I.
Iadmōn, 192.
Ida, Mt., in Phrygia, 306.
Iêïus, ‘invoked with the cry iē! (or iē paion!),‘ i. e. Apollo, 76.
Ilithyia, 308.
Ilium (Troy), 166.
Indian, 140.
Ino, daughter of Cadmus and wife of Athamas, a tragic heroine, 190.
Ion Chius, a writer of plays, and anecdotist (fl. 450), 276.
Iphĭtus, killed by Hercules, who had stolen the oxen of his father Eurytus, 185.
Isis, 296.
Ismenian, a name of Apollo, 60.
Ismenias, a Theban of the popular party and Polemarch, arrested by Leontides, tried by a commission appointed by Sparta, on a charge of ‘medizing’, and executed (see _Life of Pelopidas_), 8.
Ismenidōrus, 20.
Ismēnus, the principal (most easterly) river of Thebes, 15.
Isodaités, ‘equal divider,’ a name of Dionysus, 67.
Ister, a Greek historian, or antiquarian, 100.
Ister, the Danube, 148.
Isthmus (of Corinth), Isthmian, 94.
Italy, 15, 21, 27, 88, 200.
Ithaca, 193·
Ixīon, 293.
J.
Jason, Tagus of Thessaly (d. 370), known as ‘Prometheus’; (see Plutarch _On getting advantage from enemies_, c. 6, p. 89 C, and Xenophon, _Hellenica_, 2, 3, 18) 23.
Jews, 231.