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Cleonymus and had
He had unlawful intercourse with Chilonis, the young wife of Cleonymus, uncle of his father Areus.

Cleonymus and shield
* Cleonymus: A supporter of Cleon, he is immortalized in later plays as the coward who threw away his shield at the Battle of Delium in 424 BCE ( soon after The Acharnians was produced ).
* Cleonymus: An associate of Cleon and frequently a target in other plays, he is mentioned in lines 19, 592, 822 as the figment of a slave's dream, as a flattering patron of jurors and as the image of the image of the image of the hero Lycus, and each mention is in relation to a notorious incident in which he threw away his shield.

Cleonymus and retreat
Thus we have the story of his riding across a stick ( horse made of stick ) with his children and upon being discovered by a friend desiring that he not mention till he himself were the father of children ; and because of the affection of his son Archidamus ' for Cleonymus, he saved Sphodrias, Cleonymus ' father, from execution for his incursion into the Piraeus, and dishonorable retreat, in 378 BC.

Cleonymus and from
The son of Cleonymus quotes from it ( lines 1298-99 ).

Cleonymus and .
In 303 BC after a vain siege by Cassander, the island was occupied for a short time by the Lacedaemonian general Cleonymus of Sparta, then regained its independence and later it was attacked and conquered by Agathocles.
* The citizens of Tarentum seek the help of the Spartan general, Cleonymus.
* Cleonymus, a Spartan of royal blood who has been outcast by his fellow Spartans, asks the King of Macedonia and Epirus, Pyrrhus, to attack Sparta and place him in power.
* Cleonymus: An associate of Cleon and a notorious glutton, he is a frequent target for Aristophanes ' satire.
In 272 BC, Cleonymus, a Spartan of royal blood who was hated among fellow Spartans, asked Pyrrhus to attack Sparta and place him in power.
In 272 BC, Cleonymus, an important Spartan, invited him to invade Laconia.
Among those initially killed on the Spartan side were Deinon, a polemarchos ; Sphodrias, a general and a member of the king's council ; and his son, Cleonymus.
While still a prince, he was the eispnelas ( inspirer, or pederastic lover ) of Cleonymus, son of Sphodrias.
He was the father of Acrotatus I, the father of Areus I, and of Cleonymus, the father of Leonidas II.
It was this, together with the disappointment of not obtaining the throne, which led Cleonymus to invite Pyrrhus to Sparta in 272 BC.
Pausanias, in speaking of his death, calls him the son of Cleonymus, but he has mistaken him for his grandfather, mentioned above.
But some years later, 303 BCE, when Cleonymus of Sparta was in his turn invited by the Tarentines, the Metapontines, for what reason we know not, pursued a different policy, and incurred the resentment of that leader, who, in consequence, turned his own arms, as well as those of the Lucanians, against them.

conspicuous and figure
Albert's personal qualities won for him the cognomen of the Bear, " not from his looks or qualities, for he was a tall handsome man, but from the cognisance on his shield, an able man, had a quick eye as well as a strong hand, and could pick what way was straightest among crooked things, was the shining figure and the great man of the North in his day, got much in the North and kept it, got Brandenburg for one there, a conspicuous country ever since ," says Carlyle, who called Albert " a restless, much-managing, wide-warring man.
William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke ( 1580 – 1630 ), eldest son of the 2nd Earl and his famous countess, was a conspicuous figure in the society of his time and at the court of James I.
Calder spent much of his career in Edinburgh, where he became a conspicuous figure on the Scottish literary scene as a published poet and commentator on Scottish culture and politics.
In the stormy controversies of the time of Mary, Queen of Scots, and her son, James VI, Erskine was a conspicuous figure and a moderating influence.
She was a conspicuous figure at the court of King Charles I.
" The Times said, " Never a great actor, he was nevertheless always a conspicuous figure in the theatrical world.
As the last survivor of the Metternich school, he became towards the close of his life more and more out of touch with the trend of modern politics, but remained a conspicuous figure in the Upper House and at the annual delegations.
Wakisaka then joined the victor, Hashiba Hideyoshi, who had become a conspicuous figure as a retainer of Oda Nobunaga.
Don was also a conspicuous figure in the Component Object Model ( COM ) community, where he coined the phrase " COM is love.
He cut a conspicuous front-of-house figure, joking with customers at the bar, and patrolling the stage with little solo dances until the audience was settled.
" To his contemporaries his forty years of influential episcopate, his friendship with Origen and Dionysius, the appeal to him of Cyprian, and his censure of Stephanus might well make him seem the most conspicuous figure of his time " ( Wace ).

