This index covers the translation and the Greek names in the footnotes and in the italicized prefaces to the chapters; it does not cover the two Introductions. References to Aristotle’s works, other than the Politics, are included; but Aristotle himself, who occurs passim, is not; nor, for the same reason, are ‘Greece’ and ‘Greek’, except when the ‘Greeks’ collectively are contrasted with ‘non-Greeks’.
Achaeans (round Euxine Sea), 459
Achaeans (of Peloponnese), 304
Achaeans (neighbouring Thessaly), 142
Adamas, 338
Aenos, 338
Agesilaus, 319
Agrigentum, 335n
Aleuadae, 317
Alexander the Great, 231, 269n.
Alcyone, 162
Amadocus, 339
Amasis, 92
Amyntas, 337
Amyntas the Little, 337
Anaxilaus, 355
Androdamas, 164
Andros, 145
Anntileon, 355
Antimenides, 218
Antissa, 304
Antisthenes, 213
Aphrodite, 143
Aphytaeans, 370
Apollodorus, 89
Apollonia (on Euxine Sea), 304, 316
Apollonia (on Ionian Gulf), 245
Archelaus, 337–8
Archias, 317
Archilochus, 410
Archytas, 468
Ares, 143
Argo, Argonauts, 214
Argos, 141, 143, 302–3, 308, 335
Ariobarzanes, 339
Aristogeiton, 337
Aristophanes, 111
Arrhabaeus, 337
Art of Rhetoric (of Aristotle), 333
Artapanes, 338
Asiatic, Asia Minor, 130n, 151, 218, 241, 410
Assos, 130n.
Assyrians, 339n.
Astyages, 339
Atarneus, 130–31
Athena, 470
‘Athenian Stranger’, 120
Athens, charge ‘of illegality’, 71n.;
Council; court of Areopagus, 160–61, 308, 353;
demagogues, 315;
democracy, 160–61, 303, 305, 308, 372;
mixed constitution, 160–61;
Mytilene, affair with, 307;
notables, depletion of, 303;
oath of juryman, 226n.;
ostracism, 302;
pipe–playing, 470;
political sentiment, variation in, 305;
property classes, 161;
public services, 152n.;
sea-power, 161, 249, 308, 407;
theatre grant, 131n.;
war-orphans, 135;
Attalus, 337
Ausonians, 418
Autophradates, 130–31
Bacchiad, 162
Bacchic, 475–6
Basilidae, 314
Camicus, 151
Carthage, 139;
‘colonies’ (?), 159n.;
commercial treaties, 196;
constitution assessed, 154–9, 256–8, 355;
faction, 320;
military inducements, 396;
trials, 170
Chalcedon, 127
Chalcis (of Euboea), adj. Chalcidian, 162, 241, 308, 355
Chalcis (of Thrace), adj. Chalcidic, 163, 305, 316
Chares, 316
Charetides, 89
Charicles, 315
Charondas, 58, 162–3, 268, 274
Chonians, 418
Cinadon, 319
Clazomenae, 305
Cleander, 355
Cleisthenes (of Sicyon), 353, 355
Cleisthenes (of Athens), 172, 372
Cleomenes, 303
Cleopatra, 337
Cleotimus, 316
Codrus, 353
Constitution of the Athenians (of Aristotle), 160n., 203n., 373
Corinth, 124, 162, 197, 214n., 316, 335, 344, 353
Cos, 311
Cotys, 338
Crataeas, 337
constitution assessed, 139, 141, 149–55, 159, 162;
education, 396;
sharing of property, 117;
slaves, 117;
social structure, 418
Cyme (of Aeolis?), 311
Cyme (of Italy?), 138
Cyprus, 337
Cypselus, Cypselids, 335, 345, 353
Cyrene, 371–2
Daedalus, 65
Damon, 472
Danaus, 375n.
Daphnaeus, 312
Darius, 338
Decamnichus, 338
Derdas, 337
Dexander, 307
Diagoras, 317
Diocles, 162
Diogenes Laertius, 132
Dion, 339–41
Dionysius I, 90, 224, 312, 316, 321, 335, 340n., 346
Dionysus, 83n., 446n., 469n., 475n.
