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Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War 6 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 1-10 4 0 Browse Search
Diodorus Siculus, Library 4 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 11-20 4 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 11-20 2 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 11-20 2 0 Browse Search
Dinarchus, Speeches 2 0 Browse Search
Dinarchus, Speeches 2 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 1-10 2 0 Browse Search
Demosthenes, Speeches 1-10 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Demosthenes, Speeches 11-20. You can also browse the collection for Pydna or search for Pydna in all documents.

Your search returned 4 results in 4 document sections:

Demosthenes, On the Crown, section 69 (search)
No one will make that assertion. The only remaining, and the necessary, policy was to resist with justice all his unjust designs. That policy was adopted by you from the start in a spirit that well became you, and forwarded by me in all my proposals, according to the opportunities of my public life. I admit the charge. Tell me; what ought I to have done? I put the question to you, Aeschines, dismissing for the moment everything else—Amphipolis, Pydna, Potidaea, Halonnesus. I have no recollection of those places
Demosthenes, On the False Embassy, section 194 (search)
Philip bade him speak out, declaring with the easy generosity of youth that there was nothing he would not do for him. Thereupon Satyrus told him that Apollophanes of Pydna had been a friend of his, and that after his death by assassination his kinsmen in alarm had secretly removed his daughters, who were then children, to Olynthus. These girls had been made captive when the town was taken, and were now in Philip's hands, and of marriageable age.
Demosthenes, Against Leptines, section 61 (search)
You will grasp the situation best if you will reason it out for yourselves in this way. Suppose at the present day a party of those in power at Pydna or Potidaea or any of those other places which are subject to Philip and hostile to you
Demosthenes, Against Leptines, section 63 (search)
The men who betrayed Pydna and the other places to Philip—what prompted them to injure us? Is it not obvious to everyone that it was the reward which they calculated on receiving from Philip for their services? Which, then, ought you to have chosen to do, Leptines? To induce our enemies, if you can, to give up honoring those who become their benefactors on the strength of injuries done to us, or to impose a law on us which takes away some part of the rewards which our own benefactors are enjoying? I fancy the former. But that I may not wander from the present point, take and read the decrees passed in honor of the Thasians and the Byzantines. Decrees