- Pan****enic Games, were four-horse (tethrippon, τέθριππον) and two-horse (
synoris, συνωρὶς) events.
Pausanias describes the
Olympic hippodrome of the second...
- father's name was
almost certainly Magas.
Lagus (son of Ptolemy),
winner in
Synoris Arcadian Lykaia 308 BC, may be a
relative of the
Lagus family. Smith, William...
-
Philadelphus and
winner of the 264 BC
Olympic Games in
tethrippon and
synoris. It is
generally accepted that the name
Bilistiche is a
Macedonian dialectal...
-
sports of the time were the tethrippon, the apene, the
synoris, the
tethrippon for foals, the
synoris for foals, the
perfect keles race, the
kalpe and the...
- Winner), 356 BC
Horse Race, 352 BC Tethrippon, 348 BC two-colt chariot,
Synoris 344 BC
Tethrippon Panathenaics Archon of
Pella 334–332 BC
Horse race Isthmian...
- Athena's owl
nestling on the neck of the vase and on the
reverse is a
synoris team. This may mean that the vase
predates the festival's reorganization...
-
dedicated to
equestrian races which gradually came to
include harness racing,
synoris (a
chariot drawn by two horses), a
chariot drawn by four horses, and racing...
-
Apene Chariot of
polos Decapolon Kalpe Keles Perfect chariot Polos Synoris Synoris of
polos Tethrippon Tethrippon of
polos Combat Boxing Pankration Wrestling...
-
comic poet Sophron,
Stadion Olympics 432 BC Tlasimachus,
Tethrippon and
Synoris Olympics 296 BC Andromachus,
Stadion Olympics 60 BC Sil**** of Ambracia...
- Kos
Eusebius 129 § 264 BC Colts'
Synoris Bilistiche Macedonia Eusebius and Pausanias, 5.8.11. 129 § 264 BC
Synoris Bilistiche Macedonia 130 § 260 BC...