The numerals refer to the books, the figures to the chapters.
ABDERITES Complain of the rapacity and cruelty of Hortensius, and redress is ordered by the senate, xliii. 4. Abelox, a Spaniard, contrives to put into Scipio's hands the hostages left by Han- nibal at Saguntum, xxii. 22. Aborigines, united to the Trojans, lose their king Latinus in battle, i. 1, 2. Abrupolis, an ally of the Romans, op- pressed by Perseus, xlii. 13. Charged by him as the aggressor, 41. Aburius, C., ambassador to Africa, xlii. 35.
plebeian tribune, xxxix. 4. Abydus, city of Mysla, besieged by Philip, xxxi. 14. Desperate resolution of the townsmen, 17. They kill their wives, children, and themselves, 18. The Rhodians insist on the Macedonian garrison being withdrawn, xxxii. 33. Which is made an article in a treaty of peace, xxxiii. 30. It is besieged by the Romans, xxxvii. 12.
Acarnania, xxvi. 24, 25, 26. Two Acarn- anians killed at Athens, for entering the temple of Ceres, which gives rise to the Macedonian war, xxxi. 14. Acerræ, city, admitted to the freedom of Rome, viii. 17. Sacked and burned by Hannibal, xxiii. 17. Rebuilt, xxvii. 3. Achaia, xxv. 15.
Achæans, assisted by Philip against the Ætolians, xxvii. 29. Gain a victory at Messene, 32. In a council at Sicyon they determine in favour of the Ro- mans, xxxii. 19, 23. Are declared free, xxxiii. 20. Proclaim war against An- tiochus, xxxv. 50; against the Lace- dæmonians, xxxviii. 32. Refuse audi- ence to the ambassadors of Perseus, xli. 25.
Achæron, river of Molossis, viii. 24.
-, or Acherusia, river in Italy, viii. 24. Achelous river, xliii. 21, 23. Achradina, see Syracuse. Acilius, historian, his work translated into Latin by Claudius, xxv. 39.
-, C., plebeian tribune, xxxii. 29.
Acilius, L., lieutenant-general, xl. 31, 32.
Glabrio, Man., plebeian tribune, xxx. 40. Commissioner of religious af- fairs, xxxi. 50. Plebeian ædile, xxxiii. 25. Consul, xxxvi. 1, 2, 3. Arrives with his army in Thessaly, 14. His proceedings in Greece, 15-20. When he defeats Antiochus and the Etolians at Thermopylæ, reduces Heraclea, xxii. 24. Reduces the Etolians to submis- sion, 28; and composes the affairs of Greece, 35. Takes Lamia and Am- phissa from the Etolians, xxxvii. 5. Triumphs, 46. Dedicates a temple to Piety, in which he places a gilded statue of his father, the first of the kind seen in Italy, xl. 34.
-, Q., commissioner of a colony, xxi.
Acræ, town, xxiv. 36; xxxv. 27. Acrillæ, city, xxiv. 35. Acrocorinthus, citadel, xxxvi. 49, 50. Actium, promontory, xliv. 1. Adherbal, defeated at sea by Lælius, xxviii. 30.
Adramytteum, city of Asia, in the plain of Thebes, celebrated by Homer, xxxvii. 19, 21.
Adria, Tuscan colony, v. 33; xxvii. 10; xxxiv. 45.
Adriatic Sea, i. 1; v. 33; xl. 21, 57. Adultery, punished by a fine, x. 31. Æbutia, Roman matron, xxxix. 11, 12. Æbutius, L., consul, dies of a pestilence, iii. 6.
Elva, M., commissioner of a co- lony, iv. 11.
Commence a practice of ornamenting the forum on festivals, ix. 40.
Eduans, people of Gaul, v. 34. Egates, islands, xxi. 10, 41, 49; xxii. 54, 56; xxiii. 13; xxx. 32. Egean Sea, xxxvi. 43.
Ægimurus island, xxix. 27. At the mouth of the harbour of Carthage, xxx. 24. Egina, island, xxvii. 30, 33; xxviii. 5; xxxi. 14-33; xxxii. 39; xxxiii. 17, 30; xxxvi. 42; xlii. 14, 18. Æginium, town, xxxii. 15; xxxvi. 13; xliv. 46; xlv. 27.
Ægium, sea-port, xxviii. 7, 8; xxxv. 26, 47, 48.
Ælius, C., prætor, xxxii. 26. tribune, xli. 1, 4. Pætus, L., plebeian ædile, x. 23. P. one of the first plebeian quæstors, iv. 54.
