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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database



9587
Plutarch, Virtues Of Women, 252d


nanaid, "Come here, child, and, before you can realize and think, be delivered from this bitter despotism; since for me it is more grievous to look upon your undeserved slavery than upon your death." At this, Aristotimus drew his sword upon the mother herself, but as he was rushing at her in a rage, one of his intimate associates, Cylon by name, who was thought to be loyal to him, but really hated him, and was in the conspiracy with Hellanicus and the rest, intervened and turned him from his purpose by intreating him and saying that such action was ignoble and womanish


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aeneas Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
aristotimos of elis Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
clelia Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
courage Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
courageous Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
ethos Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
gender (see also identity,stereotypes),equality Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
nicocrates Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
plutarch,mulierum virtutes Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
plutarch Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
rhome Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
rome Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
sexes,relationship between Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
tiber Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
trojans Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
violence Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
virtue Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
ἀνδρεία Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248
ἄνδρες' Fabre-Serris et al (2021) 248