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Plutarch and Parallel
* Agis IV ( 265 BC – 241 BC ), a Spartan king ; Plutarch included a chapter on him in his Parallel Lives
* Plutarch Parallel Lives ( Aristides, Themistocles, Theseus ), On the Malice of Herodotus
Other noteworthy and famous Greek historians include Plutarch ( 2nd century AD ), who wrote several biographies, the Parallel Lives, in which he wanted to assess the morality of its characters by comparing them in pairs, and Polybius ( 3nd century BC ), who developed Thucydides's method further, becoming one of the most objective historians of classical antiquity.
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives ( Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans )
His earliest work was a biography of the Greek statesman Philopoemen ; this work was later used as a source by Plutarch when composing his Parallel Lives, however the original Polybian text is lost.
** Parallel Lives by Plutarch, particularly:
In his chapter on Romulus from Parallel Lives, Plutarch criticises the continuous belief in such disappearances, referring to the allegedly miraculous disappearance of the historical figures Romulus, Cleomedes of Astypalaea, and Croesus.
* Plutarch writes his Parallel Lives of Famous Men ( in Greek Βίοι Παράλληλοι ) containing fifty biographies, of which 46 are presented as pairs comparing Greek and Roman celebrities — for example Theseus and Romulus, Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar, Demosthenes and Cicero.
* Plutarch, The Parallel Lives, The Life of Julius Caesar
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives, Solon
Epaminondas was one of approximately 50 ancient figures given an extensive biography by Plutarch in his Parallel Lives, in which he is paired with the Roman statesman Scipio Africanus ; however, both these " Lives " are now lost.
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives ( Numa Pompilius ), v. 8. 6
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives, Life of Numa Pompilius.
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives ( Romulus, 14 – 20 )
* The Greek historian / biographer Plutarch of Chaeronea wrote the On the Fortune or the Virtue of Alexander the Great and " Life of Alexander " in his " Parallel Lives " series, paired with " Life of Julius Caesar "
* Plutarch, The Parallel Lives-The Life of Camillus:
Noteworthy in the Roman period were Strabo, a writer on geography ; Plutarch, the father of biography, whose Parallel Lives of famous Greeks and Romans is a chief source of information about great figures of antiquity ; Pausanias, a travel writer ; and Lucian, a satirist.
# PlutarchParallel Lives ; Moralia
However, Plutarch, who wrote about Eumenes in his series of Parallel Lives, mentions that it was about lodgings, and a flute-player, so perhaps this was an instance of some deeper antagonism breaking out into a quarrel over a triviality.
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives, Alexander, Eumenes
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives ; Themistocles, Aristides, Pericles, Cimon
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives
A third edition of his Plutarch was published, in 1603, with more translated Parallel Lives, and a supplement of other translated biographies.

Plutarch and Lives
* Plutarch " Lives "
* Plutarch, Lives, Bernadotte Perrin ( translator ), Cambridge, MA.
Most of these have been recorded by Plutarch ( Lives of Romulus, Numa Pompilius and Camillus ), Florus ( Book I, I ), Cicero ( The Republic VI, 22: Scipio's Dream ), Dio ( Dion ) Cassius and Dionysius of Halicarnassus ( L. 2 ).
* Plutarch ( Lives of Romulus, Numa Pompilius, Camillus )
Plutarch, on the other hand, was given to “ tendencies to stereotype, to polarize, and to exaggerate that are inherent in the propaganda surrounding his subjects .” Furthermore, because of the unlikelihood that Shakespeare would have had direct access to Plutarch ’ s Greek Lives and probably read them through a French translation from a Latin translation, his play, then, constructs Romans with an anachronistic Christian sensibility that might have been influenced by St. Augustine ’ s Confessions among others.
* Plutarch, Lives
The artistic unity of his work suffered severely from the frequent and lengthy digressions, of which the most important was On the Athenian Demagogues in the 10th book of the Philippica, containing a bitter attack on many of the chief Athenian statesmen, and generally recognized as having been freely used by Plutarch in several of the Lives.

Plutarch and Demetrius
A traveller called Demetrius of Tarsus related to Plutarch the tale of an expedition to the west coast of Scotland in or shortly before AD 83.
With Plutarch, with Herodes Atticus, to whom he bequeathed his library at Rome, with Demetrius the Cynic, Cornelius Fronto, Aulus Gellius, and with Hadrian himself, he lived on intimate terms ; his great rival, whom he violently attacked in his later years, was Polemon of Smyrna.
Information regarding the life of Demetrius are drawn mainly from inscription as only Plutarch writes of him, in Life of Aratus, and Polybius makes scarce mentions of him.
* Plutarch, Demetrius, Eumenes
Plutarch narrates transferrals similar to that of Theseus for the bodies of the historical Demetrius I of Macedon and Phocion the Good which in many details anticipate Christian practice.
Plutarch says that Demetrius " fought brilliantly and routed his enemy ".
See Lucian, Macrobii, 22 ; Plutarch, Demetrius, 39 ; Diod.
See also Plutarch, Demosthenes, Demetrius, Vitae decem oratorum ; J. G. Droysen's essay on Demochares in Zeitschrift fur die Altertumswissenschaft ( 1836 ), Nos.
Demetrius, according to Plutarch, arrived after Pyrrhus had retired, and when matters had been settled between Alexander and Antipater, Demetrius was now an unwelcome visitor, and Alexander, while he received him with all outward civility, is said by Plutarch to have laid a plan for murdering him at a banquet, a plan which was stymied by the precautions of Demetrius.
* Plutarch, Parallel Lives, " Demetrius ", John & William Langhorne ( translator ), ( 1770 )

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