ; the government carried on by regents in their minority, i. 107 init., 132 init. ; give all orders in the field, v. 66 med. Kings of Persia : Cyrus, i. 13 fin. ; Cambyses, ib. ; Darius, ib. 14 med.; Xerxes, ib., 129; Arta- xerxes, ib. 104 init., 137 med., iv. 50 fin ; Darius Nothus, viii. 5 init., 18, 37, 58. Kings in ancient Hellas, their con- stitutional character, i, 13 init. Knights, the, at Athens, iii. 16 init ; the Three Hundred (so called) at Sparta, v. 72 fin. Kropcia (in Attica), ii. 19 fin. Labdalum, a fort built by the Athenians on Epipolae, vi. 97 fin., 98 med. ; captured by Gylip- pus, vii. 3, Lacedaemon contrasted with Athens, i. 10 init. ; founded by the Dorians, ib. 18 init., 107 init.; long unsettled, ib. 18 init. ; never subject to tj'rants, ib. ; its ex- cellent consJitutianLi'6. ; common mistakes about, ib. 20 fin. ; the Lacedaemonians a pattern of>^ nobility in Hellas, iii. 53 fin., 57 init. ; 'liberators of Hellas,' i. 69 init., ii. 8 fin., iii. 59 fin., iv. 85 init., 108 init., v. 9 fin., viii. 43 fin., 46 med., 52 fin.-; their slothful character, especially j in contrast with the Athenians, ( i. 69, 70, 84 init., 102 med., iv.) 55 med., viii. 96 fin. ; their free- dom from passion, v. 63 med. ;^ force strict o'igarchies on their / subjects, i, 19 init. [cp. 76 init., 144 med., iv. 132 fin,], v, 81 fin,, viii, 38 med, ; bad administration of colony by Heraclea, iii, 93 fin., V. 52 init. ; different character of,V at home and abroad, v. 105 fin. ^ their bad conduct abroad, i. 77 fin. [cp. ib. 95 fin.] ; their slaughter of traders, ii. 67 fin., iii. 32 ; their treatment of the J Helots, i. 128 init., iv. 80 med. ; ■ the great number of tlieir slaves, >/ viii. 40 med. ; simplicity of Lace- / daemonian life, i. 6 med. ; the Lacedaemonians first to strip