conspicuous and Athens
Themistocles was born in Athens around 524 BC, the son of Neocles, who was, in the words of Plutarch " no very conspicuous man ".
The power of drawing such lines is conspicuous in the decoration of red-figured vases of Athens.
* Cerameicon: Athens ' most conspicuous cemetery – Psithetaerus hopes to get a hero's burial there ( line 395 ).

conspicuous and had
The greatest source of trouble was rain which had repeatedly flowed from openings above, soaking the surface and leaving streaks of dissolved lime, very conspicuous even after cleaning, particularly in the `` Landing of Columbus '', `` Oglethorpe and the Indians '', and `` Yorktown ''.
Prasutagus had lived a long life of conspicuous wealth and, hoping to preserve his line, made the Roman emperor co-heir to his kingdom, along with his wife and two daughters.
According to the indictment, the five ordered Calvi's murder to prevent the banker " from using blackmail power against his political and institutional sponsors from the world of Masonry, belonging to the P2 lodge, or to the Institute for Religious Works ( the Vatican Bank ) with whom he had managed investments and financing with conspicuous sums of money, some of it coming from Cosa Nostra and public agencies ".
From 1825 until his death he was pastor of the First Church ( Congregational ) in New Haven, Connecticut, occupying a pulpit which was one of the most conspicuous in New England, and which had been rendered famous by his predecessors, Moses Stuart and Nathaniel W. Taylor.
Prior to the advent of the charismatic Rubini, every well-schooled opera singer had avoided using a conspicuous and continuous vibrato because, according to Scott, it varied the pitch of the note being sung to an unacceptable degree and it was considered to be an artificial contrivance arising from inadequate breath control.
The military sciences ' analysis of military history that had failed European commanders was about to give way to a new military science, less conspicuous in appearance, but more aligned to the processes of science of testing and experimentation, the scientific method, and forever " wed " to the idea of the superiority of technology on the battlefield.
Because some of his material was unclear whether it was intended for adults or children, the 1985 reprint had a conspicuous cover label, " A Primer for Adults Only ".
By the early 21st century, " heritage " had become a conspicuous industry.
They had fallen out with Sinclair, as well, and were conspicuous by not being allowed to play at the December, 1971, John Sinclair Freedom Rally to protest his incarceration on marijuana possession, even though they were at the gig.
Only Boomhauer was with Hank, and, unable to persuade the proprietor to ignore Hank's purchase, convinced him to put the tattoo in a less conspicuous place, the back of Hank's head ; Hank had completely forgotten that night, but was reminded of it while undergoing treatment for head lice in the present ( an affliction caused by Bill trying to meet the school district's head lice lady ).
The rangers were armed but their jobs had mainly involved enforcing hunting and firearms regulations, and in any case there was no reason for them to expect that the men who had been making themselves conspicuous by such a disturbance would actually be wanted escapees.
Victoria may have had much to do with the practice, owing to her long and conspicuous grief over the death of her husband, Prince Albert.
:" In dealing with foreign nations his mistake on this head was more conspicuous, because he had far less knowledge of the conditions of efficient action abroad than he had at home.
Her husband ( whose mission had been in abeyance and himself in Holland for three years ) was accredited to the French republic by the regent of Sweden ; his wife reopened her salon and for a time was conspicuous in the motley and eccentric society of the Directory.
Since 2004, the socialist Spanish government, which has been following a state-wide policy of removal of Francoist symbols from public buildings and spaces, has had an uneasy relationship with a monument that is the most conspicuous legacy from Franco's rule.
At an age when most of those who distinguish themselves in life are still contending for prizes and fellowships at college, he had won for himself a conspicuous place in Parliament.
These show a somewhat lighter brown bird than the Tahiti specimen, with no white spot behind the eye, a more conspicuous light rusty eye-ring, two white wing-bars and rusty secondary and primary coverts ; one of Latham's specimens had yellow legs and feet.
The Education Office of that day had to administer a somewhat chaotic system of government grants to local schools, and Lingen was conspicuous for his fearless discrimination and rigid economy, qualities which characterized his whole career.
Typically, the darker episodes had no denouement, each episode ending abruptly after a climax involving violence and death, often giving the episodes ( especially in later seasons ) a despairing and sometimes nihilistic feel, despite the trademark glamor and conspicuous wealth.
By September, in Ursa Major, it was becoming a conspicuous object in the evening sky as it approached perihelion: William Herschel noted that a tail 25 ° long had developed by October 6.
At Oxford he was as conspicuous a failure as he had been at Carlisle, and it was said by his enemies that he was made a bishop because he was so bad a dean.

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