308 r N D
tions, .4ristotle’s account of,agrees
with that of Ephorus, 90.
Ctesias. always mentioned by Xris-
totle in terms of distrust, 220.
Cyclopes, the, 6.
Cypselidae, the. duration of their
power, 230.
Cypselus, said (in the Oeconomics)
to have taken the whole wealth
of his subjects by taxation, 225.
Cyrene, 243.
Cyrus, Aristotle’s account of, dif-
ferent from that of Herodotus,
221.
D.
Daphnaeus, of Syracuse, 199.
Darius, son of Xerxes, 220.
Dative of the instrument, IO, 136,
209; of the manner, 167; of
reference, 281 :-after T~Y ahjv,
I j8; after G&iv, 237 ; after
C;rfprf;wcl, 23s.
Delphi. revolution at, 19j.
Delphian Knife. 4.
Democracy, on!y accepted by Aris-
totle as a necessity, 143 ; is not
(AS Xristotle supposed) free from
the danger of dissension, 187.
I)cinosthcnes, quoted, (383.4),131 ;
- 201, 8j ; relates (460) that
the city repaid money borroived
by the Thirty, I 10.
in the Politics, 127, 141.
geography, 190.
Dcrdns, prince of Elimeia, 217.
Dialogueq suppressed, instances of,
Diodorus Siculus, ignorant of Italian
Diogenes Laertius, .. quoted, (v. ,. I,
4 -1 I, 73.
Dion? 221, 222, 223; said by Plu-
tarcli to have been made a Spar-
tan citizen, 81.
Dionysius the Elder, stories of the
escessive tasation imposed by
him on his subjects, 225; de-
scription of his character by Cor-
nelius Kepos, 228; duration of
his power, 231.
Dionysius the Younger, 209, 222,
223 ; description of his character
in the Aristotelian ‘Polities,’ 228;
duration of his power, 231.
Dionysius (of Halicarnassus), inen-
t1ons the great reputation of Theo-
dectes as a rhetorician, 21.
E x r.
Diophantus, 70.
Dislocations in the Politics, 36.
Dittographies, the so-called, in the
Dosiades, quoted, 89, 91.
Doxander, of Mitylene, not men-
Draco. proverbial for the seierity
Politics, 132.
tioned in Thucydides, 195.
of his legislation, 104.
n L.
Ecphantides, 302.
Egypt, effect produced by the an-
tlquity and sameness of, on the
Greek mind, 272.
Election, double, futility of, 66.
Elis, election ofthe Senate at, 203.
English constitution, the, the
growth of accident, 64.
Epaminondas, united the Arcadian
villages to form the city of Mega-
lopolis, 5, 44 ; his invasion of
Sparta, 80.
Ephoralty, the: the institution of,
attributed by Aristotle both to
Lycurgus and to Theopompus,
is, 224 : - Ephors, the ; mode
of their election unknown, 85.
Ephorus, agrees with Xristotle in
his account of the Cretan consti-
tution, 90: states that Zaleucus
fixed by law the penalties for
crimes, IO?.
Epidaninus, revolution at, ISj.
Epitadeus, said to have been the
author of the law at Sparta
alloxina the alienation of pro-
perty, c2, 83.
Eretria, war between. and Chalcis,
204.
Ethics, the Eudemian, quoted (ii.
- 4 21, 278 ; (vii. 9. 9: 4): 37 :-
the Sicomachean, quoted (i. I.
$I), I; (6. 41), 60; 16. $Z),
107, 184; (6. 4 IO), 46; (7.
5 21), 158 ; (8. 5 z), 252 :-(ii. 3.
IO), 229; (5. 0 I4), 114; (6.
12 ; (ib. 5 8), 165 ; (ib. $9), 3 :-
(iii. 5. S; 17), 39:-(v. 5. $11,
4j ; (ib. 4 II), 29 ; (ib. 4 171,
170; (6. 5 8), 11 ; (7. §,4!,
I04 ; (8. 5 I4), 17 :-(vi. 5. 4 5,
114; (8. $ I), 114; (IO. 4 21,
118; (13. $ I), IO; (ib. $ 81,
5 141, 28; (7. & 2, 3, 8, 111,