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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:T.tolmides_1</requestUrn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="T"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="tolmides-bio-1" n="tolmides_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">To'lmides</surname></persName></head><p>(<label xml:lang="grc">Τολμίδης</label>), an Athenian general, who in <date when-custom="-455">B. C. 455</date> persuaded the people to send him with a fleet to cruize round the
      Peloponnesus, and ravage the enemy's country. If we may believe Diodorus, <bibl n="Diod. 1000">1000</bibl> men were voted to him, to be selected by himself; but he first prevailed on 3000
      to join him as volunteers, by assuring them that he meant at any rate to name them for the
      service, and, having thus secured these, he proceeded to act on the vote of the assembly, and
      chose 1000 more. In his expedition he burnt the Lacedaemonian arsenal at Gythium, took
      Chalcis, a town of the Corinthians, and disembarking on the Sicyonian territory, defeated the
      troops that came against him. According to Diodorus, he had previously captured Methone,
      which, however, by the arrival of Spartan succours, he was soon obliged to relinquish. He also
      took Naupactus from the Ozolian Locrians, and settled there the Messenians, who had been
      besieged and recently conquered by the Lacedaemonians at Ithome. After the return of Tolmides
      to Athens, we hear of his leading Athenian settlers (<foreign xml:lang="grc">κληροῦχοι</foreign>) to Euboea and Naxos; and in <date when-custom="-447">B. C. 447</date>, when
      the Boeotian exiles had returned and seized Chaeroneia and Orchomenus, he proposed that he
      should be sent at once with a body of volunteers to quell the rising. Pericles objected in
      vain to the expedition as hasty and ill-timed, and Tolmides, having carried his point, marched
      into Boeotia with 1000 Athenians and some allied troops, and took Chaeroneia, where he left a
      garrison. But near Coroneia he fell in with a force consisting of the Boeotian exiles who had
      gathered together at Orchomenus, some Locrians and Euboean exiles, and others of the same
      party. A battle ensued, in which the Athenians were utterly defeated, and Tolmides himself was
      alain, (<bibl n="Thuc. 1.103">Thuc. 1.103</bibl>, <bibl n="Thuc. 1.108">108</bibl>, <bibl n="Thuc. 1.113">113</bibl>; <bibl n="Diod. 11.84">Diod. 11.84</bibl>, <bibl n="Diod. 11.85">85</bibl>, <bibl n="Diod. 12.6">12.6</bibl>; Aesch. <hi rend="ital">de Fals. Leg.</hi> p.
      38; <bibl n="Paus. 1.27">Paus. 1.27</bibl>; <bibl n="Plut. Ages. 19">Plut. Ages. 19</bibl>,
       <hi rend="ital">Per. 16, 18.</hi>) </p><byline>[<ref target="author.E.E">E.E</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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