- duty to
Charidemus and then went
north into
Thrace to the
court of its king, Cotys, who was his father-in-law (and an
enemy of Athens).
Charidemus, instead...
- hill
tribes of
Lycia and Pisidia. King
Darius III of
Persia executes Charidemus, a Gr****
mercenary leader living in
exile in Persia, for
criticising preparations...
- of the
mercenary commanders,
Chares and
Charidemus,
among others.
Chares escapes to the
Troad while Charidemus is
banished and
flees to Persia. The admiration...
-
Persian satrap Mausolus of Halicarn****us. See
Purim Euboean mercenary Charidemus recaptures the
Thracian Chersonese for Athens. He receives, from Athens...
-
Athenian general Iphicrates, and a new ally, the
mercenary commander Charidemus, who
married another daughter of Cotys. The
Athenians under their general...
- Lucian,
Dialogues of the Sea-Gods 301 ff (trans. Harmon) Pseudo-Lucian,
Charidemus 10 ff (trans. Macleod) Pseudo-Apollodorus,
Epitome 3. 3 (trans. Frazer)...
-
temple of
Athena Ilias. In 360–359 the city was
briefly controlled by
Charidemus of Oreus, a
Euboean mercenary leader who
occasionally worked for the Athenians...
- able
service of Cersobleptes' brother-in-law, the
Euboean adventurer Charidemus,
Cersobleptes was
forced to make
peace with
Athens and with his rivals...
-
management of
Thracian affairs is ****umed by the
Euboean adventurer,
Charidemus, who is
connected by
marriage with the
royal family, and who
plays the...
- Amores. Halcyon. Demosthenes. Podagra. Ocypus. Cyniscus. Philopatris.
Charidemus. Nero. Loeb
classical Library 432.
Translated by M. D. MacLeod. Cambridge...