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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 42 total hits in 11 results.
Rome (Italy) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Sicily (Italy) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Cyzicus (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Troy (Turkey) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
The ancient image of Athena Alea, and with it the tusks of the Calydonian boar, were carried away by the Roman emperor Augustus after his defeat of Antonius and his allies, among whom were all the Arcadians except the Mantineans.
It is clear that Augustus was not the first to carry away from the vanquished votive offerings and images of gods, but was only following an old precedent. For when Troy was taken and the Greeks were dividing up the spoils, Sthenelus the son of Capaneus was given the wooden image of Zeus Herceius (Of the Courtyard); and many years later, when Dorians were migrating to Sicily, Antiphemus the founder of Gela, after the sack of Omphace, a town of the Sicanians, removed to Gela an image made by Daedalus.
Xerxes, too, the son of Dareius, the king of Persia, apart from the spoil he carried away from the city of Athens, took besides, as we know, from Brauron the image of Brauronian Artemis, and furthermore, accusing the Milesians of cowardice in a naval engagement ag
Tiryns (Greece) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Persia (Iran) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Gela (Italy) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Athens (Greece) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Branchidae (Turkey) (search for this): book 8, chapter 46
Brauron (search for this): book 8, chapter 46