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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 61 total hits in 10 results.
Rome (Italy) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Macedonia (Macedonia) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Phocis (Greece) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Elateia is, with the exception of Delphi, the largest city in Phocis. It lies over against Amphicleia, and the road to it from Amphicleia is one hundred and eighty stades long, level for the most part, but with an upward gradient for a short distance quite close to the town of Elateia. In the plain flows the Cephisus, and the most common bird to live along its banks is the bustard.
The Elateans were successful in repelling the Macedonian army under Cassander, and they managed to escape from the claim to be of foreign stock, saying that of old they came from Arcadia. For they say that when the Phlegyans marched against the sanctuary at Delphi, Elatus, the son of Arcas, came to the assistance of the god, and with his army stayed behind in Phocis, becoming the founder of Elateia.
Elateia must be numbered among the cities of the Phocians burnt by the Persians. Some disasters were shared by Elateia with the other Phocians, but she had peculiar calamities of her own, inflicted by fate at the
Athens (Greece) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Greece (Greece) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Delphi (Greece) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Elateia is, with the exception of Delphi, the largest city in Phocis. It lies over against Amphicleia, and the road to it from Amphicleia is one hundred and eighty stades long, level for the most part, but with an upward gradient for a short distance quite close to the town of Elateia. In the plain flows the Cephisus, and the most common bird to live along its banks is the bustard.
The Elateans were successful in repelling the Macedonian army under Cassander, and they managed to escape from the d the Romans have given them the privilege of living in the country free and immune from taxation. They claim to be of foreign stock, saying that of old they came from Arcadia. For they say that when the Phlegyans marched against the sanctuary at Delphi, Elatus, the son of Arcas, came to the assistance of the god, and with his army stayed behind in Phocis, becoming the founder of Elateia.
Elateia must be numbered among the cities of the Phocians burnt by the Persians. Some disasters were shared
Arcadia (Greece) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Pontus (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Elateia (Greece) (search for this): book 10, chapter 34
Elateia is, with the exception of Delphi, the largest city in Phocis. It lies over against Amphicle r a short distance quite close to the town of Elateia. In the plain flows the Cephisus, and the mos yed behind in Phocis, becoming the founder of Elateia.
Elateia must be numbered among the cities ofElateia must be numbered among the cities of the Phocians burnt by the Persians. Some disasters were shared by Elateia with the other Phocians,Elateia with the other Phocians, but she had peculiar calamities of her own, inflicted by fate at the hands of the Macedonians. In , the son of Demetrius, reduced the people of Elateia to the utmost terror, and at the same time se reeks their freedom, promised to give back to Elateia its ancient constitution, and by messengers m Greece in my day, visited among other cities Elateia. Whereupon a certain Mnesibulus gathered roun Olympic festival.162 A.D In Runner Street at Elateia there stands a bronze statue of Mnesibulus.
T under Taxilus.
About twenty stades away from Elateia is a sanctuary of Athena surnamed Cranaea. Th
162 AD (search for this): book 10, chapter 34