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[3] Epameinondas' corps pursued the fugitives,1 slew many who opposed them, and won for themselves a most glorious victory. For since they had met the bravest of the Greeks and with a small force had miraculously overcome many times their number, they won a great reputation for valour. The highest praises were accorded the general Epameinondas, who chiefly by his own courage and by his shrewdness as a commander had defeated in battle the invincible leaders of Greece.

1 In the account of the battle, Diodorus fails to give any hint of cavalry action (see Xen. Hell. 6.4.10-13) which was co-ordinated with the rapid advance of the Theban corps d'élite. This co-ordination (see Cary, Cambridge Ancient History, 6.82), more perhaps than the denseness of the corps and the echelon formation of the Thebans, was a new factor in fighting later developed by Macedon.

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