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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Diodorus Siculus, Library. Search the whole document.
Found 28 total hits in 6 results.
Athens (Greece) (search for this): book 11, chapter 39
In Greece the Athenians after the victory at
Plataea brought their children and wives back to
Athens from Troezen and Salamis, and at once set to
work fortifying the city and were giving their attention to every other means which made for
its safety. But the Lacedaemonians, observing that the
Athenians had gained for themselves great glory by the actions in which their navy had been
engaged, looked with suspicion upon their growing power and decided to prevent the g the city. But
he told the Council in confidence that he and certain others would go as ambassadors to
Lacedaemon to explain the matter of the wall to the
Lacedaemonians; and he instructed the magistrates, when ambassadors should come from Lacedaemon to Athens, to detain them until he himself should return from Lacedaemon, and in the meantime to put the whole population to
work fortifying the city. In this manner, he declared to them, they would achieve their
purpose.
Peloponnesus (Greece) (search for this): book 11, chapter 39
Plataea (search for this): book 11, chapter 39
In Greece the Athenians after the victory at
Plataea brought their children and wives back to
Athens from Troezen and Salamis, and at once set to
work fortifying the city and were giving their attention to every other means which made for
its safety. But the Lacedaemonians, observing that the
Athenians had gained for themselves great glory by the actions in which their navy had been
engaged, looked with suspicion upon their growing power and decided to prevent the Athenians
from rebuilding their walls. They at once, therefore,
dispatched ambassadors to Athens who would ostensibly advise them not at present to fortify the
city, as not being of advantage to the general interests of the Greeks; for, they pointed out,
if Xerxes should return with larger armaments than before he would have walled cities ready to
hand outside the Peloponnesus which he would use as
bases and thus easily subjugate the Greeks. And when no attention
Lacedaemon (Greece) (search for this): book 11, chapter 39
Troezen (Greece) (search for this): book 11, chapter 39
In Greece the Athenians after the victory at
Plataea brought their children and wives back to
Athens from Troezen and Salamis, and at once set to
work fortifying the city and were giving their attention to every other means which made for
its safety. But the Lacedaemonians, observing that the
Athenians had gained for themselves great glory by the actions in which their navy had been
engaged, looked with suspicion upon their growing power and decided to prevent the Athenians
from rebuilding their walls. They at once, therefore,
dispatched ambassadors to Athens who would ostensibly advise them not at present to fortify the
city, as not being of advantage to the general interests of the Greeks; for, they pointed out,
if Xerxes should return with larger armaments than before he would have walled cities ready to
hand outside the Peloponnesus which he would use as
bases and thus easily subjugate the Greeks. And when no attention
Greece (Greece) (search for this): book 11, chapter 39
In Greece the Athenians after the victory at
Plataea brought their children and wives back to
Athens from Troezen and Salamis, and at once set to
work fortifying the city and were giving their attention to every other means which made for
its safety. But the Lacedaemonians, observing that the
Athenians had gained for themselves great glory by the actions in which their navy had been
engaged, looked with suspicion upon their growing power and decided to prevent the Athenians
from rebuilding their walls. They at once, therefore,
dispatched ambassadors to Athens who would ostensibly advise them not at present to fortify the
city, as not being of advantage to the general interests of the Greeks; for, they pointed out,
if Xerxes should return with larger armaments than before he would have walled cities ready to
hand outside the Peloponnesus which he would use as
bases and thus easily subjugate the Greeks. And when no attention w