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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 63 total hits in 12 results.
Arcadia (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Lacedaemon (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Archidamus left sons when he died, of whom Agis was the elder and inherited the throne instead of Agesilaus. Archidamus had also a daughter, whose name was Cynisca; she was exceedingly ambitious to succeed at the Olympic games, and was the first woman to breed horses and the first to win an Olympic victory. After Cynisca other women, especially women of Lacedaemon, have won Olympic victories, but none of them was more distinguished for their victories than she.
The Spartans seem to me to be of all men the least moved by poetry and the praise of poets. For with the exception of the epigram upon Cynisca, of uncertain authorship, and the still earlier one upon Pausanias that Simonides wrote on the tripod dedicated at Delphi, there is no poetic composition to commemorate the doings of the royal houses of the Lacedaemonians.
In the reign of Agis the son of Archidamus the Lacedaemonians had several grievances against the people of Elis, being especially exasperated because they were debarred
Aegospotami (Turkey) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Elis (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Attica (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Athens (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Olympia (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Delphi (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
Heraea (search for this): book 3, chapter 8
413 BC (search for this): book 3, chapter 8