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| | Thessalus - encyclopedia article about Thessalus. |
 | | Thessalus is also the name of a son of Heracles Heracles, or Heraklês ("glory of Hera", ηρακλης) was the demigod son of Zeus and Alcmene, the grand-son of Perseus and the wife of Amphitryon. |  | | Thessalus is the name of the son of Haemon In Greek mythology, Haemon ("bloody") (or Haimon) was the son of Creon and Eurydice. |  | | Our surviving sources of mythology are literary reworkings of this oral tradition, supplemented by interpretations of iconic imagery, sometimes modern ones, sometimes ancient ones, as myth was a means for later Greeks themselves to throw light on cult practices and traditions that were no longer explicable. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Thessalus
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| | The Internet Classics Archive Alexander by Plutarch |
 | | However, when he understood Athenodorus was fined by the Athenians for being absent at the festivals of Bacchus, though he refused his request that he would write a letter in his behalf, he gave him a sufficient sum to satisfy the penalty. |  | | For then at his going away, he said the judges deserved to be commended for what they had done, but that he would willingly have lost part of his kingdom rather than to have seen Thessalus overcome. |  | | For the kings of Cyprus were here the exhibitors, just in the same manner as at Athens those who are chosen by lot out of the tribes. |
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http://classics.mit.edu/Plutarch/alexandr.html
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| | HELLENIC COSMOGONY-DEUCALION'S CATACLYSM |
 | | Hellen was the founder of a town in Thessaly which was called Hellas after him and the inhabitants, who were called Graeci (Greeks) after Graecus the son of Thessalus, changed their name into Hellenes after him. |
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http://www.greece.org/poseidon/work/argonautika/cosmo1_1.html
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| | GTP |
 | | Dracon, (Drakon) I., eighteenth in descent from Aesculapius, who lived in the fifth and fourth centuries B. He was the son of Hippocrates II. |  | | If this be correct, he was the nineteenth of the family of the Asclepiadae, the brother of Gorgias and Hippocrates III., and lived probably in the fourth century B. Dracon III. |  | | (1) The Dogmatici or Hippocratici, founded about B.C. 400 by Thessalus, the son, and Polybus, the son-in-law of Hippocrates; |
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http://www.gtp.gr/LocInfo.asp?infoid=26&code=EGRSDO31&PrimeCode=EGRSDO31&Level=6&PrimeLevel=6&IncludeWide=1&LocId=11498
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| | Jason, Greek Mythology Link. |
 | | Medus, who called his country Media after himself, is sometimes said to be the son of Aegeus 1 and Medea. |  | | After these events, Medea was forced to escape and came to Athens, where she married King Aegeus 1. |  | | Jason might have taken the throne of Iolcus at this time, or else his own son by Medea, Thessalus 2, became king. |
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http://homepage.mac.com/cparada/GML/Jason.html
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| | Antiphus Sources |
 | | Pheidippus and Antiphus, sons of Thessalus, son of Heracles; |  | | Antiphus, son of Thessalus, went to the Pelasgians, renamed it Thessaly; |
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http://www.csulb.edu/~dbouvier/SourceFiles/i1626Sources.htm
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| | Jason - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Jason's son, Thessalus, then became king (the parentage of Thessalus is uncertain - i.e. |  | | Later Jason and Peleus (father of the hero Achilles) would attack and defeat Acastus, reclaiming the throne of Iolcus for himself once more. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argonautica
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| | Acastus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Acastus and Astydameia were dead, and the kingdom fell to Jason's son Thessalus. |  | | He pillaged Ioklos, sometimes said to have been helped by Jason and the Dioscuri, and dismembered Astydameia, then marched his army between the pieces. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acastus
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| | Astydameia |
 | | Acastus and Astydamia were dead and kingdom fell to Jason 's son Thessalus. |  | | He pillaged Iolcus dismembered Astydameia then marched his army between pieces. |
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http://www.freeglossary.com/Astydamea
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| | Thessalia |
 | | Another Thessalus was a son of Jason and Medea who escaped his mother's wrath and fled to Iolcos to become king of the place at the death of Acastus, the son of Pelias. |  | | This Thessalus became king of Cos as had been his grandfather and had two sons, Phidippus and Antiphus, who took part in the Trojan war (Iliad, II, 577-579) and, after coming back, settled in Thessalia, giving the region its name in memory of their father. |  | | One was the son of Heracles and Chalciope, daughter of Eurypylus, king of the island of Cos and a son of Poseidon, that Heracles killed on his way back from Troy because he didn't want to let him land in his island. |
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http://plato-dialogues.org/tools/loc/thessali.htm
