Histories

Herodotus

Herodotus. Godley, Alfred Denis, translator. Cambridge, MA; London: Harvard University Press; William Heinemann, Ltd., 1920-1925 (printing).

Hearing the story of the lineage of the Minyae, the Lacedaemonians sent a second time and asked why they had come into +Laconia [22.583,37] (department), Peloponnese, Greece, Europe Laconia and kindled a fire. They replied that, having been expelled by the Pelasgians, they had come to the land of their fathers, as was most just; and their wish was to live with their fathers' people, sharing in their rights and receiving allotted pieces of land.

The Lacedaemonians were happy to receive the Minyae [*](As descendants of the Argonauts, who were Minyae of +Thessaly [22.25,39.5] (region), Greece, Europe Thessaly, living near the Pagasaean gulf.) on the terms which their guests desired; the chief cause of their consenting was that the Tyndaridae [*](Castor and Polydeuces.) had been in the ship's company of the Argo; so they received the Minyae and gave them land and distributed them among their own tribes. The Minyae immediately married, and gave in marriage to others the women they had brought from +Lemnos [25.25,39.916] (island), Lesvos, Aegean Islands, Greece, Europe Lemnos.

But in no time these Minyae became imperious, demanding an equal right to the kingship, and doing other impious things;