P., prætor, xxx. 17, 21. Ambassa- dor to Antiochus, xxxiv. 59.
Pætus, P., consul, viii. 15. Master of horse, resigns on his election appear- ing faulty, ix. 7. Augur, x. 9.
-, P., prætor, xxix. 38. Com- missioner of lands, xxxi. 4. Of a co- lony, xxxii. 2. Censor, 7. Augur, xli. 21.
Ligus, P., consul, xlii. 9; xlv. 17. Tubero, P., prætor, xxx. 40. Com- missioner of a colony, xxxv. 9. Com- missioner to Asia, xxxvii. 55.
Pætus, Q., xxii. 35; xxiii. 21; xli.
Tubero, Q., historian, iv. 23; x. 9. plebeian tribune, xxxiv.
53; xxxv. 9. Q., charged by the consul with the care of Perseus when a prisoner, xlv. 8. Pætus, Sex., xxxii. 2. Consul, 7. Censor, xxxiv. 44; xxxv. 8.
T., military tribune, xli. 1, 4.
Emilia, wife of Scipio Africanus, xxxviii. 57.
Emilian law, ix. 33, 34.
tribe, xxxviii. 36. portico, xli. 27.
Emilius, consul, compels Cleonymus to re-embark, x. 2.
-, C., consular tribune, v. 26. second time, 32.
-, L., consul, ii. 42. A second time, 49. A third, 54.
consular tribune, vi. 1. A second time, 5. A third, 21. A fourth, 22. A fifth, 32.
-, interrex, vii. 17. Being again interrex, he holds the election of consuls, viii. 23.
Mamercinus, L., consul, vii. 1. Master of horse, 21. Regillus, L., commander of the
A second time, 3.
fleet employed against Antiochus, xxxvii. 1, 14. Defeats the enemy's fleet, 29, 30. Triumphs, 58. See xl. 52.
Emilius Mamercinus, L., master of horse, vii. 39. Consul, viii. 1. Dictator, 16. A second time consul, 20. Again dic- tator, ix. 21.
Scaurus, L., xxxvii. 31.
Paullus, L., commissioner of a colony, xxxiv. 45. Edile, xxxv. 10. Prætor, 24. Commissioner to settle the affairs of Asia, xxxvii. 55. Defeats the Lusitanians, 57. Consul, xxxix. 56. Proconsul, triumphs over the Ligurians, xl. 28. A second time consul, xliv. 17. His conduct in the war against Perseus, 13-42. When he gains a complete vic- tory, he receives Perseus with courtesy, xlv. 7. He, with fifteen commissioners, adjusts the affairs of Macedonia, 29. Exhibits games at Amphipolis with ex- traordinary magnificence, 32. Tri- umphs over Perseus, and loses his two sons, 40. L., ambassador to Carthage,
Paullus, L., a second time con- sul, xxii. 35. Is slain at Cannæ, xxiii. 21.
—, Mamercus, consular tribune, iv. 16. Dictator, 17. Triumphs over the Veians, 20. A second time dictator, 23. He shortens the term of the censorship, 24. A third time dictator, 31. He tri- umphs over the Veians, 34.
-, Manius, consul, iv. 53. Con- sular tribune, 61. A second time con- sul, v. 1. A third time consular tri- bune, 10.
Man., consular tribune, v. 32. Papirius, Man., dictator, ix. 7. Paullus, Man., master of horse,
Man., ambassador to king Phi- lip, xxxi. 18. Consul, xxxviii. 42. Cen- sor and chief pontiff, xl. 45. Chosen a third time prince of the senate, xliii. 15. Emus, xl. 21, 22.
Enaria, island, viii. 22. Æneas, i. 1, 2.
Sylvius, third king of Alba, i. 3. Equi, or Equicolæ, i. 3. They invade Latium, ii. 30. Are defeated, 31. A quarrel, and furious battle, between them and the Volscians, 40. They make war on the Romans, and harass the Latins, 48, 53, 58. Are conquered, 60. Are defeated by Servilius, iii. 2. Again, 3. Again, 5. In conjunction with the Volscians, they ravage the lands of the Romans and Hernicians, 6. Are routed by Lucretius, 8. Seize the citadel of Tusculum, and suffer a severe over- throw, 23. Obtain peace, 24. Sur- round the consul Minucius in his camp,
26. Are surrounded and sent under the yoke, by Q. Cincinnatus, dictator, 28. Are again defeated, 31. They defeat a Roman army, 42; after several losses in battle, 60, 61, 70; iv. 26. They ob- tain a truce of eight years, 30. They join the Lavicans, and waste the lands of Tusculum, 45. Are driven out of that country, 47; and from Vola, 49. Attack Lavici, v. 16. Are compelled to retire with loss, 28. fate at Vitellia, 29, entirely cut off in battle, ix. 45; and are finally subdued by C. Junius, dictator, x. 1. How they were enabled to recruit their armies, v. 12.
