472 



TRANS. ST. LOUIS ACAD. SCIENCE. 



Olymp. 



9 6.2 



104, I 



105, I 

 IO5, 2 



in, 4 



116, 4 

 "7. 3 



162, 4 

 212,3 



Seyf. I Pehiv. 



357 

 356 



356 



33o 



312 

 3^7 

 306 



126 



+73 



Historical Events and Eclipses. 



403 



394 

 393 



363 



359 

 358 



35S 

 332 

 33o 



3i4 

 309 

 308 



[ 5 m. 



Xen. 



Plut. 



Plut. Dion, 



Nic. 



(17) ©, Athens, Jan. 17, 2ih. 30m. Xen. ii. 3. 4. 

 Darius Nothus obit. Diod. xii. 104. Artaxerxes 



Mnemon reigns. 

 June— The Olympian games celebrated, Xen. ii. 3, 1. 

 July 2. Archon Eubulides. 

 (iS) © (/ui/voetd/'/g), Bceotia, Jan. 26, 22h. 



H. iv. 3, 10. 

 July 2. Archon. Timocrates. 



(19) © T., Thebes, Bceotia, May 12, 3h. 

 Pel. 31, P.3S9. 



July 2. Archon Callimedes. 



(20) O, Syracuse, Feb. 28th, 23b.. 15m. 

 c. 19, p. 2S6 R. 



July 2. Archon Agathocles. 



(21) J) T., Sicily, Aug. 9th, 6h. 45m. Plut. 

 Dion. 24. 



July 2. Archon. Nicocrates. 



(22*) J) T., Sept. 10th, 7h. 30m., referred to Arbela. 

 Ptolemy Geog. i. 4. 



July 2. Archon Aristophanes. The last year of Da- 

 rius Codomannus, succeeded by Alexander the 

 Great. 



(23) D P-, near Arbela, Aug. 29, 12 h. Cic. Div. i. 

 55 ; Arr. iii. 7, 6. 



Archon Nicodorus. (See p. 412.) 

 July 2. Archon Hieromnemon. 



(24) O T., near Syracuse, June 13, 21I1. 25m. Jus- 

 tin, xxii. 6; Diod. xx. 5. 



(25) ]), Athens, Oct. 14th, 1311.30m. Diog. Lae'rt. 

 iv. 9, 64. 



(26) © T., Chreronea, Bceotia, July 22d, 22I1. Plut. 

 vol. ix. p. 680 R. 



It is true, the succession of the archons in general is less reliable 

 than the epochs of the Olympian, Isthmian, and Pythian games 

 mentioned in history. For, e.g. the scholiast of Aristophanes Aves, 

 997, places Apseudes before Pythador I. in —430; the scholiast 

 of ^Eshines (p. 15 St., p. 740 R.) makes Nicephorus the predeces- 

 sor of Themistocles ; the Parian Marble counts, from Diphilus to 

 Pythador I. one archon more than Diodorus does ; the latter puts 

 all archons mentioned by Xenophon later by one year, whilst the 

 Parian Marble, in accordance with Xenophon, puts the archons 

 Antigenes, Micon, and Laches, one year earlier ; the same Dio- 

 dor puts Apseudes before Pythador I., and he (xiii. 7) inserts 

 between Chabrias and Cleocritus, in —411, Pisander, an archon 

 not elsewhere mentioned ; Pausanias names archon Charon four 



