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[4]

An interesting event occurred in connection with Agis's death. He had fought gloriously and fell with many frontal wounds. As he was being carried by his soldiers back to Sparta, he found himself surrounded by the enemy. Despairing of his own life, he ordered the rest to make their escape with all speed and to save themselves for the service of their country, but he himself armed and rising to his knees defended himself, killed some of the enemy and was himself slain by a javelin cast; he had reigned nine years.1 (This is the end of the first half of the seventeenth book.)2

1 The battle took place near Megalopolis, probably rather before than after Gaugamela (Curtius 6.1.21).

2 See the division of the book into two parts in the Table of Contents.

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