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| | Astydameia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Acastus and Astydamia were dead, and the kingdom fell to Jason's son, Thessalus. |  | | He pillaged Iolcus and dismembered Astydameia, then marched his army between the pieces. |  | | This page was last modified 00:10, 29 August 2004. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astydameia
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| | Aristotle: The Athenian Constitution: Book 3: Parts 17 -- 24 |
 | | For Pisistratus took a wife from Argos, Timonassa, the daughter of a man of Argos, named Gorgilus; she had previously been the wife of Archinus of Ambracia, one of the descendants of Cypselus. |  | | It was from his character that all the evils arose which befell the house. |  | | He had two sons by his first and legitimate wife, Hippias and Hipparchus, and two by his Argive consort, Iophon and Hegesistratus, who was surnamed Thessalus. |
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http://www.constitution.org/ari/athen_03.htm
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| | Bryn Mawr Classical Review 03.01.11 |
 | | The "old Methodists," as Caelius Aurelianus called them, remain rather shadowy figures -- Themison of Laodicea, said by Pliny the Elder to be Asclepiades' auditor (NH 29.6), and the flamboyant Thessalus of Tralles (Galen quotes from the letter he wrote to Nero to accompany the treatise he was dedicating to the emperor, MM I 2.1). |  | | Medical studies flourished in Alexandria long after the death of Herophilus' patron Ptolemy II Philadelphus, and the city remained the center of anatomical studies for centuries after wealth and political power shifted to Rome -- for the time being the preeminent city in which Greek doctors achieved fame and fortune. |  | | For Thessalus, von Staden, "Hairesis and heresy" (above, note 8), 83-85; Gourevitch, "Le méthodisme," xx-xxii. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1992/03.01.11.html
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| | Velleius Paterculus : Book 1 ( Shipley ) |
 | | But if anyone insists that the people were named Thessalians from Thessalus the son of Hercules, he will have to explain why this people never adopted the name until the time of this second Thessalus. |  | | The Pelasgians migrated to Athens, and a warlike youth named Thessalus, of the race of the Thesprotians, with a great force of his fellow-countrymen took armed possession of that region, which, after his name, is now called Thessaly. |  | | This is a common practice, but especially among the tragic poets, for whom less allowance should be made; for the poets do not speak in person, but entirely through mouths of characters who lived in the time referred to. |
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http://web.upmf-grenoble.fr/Haiti/Cours/Ak/VelleiusPaterculus1_Shipley.htm
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| | Ancient Roman Medicine |
 | | In the 2nd century, BC a rival school, called the "impirici" arose, and they claimed that their knowledge was derived only from experience. |  | | It has never been claimed that Hippocrates invented the practice of "medicine", but, either by accident or because of his fame in his own times, works ascribed to him were saved when others before or after him were lost. |  | | His immediate Roman followers, not surprisingly, were called "Hippocratici", but their other common name was more illustrative of their medical philosophy: they were called "dogmatici" or dogmatics, because they didn't question the medical dogmas which were handed down through their founders Thessalus, the son, and Polybus, the son-in-law of Hippocrates (about 400 BC). |
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http://www.mmdtkw.org/VRomanMedicine2002.html
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| | Alexander the Great |
 | | The assassin was Pausanias, who was angry because Philip had refused to give him justice for some injury done to him by Attalus. |  | | Philip had Thessalus sent to him in chains, and he banished some of Alexander's companions who had talked Alexander into this. |  | | But when Philip heard about Alexander's proposal, he emphatically told his son that it was unworthy of the power he was due to inherit to beg for an alliance with a man who was no more than the slave of a barbarian king. |
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http://www.e-classics.com/ALEXANDER.htm
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| | Jason of the Argonauts (Greek myth character) |
 | | Known Relatives: Cretheus (grandfather, deceased), Tyro (grandmother, deceased), Aeson (father), Pelias, Pheres, Amythaon, Neleus (uncles), Crete (aunt), Acastus, Alcestis, Asterius, Melampus, Bias (cousins), Medea (first wife), Alcimenes, Eriopis, Medus, Mermerus, Pheres, Thessalus (sons by Medea), Eriopis (daughter by Medea), Euneus, Deipylus (sons by Hypsipyle), |  | | Jason and Medea ruled Corinth and their son Thessalus later returned to Iolcus to rule after Acastus. |  | | Still feeling adventurous at times, he took part in the hunt for the Calydonian Boar and often lived in Thebes as a guest of King Creon. |
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http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix2/jasonargonaut.htm
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| | Plutarque : vie d'Alexandre |
 | | Alexandre favorisait Thessalus, mais il ne montra son intérêt pour lui qu'après qu'Athénodore eut été proclamé vainqueur; le roi dit, en sortant du théâtre, qu'il approuvait le jugement, mais qu'il aurait donné avec plaisir la moitié de son royaume pour ne pas voir Thessalus vaincu. |  | | Alexandre, troublé par ces soupçons, envoie en Carie le comédien Thessalus, pour représenter au satrape de laisser là ce fils bâtard, qui, outre le défaut de sa naissance, avait l'esprit aliéné, et de rechercher plutôt l'alliance d'Alexandre. |  | | Il écrivit aux Corinthiens de lui renvoyer Thessalus chargé de chaînes, et bannit de la Macédoine quatre des amis de son fils, Harpalus, Néarque, Phrygius et Ptolémée, qui, rappelés dans la suite par Alexandre, furent comblés d'honneurs. |
