Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.5, 1865).djvu/594

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586 INDEX. iv. 42S, 431 ; Cicero, v. 76 ; Anto- ny, V. 1 78. Sextus Pompeius, younser son of Pompey, Cato the Younijer, iv. 427 ; Antony, v. 184, 185, 18'J, 209. Sextus Pompeius, nepliew of Pom- pey, Cato the Younger, iv. 373. QuiNTUS PoMPKius, oonsul with Syl- la (88 B.C.), Sylla, iii. 149, 152. PoMPKius, opponent of Gracchus, Ti. Gracchus, iv. 521. I'oMPiLiA, daughter of Numa, Kuma, i. 156, 157. PoMPiLius. See Numa. PoMPO, son of Numa, ancestor of the Pomponii, Numa, i. 156. PoMPo.vi.4, wife of Quintus Cicero, Cicero, v. 87. PoMPONius, father of Numa, Numa, i. 130. The Pomponii, Numa, i. 156. PoMPONius, praetor in the year of the battle of Tlirasymene, Fabius, i. 375. PoMPOXius, friend of C. Gracchus, C. Gracchus, iv. 549. PoMPONius, taken by Mithi-idates, Lu- cuUus, iii. 245. Pontius, Sylla, iii. 178. Pontius Cominius, who climbed the capitol, Camillus, i. 295, 296. PoNTUs, Lycurgus, i. 99 ; Aristides, ii. 313; Marius, iii. 58, 83; Lysan- der, iii. 133 ; Sylla, iii. 156, 1 72,'l 74 ; LucuUus, iii. 237 and after, as far as 274; Sertorius, iii. 410; Eumenes, iii. 418 ; Pompey, iv. 89, 93, 94, 101, 106 ; Cajsar, iv.'308, 312, 315; Cato the Younger, iv. 401 ; Cicero, v. 45 ; Demetrius, v. 99; Antony, v. 214; Galba, v. 468. The Pontic trumpet- er, Lucullus, iii. 240. Salt fish of Pontus, Antony, v. 183. See, also, The Euxine. Pontus signifies, sometimes the sea, more generally its Asiatic shore and the adjoining country. PopiLius, concerned in killing Cicero, Cicero, v. 86. PopiLius, opponent of the Gracchi, C. Gracchus, iv. 535. Popii.ius L.ENAS, a senator, Brutus, V. 317-319. Caius Popilius, Cjesar, iv. 259. PuBLius Valerius Popi.icola or Publicola, Life, i. 203 ; Compari- son with Solon, i. 226; Eomulus, i. 58; Coriolanus, ii. 91. Popp.ea, wife of Crispinus, Otho, and Nero, Galba, v. 474 ; (name given to Sporus), 465. PoKCiA, sister of Cato the Younger, Cato the Younger, iv. 370, 411. PoRCiA, daughter of Cato (he Young- er, wife of Brutus, Cato the Younger, iv. 394, 443 ; Brutus, v. 303, 315, 316, 318, 326, 327, 3(!1. The Porch, Poplicola, i. 214. The PoRCiAN Basilica, Cato the Elder, ii. 340 ; Cato the Younger, iv. 375. PoRCius, i. e. Cato's son, Cato the Younger, iv. 443. See C.to. Lars Porsenna, king of Clusium, Poplicola, i. 218-222 ; Comparison, i. 229, 230. PoRUS, Indian king, Alexander, iv. ■ 235-238. PosiDONi.A or P^ESTUM, Cimon, iii. 223. PosiDONius, historian ofPerseus, Mm. Panlus, ii. 175, 176, 178. PosiDONius of Rhodes, philosopher and historian, Fabius, i. 395 ; Mar- cellus, ii. 238, 247, 261, 274; Ma- rius, iii. 48, 101 ; Pompey, iv. 103 ; Cicero, v. 39 ; Brutus, v. 303. PosruMA or Posthuma, daughter of Sylla, Sylla, iii. 190. Posru.Mius Balbus (Albus), Popli- cola, i. 224. Postumius Tubertus, Poplicola, i. 222. Postumius Tubertus, dictator, Ca- millus, i. 270. Spurius Postumius, Ti. Gracchus, iv. 514. Postumius, a soothsayer, Sylla, iii. 153. Postumius. See Livius and Albinus. PosTUMUS, a surname, Coriolanus, ii. 64. PosTUMUs, in the Greek Opsigonus, i. e. Mucins Scsevola, Poplicola, i. 220. PoT.iMON of Lesbos, an historian, Alexander, iv. 238. PoT,MUS, Attic township, Aristides, ii. 315. PoTHiNUS the eunuch, Pompey, iv. 147, 151 ; Caesar, iv. 306, 307 ; An- tony, V. 213. PoTiD.E., town of Macedonia, Peri- cles, i. 357 ; Alcibiades, ii. 8 ; Alex- ander, iv. 162. Valerius Potitus, envDy to Delphi, Camillus, i. 273.