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The Lacedaemonians, having appointed Pausanias, who had held the command at Plataea, admiral of their fleet, instructed him to liberate
the Greek cities which were still held by barbarian garrisons. And taking fifty triremes from the Peloponnesus and
summoning from the Athenians thirty commanded by Aristeides, he first of all sailed to
Cyprus and liberated those cities which still had
Persian garrisons; and after this he sailed to the Hellespont and took Byzantium, which was held by the Persians, and of the other barbarians some he
slew and others he expelled, and thus liberated the city, but many important Persians whom he
captured in the city he turned over to Gongylus of Eretria to guard. Ostensibly Gongylus was to keep these men for punishment, but
actually he was to get them off safe to Xerxes; for Pausanias had secretly made a pact of
friendship with the king and was about to marry the daughter of Xerxes, his purpose being to
betray t
Thereupon Cimon, not
satisfied with a victory of such magnitude, set sail at once with his entire fleet against the
Persian land army, which was then encamped on the bank of the Eurymedon River.In Pisidia, at least 125 miles from Cyprus. And wishing to overcome the barbarians by a stratagem, he manned
the captured Persian ships with his own best men, giving them tiaras for their heads and
clothing them in the Persian fashion generally. The
barbarians, so soon as the flee ge of his plans might occur.
And when the soldiers had all been gathered at the torch and
had stopped plundering, for the time being they withdrew to the ships, and on the following day
they set up a trophy and then sailed back to Cyprus,
having won two glorious victories, the one on land and the other on the sea; for not to this
day has history recorded the occurrence of so unusual and so important actions on the same day
by a host that fought both afloat and on l
Contents of the Twelfth Book of Diodorus
—On the campaign of the Athenians against Cyprus (chaps. 1-4). —On the revolt of the Megarians from the Athenians
(chap. 5). —On the battle at Coroneia between the Athenians and Boeotians (chap. 6).
—On the campaign of the Athenians against Euboea (chap. 7). —The war in Sicily between the Syracusans and the Acragantini (chap. 8). —The
founding in Italy of Thurii and its civil strife (chaps. 9-11). —How Charondas, who was
chosen lawgiver of Thurii, was responsible for
many benefits to his native city (chaps. 12-19). —How Zaleucus, the lawgiver in
Locri, won for himself great fame (chaps. 20-21).
—How the Athenians expelled the Hestiaeans and sent there their own colonists (chap.
22). —On the war between the Thurians and the Tarantini (chap. 23). —On
the civil strife in Rome (chaps. 24-26).
—On the war between the Samians and the Milesians (chaps. 27-28).
Chorus
Would that I could go to Cyprus, the island of Aphrodite, where the Loves, who soothe mortals' hearts, dwell, and to Paphos, fertilized without rain by the streams of a foreign river flowing with a hundred mouths. Lead me there, Bromius, Bromius, god of joy who leads the Bacchae, to Pieria, beautiful seat of the Muses, the holy slope of Olympus. There are the Graces, there is Desire; there it is lawful for the Bacchae to celebrate their rites.