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http://www.remacle.org/bloodwolf/historiens/Plutarque/alexandre.htm
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| | Thessalus -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article |
 | | Thessalus is also the name of a son of ((classical mythology) a hero noted for his strength; performed 12 immense labors to gain immortality) Heracles. |  | | Thessalus is the name of the son of (Click link for more info and facts about Haemon) Haemon for whom (A fertile plain on the Aegean Sea in east central Greece; Thessaly was a former region of ancient Greece) Thessaly was named. |  | | After the adventures of the ((Greek mythology) one of the heroes who sailed with Jason on the Argo in search of the Golden Fleece) Argonauts and the death of (Click link for more info and facts about Acastus) Acastus, Thessalus became king of (Click link for more info and facts about Iolcus) Iolcus. |
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http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/t/th/thessalus.htm
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| | Plutarch, Alcibiades |
 | | "Thessalus, the son of Cimon, of the township of Lacia, lays information that Alcibiades, the son of Clinias of the township of the Scambonidae, has committed a crime against the goddesses Ceres and Proserpine, by representing in derision the holy mysteries, and showing them to his companions in his own house. |  | | The people were highly exasperated and incensed against Alcibiades upon this accusation, which being aggravated by Androcles, the most malicious of all his enemies, at first disturbed his friends exceedingly. |  | | (2) These were the matters contained in the articles of information which Thessalus, the son of Cimon, exhibited against Alcibiades, for his impious mockery of the goddesses Ceres and Proserpine. |
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http://www.ucalgary.ca/~vandersp/Courses/texts/plutarch/plutalci.html
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| | Geographia: Mainland Greece |
 | | Thessalus (not a founder, but the region was named after the son of Jason and Medea). |  | | The entire region was named after Thessalus, the son of Jason and Medea. |  | | Thessalus ruled only in Iolcus, not the entire Thessaly. |
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http://www.timelessmyths.com/classical/mainland.html
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| | Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, page 1101 (v. 3) |
 | | The epitaph of Thessalus is preserved in the Greek Anthology, (vii. |  | | 13; but the true reading in that passage is " Medius Thessalus," not Medicus ; and Medius, not Tlwssalus, is the proper name. |  | | 387.) The reputation of Thessalus does not seem to have been very lasting, as, with the exception of Galen and Pliny, Caelius Aurelianus and Soranus (De Arle Obstetr. |
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http://ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/3435.html
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| | PEISISTRATUS - LoveToKnow Article on PEISISTRATUS |
 | | By a former marriage he already had two sons, flippias and Hipparchus, now growing up, and in his first tyranny or his first exile he married an Argive, Timonassa, by whom he had two other sons lophon and Hegesistratus, the latter of whom is said to be identical with Thessalus (At/i. |  | | Further it is suggested that Peisistratus was unwilling to have children by one on whom lay the curse of the Cylonian outrage. |  | | Herodotus describes Hegesistratus as a bastard, and Thucydides says that Thessalus was legitimate. |
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http://31.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PE/PEISISTRATUS.htm
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| | Galen [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] |
 | | This is evident in Themison (first century, BCE) and Thessalus (first century, AD). |  | | Disease was depicted as a community of constriction or dilatation (or some combination of the two) that, in principle, was observable even though, in practice, it couldn't be observed except through its effects, viz., the disease. |  | | In his avowed work on biological theory, On the Natural Faculties, Galen goes to great lengths to refute the principles of Erasistratus and his followers. |
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http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/g/galen.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | At first he had thought it was the dark playing tricks on his eyes, but now it had brightened to the point where he could just barely make out the dimensions of their cell and the figures slumped on the floor. |  | | The Thessalus' men won't dare to follow us there. |  | | A burst of laughter - genuine, this time - came from his fellow prisoners, as he walked over to the corner and crouched down over the source of the illumination, only to reel backwards from the stench that struck him like an armored fist. |
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http://www.iolausianlibrary.org/owlharp1.txt
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| | Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, page 1100 (v. 3) |
