C.
Cabirĭchus, 48.
Cadmeia, the citadel of Thebes, 8, 10, 12, 30, 51.
Cadmus, the founder of Thebes, 87.
Caesar, the Emperor Augustus (63-A.D. 14), 62.
Caligŭla, 233.
Callias, a rich Athenian, see the _Symposium_ of Xenophon and the _Protagoras_ of Plato, 95.
Callippus, 185.
Callistrătus, of Athens, 49.
Callistratus, archon of Delphi, 117.
Calondas, 199.
Capheisias, of Thebes, son of Polymnis and brother of Epaminondas; the chief speaker in the First Pythian Dialogue.
Caria, 13.
Carthage, Carthaginian, 91, 183, 184, 302, 316.
Carystus, on the S. coast of Euboea, noted for its marble and asbestos, 162.
Caspian Sea, supposed until Ptolemy to be an inlet of Ocean, though Herodotus describes it as an inland water (1, 202-3), 300, 305.
Cassander, 354-297, king of Macedon, began the restoration of Thebes in 315: 184, 197.
Cĕbēs, of Thebes, a companion of Socrates (see the _Critias_ and _Phaedo_ of Plato), 17, 35.
Cecrops, 182.
Cephisodōrus, 45, 47, 49.
Chaereas, 233.
Chaerēmon, an Athenian tragic poet (fl. 380), 104.
Chaeroneia, in Boeotia, on the borders of Phocis; Plutarch’s native town, 35, 121.
Chaldaeans, 62.
Charillus, 17.
Charon, a Theban patriot, 8, 9, 28, 29, 30, 32, 44, 45, 47.
Charybdis, 218.
Cheiron, the Centaur, instructor of Achilles, 65.
Chersonese, the Thracian, 183.
Chilon, one of the Seven Wise Men, 61.
Chios, 275.
Chius, 108.
Chlidon, 31, 44.
Cleanthes, a Stoic philosopher, b. 300, at Assos in the Troad, 264.
Clearchus, a Peripatetic philosopher of Soli, pupil of Aristotle, 260, 262.
Chonūphis, 13.
Chrysippus (280-207), the Stoic philosopher, born at Soli in Cilicia, 134, 146, 147.
Cilicia, 163, 205.
Cimmerians, 231.
Cimon, 183, 195.
Cinaethon, 107.
Cinēsias, dithyrambic poet of Athens (fl. 400), 232.
Cithaeron, the mountain range between Attica and Boeotia, 8, 43.
Clazomĕnae, a city in Ionia, 39.
Cleander, of Aegina, 99.
Cleisthĕnes, of Sicyon, 185.
Cleobulīnē, 95.
Cleobūlus, tyrant of Lindus in Rhodes, sixth century. One of the Seven Wise Men, 61.
Cleombrŏtus, of Lacedaemon, a speaker in the Third Pythian Dialogue.
Cleon, of Daulia, 169.
Cleōnae, a city in the Peloponnesus, 94, 185.
Cleonīcē, 189.
Cleotīmus, 99.
Clio, the Muse of History, 97.
Clotho, one of the Fates, 37, 308, 315.
Clytaemnēstra, 188.
Cnidus, a city of Caria, 14, 88, 122.
Conon, 7.
Copreus, 185.
Cora (Persephone), daughter of Demeter, 302.
Corax, 199.
Corcȳra, Corcyrean, 193.
Corētas, 161, 165.
Corinth, 51, 61, 83, 92, 94, 95, 224.
Corōnē (Crow), 122.
Corybantes, priests of Cybele, 306.
Corycium, the Corycian cave, on the slopes of Parnassus, 7-1/2 miles NE. of Delphi, and 3,500 feet above it (Pausanias x. 32, 2), 82.
Cosmos, i. e. Apollo, 67.
Crates, a Cynic philosopher (fl. 328), 94, 95.
Crates, a critic, of Pergamos (born at Mallus in Cilicia, fl. 155), 295.
_Cratylus_, a Dialogue of Plato, on etymology, 71.
Crete, 131, 200.
Cretīnus, 108.
Critias, of Carthage, 234.
Croesus, king of Lydia, d. 540 (see Herod. 1-3), 96, 192.
Crŏnus (Saturn), father of Zeus, 135, 138, 183, 235, 299, 300, 301, 306, 308.
Crotōna, a Greek colony in southern Italy, 21.
_Cyclops_, a satyric play of Euripides, 164; and see 193.
Cydias, an early poet, 282.
Cydnus, a river of Cilicia, 160.
Cylon, Cylonians, 21, 22.
Cymé (Cumae), a city on the coast of Campania, 90.
Cypsĕlus, of Corinth, tyrant 655-625, father of Periander, 94.
Cyzĭcus, a city of Mysia, 14.