- Syracuse,
Sicily Heracleides, son of Lysimachus, a
Syracusan general during the
siege of
Syracuse in the
Peloponnesian War 415 BC
Heracleides, 414 BC, another...
- citizens. Its
leaders were
Heracleides (Heraclides) and Sosistratus. Some
scholars have
suggested it
possible that this
Heracleides could be the same as Agathocles's...
-
Heracleides (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης), also
knows as
Heracleides of
Tarentum (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης ὁ Ταραντῖνος) (fl. 212–199 BC) was an ancient...
-
Heracleides (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης) of
Alexandria was a Gr**** grammarian, who is
perhaps the same as the one whom
Ammonius mentions as a contemporary...
-
Heracleides (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης) was a
tyrant or
ruler of Leontini,
Magna Graecia, at the time when
Pyrrhus of
Epirus landed in Sicily, in 278...
-
Heracleides (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης) was a
rhetorician from Lycia, who
lived and
taught in
Athens and
Smyrna in the
second century AD.
Heracleides...
-
Heraclides Ponticus (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης ὁ Ποντικός Herakleides; c. 390 BC – c. 310 BC) was a Gr****
philosopher and
astronomer who was born in Heraclea...
-
government and
openly accused the
leading oligarchs,
Sosistratus and
Heracleides, of s****ing to
become tyrants.
These accusations were not successful...
- Chesnut,
Roberta C. (1978). "The Two
Prosopa in Nestorius'
Bazaar of
Heracleides". The
Journal of
Theological Studies. 29 (29): 392–409. doi:10.1093/jts/XXIX...
-
Heracleides (Ancient Gr****: Ἡρακλείδης) was an
architect in the time of the
Roman emperor Trajan, who is
known by two
inscriptions found in Egypt. Muratori...