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[4]
In this way many of the older men were killed; for it was they especially who chanced to be in the market-place; while the younger men, since Pasimelus suspected what was going to happen, had remained quietly in the gymnasium of Craneium. But when they heard the outcry and some had come to them in flight from the massacre, thereupon, rushing up on the slopes of Acrocorinthus,1 they beat off an attack which the Argives and the rest made upon them.
1 The citadel of Corinth.
Xenophon. Xenophon in Seven Volumes, 1 and 2. Carleton L. Brownson. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA; William Heinemann, Ltd., London. vol. 1:1918; vol. 2: 1921.
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References (3 total)
- Cross-references to this page
(1):
- Herbert Weir Smyth, A Greek Grammar for Colleges, THE CASES
- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page
(2):
- LSJ, ἀκρο-κόρινθος
- LSJ, ἀνατρέχω
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