Suffer the same 31. Are almost
Equimælium, iv. 16; xxiv. 47; xxxviii.
Ærarii facti, disfranchised, iv. 24. Es grave, iv. 41, 60. Eneates, people, xl. 4.
Enus, town, declared free, xxxvii. 60; xxxix. 33; xlv. 20.
Æolis, country, xxxiii. 38; xxxiv. 58; XXXV. 16; xxxvii. 8, 35. Esculapius, brought from Epidaurus to Rome, xxix. 11. His temple adorned with pictures by Lucretius, xliii. 4. Æsula, its citadel, xxvi. 9. Ætna, mount, xxvi. 29.
Ætolians, form an alliance with the Ro- mans, xxvi. 24. Make war on Mace- donia and Acarnania, 25. Ravage Achaia, xxvii. 29. Are defeated by Philip, 30. Dislodged from Thermo- pylæ, xxviii. 7. Make peace with him, xxix. 12. Solicit the aid of Antiochus, Philip, and Nabis, against the Romans, XXXV. 12. Openly declare war, 33; and seize Demetrias, 34. Are defeated, to- gether with Antiochus, at Thermopylæ, by Acilius, xxxvi. 19. Sue for peace, 27. Obtain a truce, 28. Renew hos- tilities, 29. Obtain peace, xxxviii. 11. Their internal commotions, xli. 25. The parties reconciled, xlii. 5. Afranius Stellio, C., prætor, xxxix. 23. Deputed to Perseus, xliii. 18. Africa furnished with a strong army by Hannibal, xxi. 22. The consul, Ser- vilius, is unsuccessful there, xxii. 31. It is ravaged by M. Valerius Messala, xxvii. 5. Scipio goes into Africa, xxix. 26, 27. See Scipio, Hannibal. African wind, xxvi. 41; xxx. 24. Agathocles, king of Syracuse, went into Africa, xxviii. 43.
Agathyrna, town in Sicily, filled with mis- creants, xxvi. 40; xxvii. 12. Agesipolis, rightful heir to the crown of Lacedæmon, an exile, xxxiv. 26. Aglaspides, a band of soldiers, xliv. 41. Agrians, xxviii. 5; xxxlii. 18; xlii. 51. Agrigentum, xxiv. 35; xxv. 23. Is sur- rendered to the Romans, xxvi. 40; xxxvi. 2.
Agrarian law, first proposed by Cassius, ii. 41. Disputes concerning it, iii. 1; iv. 48; vi. 11, &c. Agrippa, king of Alba, i. 3. Aius Locutius, v. 50.
Alabanda, xxxiii. 2; xxxviii. 13. Ala- bandans inform the senate, that they had built a temple to the city of Rome as a deity, and instituted games in hon- our of it, xliii. 6.
Alba Longa, built by Ascanius, i. 3. De- molished, 29.
Alba Sylvius, fifth king of Alba, i. 3.
-, a colony among the Æquans, x. 1. Alban lake, v. 15, 22. Albans, wage war with the Romans, i. 1, 22, 23. Combat of the Horatii and Cu- riatii, 24. Mettius punished, 28. Al- bans removed to Rome, 29. Their chiefs brought into the senate, 30. Albinius, L., carries the vestal virgins in a waggon to Cære, v. 40.
M., plebeian consular tribune,
vi. 30. Albius Calenus, C., a leader of the mu- tiny at Sucro, xxviii. 24. Put to death,
Albula, old name of the Tiber, i. 3. Alcis, Minerva so called, xlii. 51. Alexamenus, Ætolian, xxxv. 34, 35. Alexander, Ætolian chief, xxxv. 34, 35. king of Epirus, comes into
Italy, viii. 3. Makes peace with the
Romans, 17. His actions and death, 24. His wife sister to Alexander the Great. the Great, contemporary with the preceding, viii. 3. Compared with the Roman generals of that age, ix. 17,
son of Perseus, xlii. 52. of Beræa, xl. 24.
Ætolian, a man of eloquence,
of Megalopolis, father-in-law of Amynander, pretends to be a de- scendant of Alexander the Great, and is led into hopes of the crown of Mace- donia, xxxv. 48.
