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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 36 total hits in 12 results.
Ionia (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Laconia (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Messenia (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Mysia (Turkey) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Lesbos (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Helos (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Peloponnesus (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Aeolis (Turkey) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Patrae (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2
Eurysthenes, the elder of the sons of Aristodemus, had, they say, a son Agis, after. whom the family of Eurysthenes is called the Agiadae. In his time, when Patreus the son of Preugenes was founding in Achaea a city which even at the present day is called Patrae from this Patreus, the Lacedaemonians took part in the settlement. They also joined in an expedition oversea to found a colony. Gras the son of Echelas the son of Penthilus the son of Orestes was the leader, who was destined to occupy the land between Ionia and Mysia, called at the present day Aeolis; his ancestor Penthilus had even before this seized the island of Lesbos that lies over against this part of the mainland.
When Echestratus, son of Agis, was king at Sparta, the Lacedaemonians removed all the Cynurians of military age, alleging as a reason that freebooters from the Cynurian territory were harrying Argolis, the Argives being their kinsmen, and that the Cynurians themselves openly made forays into the land. The Cynur
Cnossus (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 2