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Show amt Ofthethird Booke, The Gonitents oS X. , finodvat the beginning of tie Peloponnefiatl warre. Thegreat battaile of Plate. The battaile of Mycale :, with « firange §. 1 their great. difaduantage, obtained 4, peace, that was not well kept, + Mids Ofthe négotiations and practices held. be. CHAP. VII. toveene many States ofGreece, by occafion of thepeace that yas concluded. Ofthings that paffed in Greece from "the end of the Perfian Warre,to i §. VII. How thepeace between Athens and Spat- the beginning of the Peloponnefian. tawas ill kept, though not openly broken, §, VIII, The Atheniansending two Fleets to fuck Syracufe, arepat to flight, and otterl dif §. I, OwAthens was re-built andfortified, §. 11. comfited, The beginning of the Athenian greatne/s, TX. ~ Ofthe troubles whercinto, the Statt ofA: thens fell,after thegreat laffe ofthe Fleet, o* and profperonus wars made by that State vpos the Perfian. ! eth ie The death ofXerxes,by the treafon of Areet § IL" Army in Sicilia, : §. X. ' How Alcibiades. manne may weeks ae Vidlories for the Athenians, wa re-ca?® The benifoment ofThemittocles,isflight fromexile-s-madetheir General :andagaitt to Artaxerxesnewly reigningin Perfia,and, depofed. 1} biedeathe 6. XL nul:ei The battaileat Argi Ana conacme How the Athenians, breaking the Peace. sation ofthe victorious ‘Athehian Captaines which to their great honour they bad made by thepeople, with theRerfian, were (bamefully-beatenin §,. XLT. n0S, wherein The battaile at Aigos Potamos a pith Egypt. §.-VI. the whole'state of Athens m4 ruin Of other warres made bythe Athenians (Yor the mof pant) mith goadfucceffe, about thefame time. the end ofthe Peloponnefian wares es "oe vi CHAR. IX. . : hebeRe- Of Artaxerxes Longimanus,that he-was Ahafhuerofhi, the Husband ofQueene He- Of the matters concanrmig Wt fer. loponnefian-Warre, orfoartly §. VIII. Ofthe troubles in Greece, fore-coing the Pelopontielian Warre. > CHAP. VIIL. § I ae Ofthe Pcloponnefian Warre. % AGis printipa soadin HH" the affaires of Pertia ood times. 2 As f what Taetermesagg \ Po the,two. ths "following we! Be tft beet : : ) aa)lel et) £3 SehInio\ 333 wzso their Demet How'the thirty Tyrants got on in Athens. 2 ac mrer Ne phony! aadhowtha vdrmie retarneninto + 2d CHAP: te The ealof the Hartebeam the Lacedeemoniansla¥d phe Pet <i We sind es dra Vee T ind mes Kin) ABEL 359 388 Qu yey -tealitaa GLa ee Teed Cyeastcaremprsatioll OF the affaires of. Cxbebe, whileft they Pe atid ;, were managedby the Lace-, a peanAIaAS YO AY ; GGL SETION wT _Thepreparations of Cyrus, and his firft enbyie intotbe warre, ‘ - §. TIT. Hom Cytus vooke bis iouvnyinco the hizhs én i | Owthe Lacedieitiotiians tooke cowrage by example of Xenophons Armie, to make warre vpon Artaxdtxes, er Afia, and came vp clofe to bis brother: §. ILI Thebatrelberivcene Gytus and Attaxer- * ; GAIDAHAT ao] xes, . 6.30 Theprofperons becinwings ofthe warre ie wlW) A fia The hard oftate of the' Greekes ‘after the ; §. TTT febt:andlow Artaxerxésin vainefought ¥o How the Lacedemonians' todke: renenge bane made themyeeld unto hin, * upon the Eleansforold difpleafare:The dit contents ofthe Corinthians azd Thebans, 2 VE _ How the Creciss begau-to returze homes boncdined Boainst the Stare ofSpattai wards, : 6. FITL . iminin Thépayfage of Agefilaus intaAfia> ue §. VIE How Tiflaphernes vndercoloyeofpeste, Warre with Tiffaphernes: How Tiffaphers betrayed allthe Captaines ofthe Greckess*© VEL How Xenophon heartened the Greckes, andindefpight of Thiffaphernes, went off LLB FES §.1X. nes was put todeath, and the warre dinerted dtd "another Pronintes throneh perfwafion andgifts of Tithrauftes hes fuccefour. How careleffe the Perlian Liewtenants were ofthe Kings.goda, : g. V. The difficiltces which, the Grecke Abmie.) The Warreand Treaties betmetne Agéfifound, in pafsing through the Land ofthe , laus.and Pharnabaaus. - Garduchiv ¢° 716s": vi Thegrest gommotions raifed in Greece,by X. How Teribazus Goxermour of Armenias.¢4¢ Thebans and others, that were hyred omthe Perfian. te entrapthe Greckes with termes of with Goldfr ot EM ‘ained peace, was difappointed, and /hamefullr beeice ; ed i § XI. Thepaffage of the Armi¢to-Ttabizonde, throngh the Countrie, bordering. upon the Riner ofPhalisssadiother ob(cure Nations, : How Agefilaus wastalldd oat of Alia, to Sparhelpe his Countrie. A viclory of the by Phartans! Cation be Atheniat,4 pied nabazus,s.bdercomes /the Lacedemonian and Fleetereconers the maftryofthe Seas: rebuilds the wals ofAthens. 6. XIL §. VILE How the Armie began at Trabizonde te tits Offundryfall vilories, gatken Oe Priwide.a Fleer, wherewith-to returne home in Afia. part, The Lacedemonsans loferull by Sea, 6. XIIL The Athenians recouerfomepart of ¥heir old Ofdifention which arofeinthe Armyjand ey it Was cm emb ase a, pails A apt, Dorhinions phe a offereda eshte The bale conditions a. : a he Lacedemonians.Of /wrary (ig0F5, inthe warre Thepeace of wad ditectin. ey, » ofthe Army, Homthe Mutinerswere beaten and obshecpaflige 4) th: Barbarians,cm re/ewed-by Xenophon. The confpiracie agaiufephe thi ty Tyaaa #ies of Greece, Athens, and Sparta; and their depofitier. 1h Ofthe expedition of CyrasstheoA The beginningofthe Peloponnefian war, §. IT1I. _ §. XI. Ofthegreatloje whith\ the Spartanes re. Of the barbarous qualitie ofXerxes: with 4 tranfition fromthe Perlian affaires to mat» ceiued at Pylus, ters ofGreece, whichfrom this time grew How the Lacedemonians hardly, andto more worthyofregard. exper nts GHA Pass viaawtnoly How Spattaand Athens entred into war, §. 111, : accident thatfell out 1k the beginning of it: and examples of the like. tabanus. nan § Ofdiners pieces offeruice done by Xeno~ Antalcidas. ik, , made Ti)he war which the Lacedumonians upon b4 |