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[25]
Meanwhile the Athenians, coming to the belief1 that the Lacedaemonians were again acquiring power on the sea, sent out against them Thrasybulus, of the deme Steiria, with forty ships. When he had sailed out, he gave up his plan of an expedition to Rhodes, thinking on the one hand that he could not easily punish the friends of the Lacedaemonians,2 since they held a fortress and Teleutias was there with a fleet to support them, and, on the other hand, that the friends of his own state would not fall under the power of the enemy, since they held the cities, were far more numerous, and had been victorious in battle.
Xenophon. Xenophon in Seven Volumes, 1 and 2. Carleton L. Brownson. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA; William Heinemann, Ltd., London. vol. 1:1918; vol. 2: 1921.
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References (6 total)
- Cross-references to this page
(4):
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), CONSTANTINO´POLIS
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), O´DRYSAE
- Sir Richard C. Jebb, The Attic Orators from Antiphon to Isaeos, Lysias: Forensic Speeches in Public Causes
- Smith's Bio, Thrasy Bu'lus
- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page
(2):
- LSJ, ἀντεκ-πέμπω
- LSJ, φίλος
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