- battle.
Herodotus (7.226)
related the
following anecdote about Dienekes: ... the
Spartan Dienekes is said to have
proved himself the best man of all, the same...
- response,
though not in this form, was
variously attributed to the
soldier Dienekes or to King
Leonidas I. in
utero in the womb in
utrumque paratus prepared...
- the
original on 24
September 2015.
Retrieved 17
February 2008. Huurne,
Dieneke. 'It's like
carrying a
heavy box with many people.' A
study about the contributions...
- Thespians, the man who
proved himself best was a
Spartan Officer named Dienekes". The
brothers Alpheos and
Maron were also
honored for
their battlefield...
- See also "mtDNA from 55 hunter-gatherers
across 35,000
years in Europe".
Dienekes'
Anthroplogy Blog. 8
February 2016. Prüfer K,
Racimo F,
Patterson N, Jay...
-
fight them?"
Herodotus reports a
similar comment, but
attributes it to
Dienekes.
Xerxes sent a
Persian emissary to
negotiate with Leonidas. The Gr****s...
- (Gr****: Υπό σκιή, Ypo Skii). The
phrase is
attributed to the
Spartan soldier Dienekes, who on the eve of the
Battle of Thermopylae, was told by a
native of Trachis...
- an
extensive bibliography.
Dienekes (2005). "mtDNA of
early central European farmers".
Dienekes'
Anthropology Blog.
Dienekes summarizes and
reviews Haak...
- Polynikes, a
young Spartan warrior named Alexandros, and the
Spartan officer Dienekes.
Pressfield employs detailed descriptions of the
Spartan phalanx in battle...
- response,
though not in this form, was
variously attributed to the
soldier Dienekes or to King
Leonidas I. in
utero in the womb in
utrumque paratus prepared...