Alexandria in Egypt, founded, viii. 24. Besieged by Antiochus, xliv. 19. Re- lieved by Roman ambassadors, xlv. 12. - in Troas, xxxv. 42; xxxvii.
35. Algidum mount, iii. 2-68; iv. 26; v. 31; xxi. 62; xxvi. 9.
Allia river, v. 37; vi. 28; vii. 13; xxxviii.
Allienus, L., plebeian ædile, iii. 31. Allifæ, viii. 25; ix. 38.
Allucius, Celtiberian prince, receives his spouse from Scipio, xxvi. 50. Alopeconnesus, xxxi. 16.
Alorcus and Alcon mediate between Han-
nibal and the Saguntines, xxi. 12, 13. Alps, i 1. First passed by the Gauls,
Ambassadors, ought to be considered as inviolable, ii. 4. Ambassadors from enemies were admitted to audience in the temple of Bellona, xxx. 22. Ambigarus, king of the Celts, v. 34. Ambracia, xxxii. 15. Besieged by M. Fulvius, xxxviii. 4. Surrendered, 9. Ambracian gulf, xxiii. 14; xliii. 21. Amiternian lands, xxi. 6. The inhabit- ants promise soldiers to Scipio, xxviii. 45.
Amphilochia, xxxviii. 7.
Amphilochus, worshipped at Eropus, Xxxviii. 5.
Amphipolis, xl. 24, 56, 57; xliv. 43. The inhabitants refuse to give refuge to Perseus, 45.
Amphissa, xxxvii. 5.
Amulius, dethrones his brother Numitor, i. 3. Is slain, and Numitor restored, 5, 6.
Amynander, king of Athamania, xxvii.
30; xxix. 12. Joins the Romans, and wastes Thessaly, xxxii. 14. Seizes Pel- linæum, xxxvi. 10.
Amyntas, king of Macedonia, father of Philip, xxxviii. 34; xlv. 9.
Anagnia, xxvi. 23; xxvii. 4; xxix. 14; xliii. 13; xlv. 16.
Anapus river, xxiv. 36.
Ancilia, the sacred shields that fell from heaven, i. 20; v. 52.
Ancius, Sp., Roman ambassador, slain by order of Tolumnius, iv. 17.
Ancus, king of Rome, his acts, i. 32, 33. Death, 35.
Andranodorus, son-in-law of Hiero, king
of Syracuse, and guardian of his son Hieronymus, xxiv. 4. Seizes the island and citadel, 21. Is made prætor, 23. Slain, 24.
Androcles, Macedonian ambassador to the Acarnanians, xxxiii. 16.
Andros, island, xxxi. 15. Taken by the Romans, and bestowed on Attalus, xxxi. 45; xxxii. 16; xxxvi. 20. Androsthenes, Macedonian commander of a garrison in Corinth, obliges Quintius and Attalus to raise the siege, xxxii. 23. Is defeated by the Achæans, xxxiii. 14. Again, 15.
Anicius, L., prætor, xliv. 17.
against Gentius, 30. His clemency and justice, 31. Recovers the Roman am- bassadors seized by Gentius, 32. Re- turns victorious to Rome, xlv. 34. Leads Gentius and his family in triumph, 43.
Anio, river, i. 27, 36; iv. 17; vi. 42; Xxx. 28.
Annals of the magistrates, ix. 18. An- cient annals confused, ix. 15. Uncer- tain, 44, 45; x. 2, 17. Inconsistent, 30.
Annius, L., prætor of the Latins, sum- moned to Rome, viii. 3. Demands that one consul, and half the senate of Rome, may be chosen out of Latium, 5.
T., commissioner of a colony, flies to Mutina from an insurrection of the Boians, xxi. 25.
Luscus, T., xlii. 25. Antemnatians, i. 9, 11. Antenor, Trojan, i. 1.
-, admiral of Perseus's fleet, xliv. 28; xlv. 10.
Antesignani, xxii. 5; xxvii. 18. Antians, make war on the Romans, vi. 6. Are conquered, 8. Renew hostilities, viii. 1. Their ships are taken from them, with the prows of which the pul- pit in the forum is ornamented, 14. Hence called Rostrum.
Anticyra, island, taken by the Romans, and delivered to the Etolians, xxvi. 26; xxviii. 28. Antigonia, xliii. 23.
Antigonus, son of Echecrates, xl. 54. In- forms Philip, king of Macedonia, of the crimes of Perseus against Demetrius, 55. Destined to the throne by Philip, 56. Slain by Perseus, 58.
