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Vanderpool, Eugene ... American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... Hesperia 35.2 2 93-106 10.2307_147299 ... 1966 ... A Monument to the Battle of Marathon |
| Brescia. Sarcophagus relief: The Battle of Marathon. Negative made from museum photo ... AMS Horizontal (normal) ... Sarcophagus relief: The Battle of Marathon. |
| Kimon. Messene: herm at city gates. Kimonian herms. Metalwork, archaic Greek imitated in Roman times. Kleon, G. Quintus, marathonios, archon. Korai. Mikkiades. Miletos: archaistic dancers from theater ... Agora 11 183 ... Pallene, battle ... Marathon, battle ... Marathon epigrams |
| Lion guarding fountain. Menodoros. Lions, beneath throne. Menon. Livia. Metalworkers. Logistai. Meter. Logisteria. Metichos or Metiochos. Lokros. Meton. Lollianos. Metragyrtes. Long Rocks. Metronomoi ... Agora 3 254 ... Miltiades, of Marathon ... Marathon ... Naxos, battle of |
| Sv. 98.19-20. Pausanias 1.32.4. E. Vanderpool, A Monument to the Battle of Marathon, Hesperia 35, 1966, 93-106. W. Dindorf, Aristides III, Leipzig 1829, pp. 535-536. Sv. 97.32. Richter, pp. 96, 98. L ... Agora 26 123 ... Vanderpool, A Monument to the Battle of Marathon, Hesperia 35, 1966, 93-106 |
http://agathe.gr/guide/stoa_poikile.html Stoa Poikile Across modern Hadrian Street are the most recent excavations (2003), along the north side of the square. Here have been revealed the remains of another large stoa, identified on the basis ... Most famous, perhaps, was a picture of the battle of Marathon (490 B.C.) by Polygnotos. |
| Handbuch der Archäologie, im Rahmen des Handbuchs der Altertumswissenschaft, III, 1, Die Plastik, by Georg Lippold, Munich, 1950. Georg Lippold, Die Skulpturen des vaticanischen Museums, III, 1, 1936 (vols ... Agora 11 xvii ... Meritt, Benjamin D., "Epigrams from the Battle of Marathon," Aegean and Near East, pp. 268-280 ... Meritt, Benjamin D., "The Marathon Epigrams Again," A.J.P., LXXXIII, 1962, pp. 294-298 |
http://agathe.gr/democracy/the_athenian_army.html The Athenian Army From the very beginning, the Athenians were compelled to fight for their new democracy. Their dramatic victories over the Boiotians and Chalkidians in 506 B.C. led many to attribute Athenian ... This notion was greatly enhanced by the extraordinary victory of the Athenian army over the Persians at Marathon in 490 B.C. On numerous subsequent occasions, Athenian citizens were called upon to go into battle against other states, both Greek and foreign, most often against oligarchies and aristocracies, since the Athenians tended to ally themselves with other democracies. ... They went into battle protected by a helmet, breastplate, and greaves (shin guards), carrying a large round shield and long thrusting spear. |
http://agathe.gr/democracy/practice_of_ostracism.html Ostracism Soon after their victory over the Persians at the battle of Marathon in 490 B.C., the Athenians began the practice of ostracism, a form of election designed to curb the power of any rising tyrant ... Ostracism Soon after their victory over the Persians at the battle of Marathon in 490 B.C., the Athenians began the practice of ostracism, a form of election designed to curb the power of any rising tyrant. They were probably inspired at least in part by the fact that their old tyrant Hippias, who had been thrown out years before, accompanied the Persian fleet to Marathon, hoping to be reinstalled in power in Athens once again. |
http://agathe.gr/democracy/slaves_and_resident_aliens.html The Unenfranchised II - Slaves and Resident Aliens Also excluded from political participation were two other large segments of the population: slaves and metics (resident aliens). Slavery was common in ... Africans, like the peoples of many other races captured in battle, might become slaves in the Athenian state. ... The inscription on the plate praises Miltiades as beautiful but probably refers to a different Miltiades than the hero of Marathon. Neither slave nor metic played any direct role in the political life of the city; such activity was reserved only for male citizens. |
http://agathe.gr/democracy/tyranny.html Tyranny As happened in many other Greek states, a tyrant arose in Athens in the 6th century B.C. His name was Peisistratos, and after several unsuccessful attempts he seized power in 546 B.C. and ruled ... : Miltiades, future hero of the battle of Marathon against the Persians, and Kleisthenes, later to be the initiator of democratic reforms. |
| The Athenian Agora 24; Late Antiquity A.D. 267-700; Index; General Index; Longinus. The Athenian Agora 24; Late Antiquity A.D. 267-700; Index; General Index; Olympiodorus. The Athenian Agora 24; Late Antiquity ... Agora 24 148 ... The Athenian Agora 24; Late Antiquity A.D. 267-700; Index; General Index; Marathon Battle; Paintings of Battle of Marathon |
| The Athenian Agora; Volume 014; The Agora of Athens; The History; Index; General; Law Courts; Hellenistic. The Athenian Agora; Volume 014; The Agora of Athens; The History; Index; General; Lithos; See ... Agora 14 250 ... The Athenian Agora; Volume 014; The Agora of Athens; The History; Index; General; Marathon; Battle ... The Athenian Agora; Volume 014; The Agora of Athens; The History; Index; General; Marathon; In Heraclidae ... The Athenian Agora; Volume 014; The Agora of Athens; The History; Index; General; Marathon; Tomb |
| The Neolithic and Bronze Ages; Index; Kraters Mycenaean. The Neolithic and Bronze Ages; Index; Kraters Mycenaean; In Funerary Ritual. The Neolithic and Bronze Ages; Index; Mellink Machteld. The Neolithic ... Agora 13 280 ... The Neolithic and Bronze Ages; Index; Malthi; Early Helladic Battle Axe ... The Neolithic and Bronze Ages; Index; Marathon ... The Neolithic and Bronze Ages; Index; Marathon; Mycenaean Tholos |
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