- women", an
epithet for people. The
residents of
Sparta were
often called Lacedaemonians. This
epithet utilized the
plural of the
adjective Lacedaemonius (Gr****:...
- Πολιτεία),
known in
English as the Polity, Constitution, or
Republic of the
Lacedaemonians, or the
Spartan Constitution, is a
treatise attributed to the ancient...
- (which was more
characteristically known to its
contemporaries as "the
Lacedaemonians and
their allies"). By the late 6th
century BC,
Sparta was recognized...
-
biography of the
Spartan king
Agesilaus and the
Constitution of the
Lacedaemonians. The sub-satrap
Mania is
primarily known through Xenophon's writings...
- Two
ships of the
Royal Navy have
borne the name HMS
Lacedaemonian,
after an
inhabitant of the
region of
Greece also
known as Laconia: HMS Lacedemonian (1796)...
- In Gr**** mythology,
Hyacinthus (Ancient Gr****: Ὑάκινθος) was a
Lacedaemonian who is said to have
moved to Athens. In
compliance with an oracle, to have...
- Fidius). In
another account mentioned in Dionysius's work, a
group of
Lacedaemonians fled
Sparta since they
regarded the laws of
Lycurgus as too severe....
- World) the
Lacedaemonians say was
handed on to them by Orpheus, but in my
opinion it was
because of the
sanctuary in
Hermione that the
Lacedaemonians also began...
- on
Mount Parn****us. In one of the
early wars (740 BCE)
between the
Lacedaemonians and the Argives, the
Asinaeans joined the
former when they
invaded the...
- a concubine. He and his
brother Nicostratus were
worshipped by the
Lacedaemonians. Apollodorus, 3.11.1, f.n. 1 by
Frazer with
Scholiast on Homer, Iliad...