Antimachus, Macedonian commander of the holy brigade, xlii. 46. Antinous, xlv. 26.
Antiochia, xxxv. 13; xxxviii. 13; xli. 20; xlii. 18.
Antiochus, king of Syria, in league with Philip of Macedonia, xxxi. 14. En- deavours to make himself master of all Asia, xxxiii. 38. Is solicited by the Ætolians to join in alliance against the Romans, xxxv. 12. A conference be- tween his minister and ambassadors from Rome, 16. He passes over to Europe, 43. Makes a vain attempt on Chalcis, 46. Gains possession of it, 51. Solicits the states of Greece, xxxvi. 5. Rejects the advice of Hannibal, 8. At the approach of the Romans, raises the siege of Larissa, 10. Marries at Chalcis, 11. Is defeated at Thermopylæ, 18, 19; and driven out of Greece, 21. Instigated by Hannibal, he prepares to renew the war, 41. Proposes a treaty of peace, which is rejected by Æmilius, Xxxvii. 19. His fleet is defeated by the Rhodians, 23, 24. Again by the Romans, 30. He makes overtures for peace, and sends back the son of Scipio Africanus, who was a prisoner in his hands, 34. The treaty is broken off, and his offers to Scipio rejected, 35, 36. He is finally
Apollinarian games, their origin, xxv. 12. Vowed perpetual, xxvii. 23; xxx. 38. circus, iii. 63.
Apollo Pythius, consulted, i. 56; v. 15. A tenth of the spoil offered to him, 23. A golden vase sent to Delphi, 25. See iv. 25; v. 13, 15; vii. 20; xxiii. 11; xxv. 12; xxix. 10, &c. Apollo's promontory, xxx. 24. Apollodorus, xxxv. 50.
Apollonia attacked by Philip, xxiv. 40; xxvi. 25; xxix. 12. Apollonius, commander of the Syrian fleet, Xxxvii. 23. Apparitors, i. 40; iii. 38.
Appeal to the people established by law,
ii. 8; iii. 55; x. 9. Not allowed from a dictator, ii. 18, 29. Nor from the de- cemvirs, iii. 22. Nor at a greater dis- tance from the city than one mile, iii. 20. Submitted to by a dictator, ii. 18, 29.
Appian road made, ix. 29; xxii. 15; xxvi. 8.
Appuleius, L., plebeian tribune, prose- cutes Camillus, v, 32.
Saturninus, C., commissioner
of a colony, xlv. 13, 44.
Q., consul, x. 6.
Apronius, C., plebeian tribune, iii. 54. Apsus river, xxxi. 27.
Apulia, vi. 42; vii. 26; ix. 2, 12, &c. Apulians, form an alliance with the Ro- mans, viii. 25. Revolt to the Car- thaginians, xxii. 61.
Archidamus, Ætolian general, xxxii. 4; XXXV. 48; xliv. 43.
Archimedes, the famous mathematician, baffles the attacks of the Romans on Syracuse, xxiv. 34. Is slain, xxv. 31. Ardea, besieged by Tarquinius Superbus, i. 57. In a dispute between the Ardeans and Aricians, the Romans make a scan- dalous decision, iii. 71, 72. The Ar- deans revolt, iv. 1. The alliance is renewed with them, 7. A colony led to Ardea, 11. The Ardeans, under the command of Camillus, attack the Gauls, v. 43.
Arennius, C. and L., plebeian tribunes, xxvii. 6.
L., prefect or general of the allies, xxvii. 26, 27. Arethusa, fountain, xxv. 30.
Argei, places appointed for the perform- ance of sacrifices, i. 21.
Argiletum, hill, adjacent to Rome, i. 19. Argithea, xxxviii. 2. Argos, xxxiv. 25.
Betrayed to Philip, and given in trust to Nabis, xxxii. 38. Robbed by him and his wife, 40. fruitless attempt to deliver it, xxxiv. 25. It is taken by the Romans, and given up to the Achæans, xxxiv. 41. Argos of Amphilochia, xxxviii. 10. Ariarathes, king of Cappadocia, assists Antiochus, xxxvii. 40. Is fined, and admitted into alliance by the Romans, xxxviii. 39. Sends his son to Rome to be educated, xlii. 19. Aricea, i. 50; ii. 14, 26.
Ariminum, xxi. 51; xxiv. 44. As a pro- vince, xxviii. 38.
Aristænus, Achæan prætor, xxxii. 19, 20. Aristo, actor of tragedies, xxiv. 24.
-, Tyrian, sent, by Hannibal, to Carthage, xxxiv. 61.
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