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[25]
But when Pausanias reached home he was brought to trial for his life. He was charged with having arrived at Haliartus later than Lysander, though he had agreed to reach there on the same day, with having recovered the bodies of the dead by a truce instead of trying to recover them by battle, and with having allowed the Athenian democrats to escape when he had got them in his power in Piraeus;1 and since, besides all this, he failed to appear at the trial, he was condemned to death. And he fled to Tegea, and there died a natural death. These, then, were the events which took place in Greece.
1 cp. II.iv.29-39.
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 (5 total)
- Commentary references to this page
(1):
- W. W. How, J. Wells, A Commentary on Herodotus, 6.72
- Cross-references to this page
(2):
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), TE´GEA
- Smith's Bio, Pausa'nias
- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page
(2):
- LSJ, κατηγορ-έω
- LSJ, ὑστερ-έω
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