Diophantus, 132
Dorian, 176, 242, 335n., 466, 474–5
Draco, 163
Ecphantides, 470
Elimea, 337
Ephesus. 350n.
Ephialtes, 161
Epimenides, 58
Equals, 319
Ervthrae, 314
Ethiopia, 245
Eubulus, 130–31
Eupatridae, 160
Euripides, 57n., 181n., 332, 338, 411, 462
Euryphon, 133
Eurytion, 317
Euthycrates, 308
Evagoras. 337
Gela, 355
Gelon, 302, 306n., 340–41, 353, 355
Gorgus, 353
Gyges, 245n.
Hades, 375n.
Hanno, 320
Harmodius, 337
Helen, 72
Hellanocrates, 337–8
Heniochians, 459
Hephaestus, 65
Heraclea (Pontica), 311, 314–15, 317, 408
Heracleides, 338
Heracleodorus, 304
Heracles, 214
Heraea, 303
Hermias, 269n.
Herodotus, 92n., 101, 150n., 214., 432n.
Hestiaea, 307
Hipparinus. 316
Hippias. 337n.
History of Animals (of Aristotle), 60n.
Homer, 58–9, 65n., 92, 129n., 185, 216–17, 227., 251, 438n., 456–7
Iberians, 396
India, 432
Iphindes, 317
Island.305
Isles of the Blest, 438
Istros, 314
Italus, 418
Jason, 181
Knights, 162
Lacedaimon, Laconia, Sparta:
agriculture, 117;
ambition, 147;
constitution assessed, 124–5.139–49 passim, 159, 237, 256, 258, 261–2, 354;
constitution compared with Cretan, 150–54;
education, see virtue, warfare and music;
Elders, 140, 146–7, 151, 153, 170, 316;
Ephors, 140, 145–6. 151, 170, 297, 344;
faction, 319–22;
finance, 145, 147–9. 152, 319,;
foreign policy, 269, 303, 322, 340;
naval commanders, 148;
peripheral populations, 140, 151;
polity, 140;
population, 144–5;
scrutiny, 147;
slaves, 115;
warfare, 148–9, 308–3, 396, 431 434–5, 459;
women, 142–3
Laconia, see Lacedaimon
Lampetic (gulf), 418
Lemnos, 90
Lesbos, 214
Leucas, 128
Leuctra, 144n.
Libva (Upper), 109
Locrians (Epizephyrian), 128, 162, 321
Lycophron, 197
Lvctians. 150
Lycurgus, 139–50, 160, 162, 268, 431
Lygdamis, 314
Macedonia, 231, 335, 337n., 396
Maeander, 241
Magnesia (on Maeander). 241
Magnesians (neighbouring Thessaly), 142
Malis, 275
Megarles. 338
Midas, 83
Miletus. 90, 134, 162n., 214n., 267n, 277, 312
Mithridates, 339
Mixo–Lydian, 466
Mnaseas, 307
Mnason, 308
Mole, 305
Musaeus, 404
Myron, 355
Mytilene, 163n., 218, 307, 338
Nature, 455
Naxos, 314
Nicomachean Ethics (of Aristotle), 57n., 59n., 60n., 77, 104n., 120, 138n., 178, 195, 201, 206–7, 225, 266, 329n., 389, 394, 427–8, 429n.
Notians, 305
Odysseus, 457
Oenophyta, 302
Oenotria, 418
Olympic (games), 162
Olympius (Zeus), 345
Olympus (the Phrygian), 465
Onomacritus, 162
Onomarchus, 308
Opicians, 418
Opus, 225
Oreus, 304
Orthagoras, 353
Oxylus, 370
Paches, 307
Partheniae, 319
Pausanias (of Sparta), 297, 320 435
Pausanias (of Macedonia), 337
Pausanias (the author), 150n.
Pauson, 466
Peisistratus, 312, 335, 337n;. 353
Peisistratidae, 337, 341, 345, 353
Pentacosiomedimnoi, 161
Penthilus, Penthilidae, 338
Periander (of Ambracia), 308, 337
Periander (of Corinth), 214, 336, 344, 345n.353
Perrhaebians, 142
Persia, education, 396;
foreign relations, 214 (cf. 344–5), 309, 335n.;
meeting–place, 424;
mode of preserving tyranny, 344–5 (cf. 214);
music, 462;
wars, 161, 303, 307–8, 320, 470
Phalaris, 335
Pheidon (of Argos), 335
Pheidon (of Corinth), 124
Pherae, 181
Philemon, 74n.
