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Hellenica

Part 1 Chapter 2

Word Count: 946    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

set sail for Samos at the beginning of summer. At Samos he stayed three days, and then continued his voyage to Pygela, where he proceeded to ravage the territory and attack

following night they made an incursion into Lydia, where the corn crops were ripe, and burnt several villages, and captured money, slaves, and other booty in large quantity. But Stages, the Persian, who was employed in this neighbourhood, fell in with a reinforcement of cavalry sent to protect the scattered pillaging parties from the Athenian camp, whilst occupied with th

, consisting of the crews of their former twenty vessels and those of five new vessels which had opportunely arrived quite recently under Eucles, the son of Hippon, and Heracleides, the son of Aristogenes, together with two Selinuntian vessels. All these several forces first attacked the heavy infantry near Coressus; these they routed, killing about one hundred of them, and driving the remainder down into the sea. They then turned to deal with the second division on the marsh. Here, too, the Athenians were put to flight, an

eleased.15 From Methymna Thrasylus set sail to Sestos to join the main body of the army, after which the united forces crossed to Lampsacus. And now winter was approaching. It was the winter in which the Syracusan prisoners who had been immured in the stone quarries of Piraeus dug through the rock and escaped one night, some to Decelia and others to Megara. At Lampsacus Alcibiades was anxious to marshal the whole military force there collected in one body, but the old troops refused to be incorporated with those of Thrasylus. "They, who had never yet been beaten, with these newcomers who had just suffered a defeat." S

that the Achaeans betrayed the colonists of Heracleia Trachinia, when they were all drawn up in battle to meet the hostile Oetaeans, whereby as many as seven hundred of them were lost, together with t

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Hellenica
Hellenica
“B.C. 411. To follow the order of events1. A few days later Thymochares arrived from Athens with a few ships, when another sea fight between the Lacedaemonians and Athenians at once took place, in which the former, under the command of Agesandridas, gained the victory. Another short interval brings us to a morning in early winter, when Dorieus, the son of Diagoras, was entering the Hellespont with fourteen ships from Rhodes at break of day. The Athenian day-watch descrying him, signalled to the generals, and they, with twenty sail, put out to sea to attack him. Dorieus made good his escape, and, as he shook himself free of the narrows,2 ran his triremes aground off Rhoeteum. When the Athenians had come to close quarters, the fighting commenced, and was sustained at once from ships and shore, until at length the Athenians retired to their main camp at Madytus, having achieved nothing.”
1 Part 1 Chapter 12 Part 1 Chapter 23 Part 1 Chapter 34 Part 1 Chapter 45 Part 1 Chapter 56 Part 1 Chapter 67 Part 1 Chapter 78 Part 2 Chapter 19 Part 2 Chapter 210 Part 2 Chapter 311 Part 2 Chapter 412 Part 3 Chapter 113 Part 3 Chapter 214 Part 3 Chapter 315 Part 3 Chapter 416 Part 3 Chapter 517 Part 4 Chapter 118 Part 4 Chapter 219 Part 4 Chapter 320 Part 4 Chapter 421 Part 4 Chapter 522 Part 4 Chapter 623 Part 4 Chapter 724 Part 4 Chapter 825 Part 5 Chapter 126 Part 5 Chapter 227 Part 5 Chapter 328 Part 5 Chapter 429 Part 6 Chapter 130 Part 6 Chapter 231 Part 6 Chapter 332 Part 6 Chapter 433 Part 6 Chapter 534 Part 7 Chapter 135 Part 7 Chapter 236 Part 7 Chapter 337 Part 7 Chapter 438 Part 7 Chapter 5