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Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War 78 0 Browse Search
Pausanias, Description of Greece 48 0 Browse Search
Diodorus Siculus, Library 40 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 21-30 28 0 Browse Search
P. Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses (ed. Arthur Golding) 22 0 Browse Search
Apollodorus, Library and Epitome (ed. Sir James George Frazer) 22 0 Browse Search
P. Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses (ed. Brookes More) 20 0 Browse Search
Euripides, Rhesus (ed. Gilbert Murray) 20 0 Browse Search
Xenophon, Anabasis (ed. Carleton L. Brownson) 16 0 Browse Search
Euripides, Hecuba (ed. E. P. Coleridge) 16 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Lysias, Speeches. You can also browse the collection for Thrace (Greece) or search for Thrace (Greece) in all documents.

Your search returned 4 results in 4 document sections:

Lysias, Against Alcibiades 1, section 38 (search)
So sensible was he of his numerous offences against you that, for all his power of speech, his friends, and his acquisition of wealth, he never once ventured to come under an inquiry, but condemned himself to exile, and preferred to become a citizen of Thrace and any sort of city rather than belong to his own native land. Finally, gentlemen, he outdid his former villainy by daring, with Adeimantus, to surrender the ships to Lysander.The fact rather is that Alcibiades tried to warn the Athenian commanders of the danger of their being surprised at Aegospotami (405 b.c.
Lysias, On the Property of Aristophanes, section 14 (search)
When he was of age, he had the chance of marrying another woman with a great fortune; but he took my mother without a portion, merely because she was a daughter of Xenophon,One of the Athenian generals to whom the Potidaeans surrendered in 430 B.C. He was killed in a fight with the Chalcidians in Thrace, 429 B.C. (cf. Thuc. 2.70, 79). son of Euripides, a man not only known for his private virtues but also deemed worthy by you of holding high command, so I am to
Lysias, Against Ergocles, section 5 (search)
And to make matters worse, as soon as you had decreed that an inventory be made of the sums obtained from the cities, and that his fellow-commanders should sail home to undergo their audit, Ergocles said that there you were at your slander-mongering and hankering after the ancient laws,Which regulated the collection of tribute from the states subject to Athens down to the time of the Peloponnesian War. and he advised Thrasybulus to occupy Byzantium, keep the ships, and marry Seuthes'A prince of Thrace friendly to Thrasybulus. daughter:
Lysias, Against Diogeiton, section 6 (search)
and he also produced an account of his loans on bottomry, amounting to seven talents and forty minaeand two thousand drachmae invested in the Chersonese.In Thrace. This sentence is evidently defective. He charged him, in case anything should happen to himself, to dower his wife and his daughter with a talent each, and to give his wife the contents of the room; he also bequeathed to his wife twenty minae and thirty staters of Cyzicus.See Lys. 12.11, note.