Philip, 337
Philolaus, 162–3
Philoxenus, 475
Phocis, 307–8
Phocylides, 267
Phoxus, 308
Phreatto, 290
Phrygia, 83n., 176, 242, 465n., 466, 474–5
Phrynichus, 315
Physics (of Aristotle), 56, 76, 393n
Pindar, 438n.
Plato, his writings and views on: administration, 424;
ambition and office, 147n.;
appointment of officials, 125–6;
citizenship, 407;
constitutional change, 351–2, 354–6;
constitutions in general, 239n., 257, 354–6;
constitution of the Laws (cf. polity), 402;
drinking, 163;
education, 51, 118, 121, 426, 441n., 444, 446n., 447n., 458, 461;
equality, see justice;
eugenics, 103;
family, 101–27 passim;
happiness, 113, 119, 393n;. 427, 429
justice, 72;n., 207, 210, 296;
legislation, 51, 118, 121, 225, 227n.;
Minos, 151n.;
modesty, 425n.;
moral intuition, 202;;
oligarchy, 124–6;
population, 122–4, 159n., 402;
property, communal, 101–26
passim, 163, 419, private, 127;
rulers and social structure, 118–19, 124, 178, 213, 220;, 243, 247–8 281, 407;
sea–power, 406–7;
Sicilian politics, 340;
soul, 467n.;
‘statesmanship’, 53;
territory, 122, 402, 405, 418–19;
thumos, 409;
tyranny, 125;
unity of state, 101–26;
utopianism, 107, 127, 139, 235, 389
virtues, 95, 123, 143n., 148–9, 393n., 394, 416n., 431;
wealth, 254
Poetics (of Aristotle), 446n., 466n., 473
Polycrates, 345
Polygnotus, 466
Problems (of Aristotle), 68n.
Protrepticus (of Aristotle), 391n.
Psammitichus, 353
Pythagoreans, 467n
Python, 338
Romans, 154
Sacred War, 308
Salamis (battle of), 308
Salamis (of Cyprus), 337n.
Sardanapalus, 339
Scylax, 432
Scylletic (gulf), 418
Scythia, 396
Sesostris, 418
Seuthes, 339
Sicily, 58n., 90, 151, 162, 335n., 355, 468n.
Simus, 317
Siritis, 418
Sirrhas, 337
Smerdes, 338
Socrates (see also Plato and Xenophon), 213n.;
in Plato’s Laws?, 120;
his views (as represented chiefly by Plato) on: communal life and unity of the state, 102, 104, 107, 116, 118;
constitutional change, 354–6;
music 474–5;
primitive state, 247;
rulers and social structure, 118–19;
‘statesmanship’, 53;
virtues, 95
Solon, 79, 84n., 128, 159–61, 203, 268, 269n., 443n.
Sophocles, 96n.
Sparta, see Lacedaimon
Spartiatae, 140, 144–5, 149, 319
Stentor, 404
Sybaris, 304
Syracuse, 74;
good constitution, 340;
spies, 345;
tyrannies, 224, 302, 304, 316, 321n., 335n., 339n., 340, 345, 353, 355
Tarentum, 249, 303, 319, 373, 375
Telecles, 277
Tenedos, 249
Thales (of Crete), 162
Thales (of Miletus), 88, 90–91
Thaletas, 162n.
Theagenes, 312
Thebes, 143, 144n., 162–3, l84, 302, 308n., 317, 379
Theodectes, 72,
Theodorus, 447
Thera, 245
Thetes, 162
Thibron, 435
Thirty Tyrants, 315
Thrasippus, 470
Thrasybulus (of Miletus), 214, 312n., 336
Thrasybulus (of Syracuse), 341, 353
Thrasymachus (the ‘sophist’), 72n
Thrasymachus (of Cyme), 311
Timoleon, 316n.
Timophanes (of Mytilene), 307
Timophanes (of Corinth), 316
Triopium, 151
Tyrtaeus, 319
Xenophanes, 458
Xerxes, 338
Zaleucus, 162
Zancle, 304
Zeugitae, 162