 | | THESSALUS (©ecrtraAfo), an eminent tragic actor, in the time of Alexander the Great, whose especial favour he enjoyed, and whom he served before his accession to the throne, and afterwards accompanied on his expedition into Asia. |  | | 7) and other modern authors, but the Writer has hitherto been unable to find any ancient author who says that Thessalus had a son named Gorgiaa, |  | | On this page: Thespius – Thessalonice – Thessalus |
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http://ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/3434.html
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| | Hippocrates |
 | | He had at least 2 sons, Draco and Thessalus and one daughter). |  | | One of his teachers was Herodikos of Selymbria, a important Greek physician, and another teacher maybe was Democritus of Abdera (there is a story that he was asked by the citizens of Abdera to cure Democritus). |
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http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Hippocrates.htm
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| | Herodotus - The Histories - Page 811 |
 | | These men and all the troops under their command reached Sicily; but there they fell in a battle in which they were defeated by the Egesteans and Phoenicians, only one, Euryleon, surviving the disaster. |  | | Certain Spartans accompanied Dorieus on his voyage as co-founders, to wit, Thessalus, Paraebates, Celeas, and Euryleon. |
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http://www.galileolibrary.com/ebooks/eu04/herodotus_page_811.htm
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| | Thessalus - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Thessalus |
 | | Thessalus is not available in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. |  | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |  | | You may also use the word browser links: |
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http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Thessalus
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| | Archaic Period-Politics |
 | | In the context of this policy, they upheld the power of Pisistratus tyrant of Athens and his sons, one of whom was actually called Thessalus. |  | | A little after 510 B.C., when there was a Spartan landing at Phalerum, the then haven of Athens, with the object of expelling the Pisistratids, they were defeated by the Thessalian cavalry, led by the tagos Cineas. |
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http://www.fhw.gr/chronos/04/en/politics/230esw_thesa.html
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| | Medea, Greek Mythology Link. |
 | | It is told that Thessalus 2 escaped being murdered by his mother, was reared as a youth in Corinth, and later moved to Iolcus where he seized the throne and became king. |  | | Of Tisandrus it is said that he was much younger than his brothers Thessalus 2 and Alcimenes 2. |  | | Medus, of disputed parentage, went back with Medea to Colchis and, reigning over a certain country, called it Media after himself. |
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http://homepage.mac.com/cparada/GML/Medea.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Aristotle relates that a king of the Oenotrians named Italus gave his name to the country. |  | | Othrys mons Thessalus Mountain in Thessaly; traditional home of the Centaurs. |  | | Olympus mons Thessalus Highest mountain in in the Greek peninsula dominating the Aegean and Thessalian plains. |
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http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~jfarrell/temp/vp/july31/mettus.txt
(2352 words)
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| | Ship Modelers Association - Famous Ships |
 | | She reached London in 78 days, the best wool passage of that year. |  | | On the arrival of the THESSALUS home from Sydney in the spring of 1898, she was sold to the Swedes, and left London on May 17 |  | | For the next 10 years she sailed in the Baltic and Australian timber trade, but apparently her new captain made no attempt to drive her, for she had no outstanding passages to her credit while under the Swedish flag. |
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http://www.ship-modelers-assn.org/fam9903.htm
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| | Pleasant Objects of Love |
 | | Thessalus amat equum pullinum, buculum Ægyptius, Lacedæmonius Catulum, andc., such things we love, are most gracious in our sight, acceptable unto us, and whatsoever else may cause this passion, if it be superfluous or immoderately loved, as Guianerius observes. |  | | These things in themselves are pleasing and good, singular ornaments, necessary, comely, and fit to be had; but when we fix an immoderate eye, and dote on them over much, this pleasure may turn to pain, bring much sorrow and discontent unto us, work our final overthrow, and cause melancholy in the end. |  | | The heaven itself is said to be fair or foul: fair buildings, fair pictures, all artificial, elaborate and curious works, clothes, give an admirable lustre: we admire, and gaze upon them, ut pueri Junonis avem, as children do on a peacock: a fair dog, a fair horse and hawk, andc. |
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http://www.exclassics.com/anatomy/anat130.htm
(569 words)
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| | GTP |
 | | The daughter of Eurypylus, Chalciope, became mother of Thessalus by Heracles. |
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http://www.gtp.gr/LocInfo.asp?infoid=30&code=EGRSDO31&PrimeCode=EGRSDO31&Level=6&PrimeLevel=6&IncludeWide=1&LocId=11498
(185 words)
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| | Hippocrates |
 | | There is little to nothing securely known of his childhood or medical train= ing, although there is speculation that he did have a medical apprenticeship wit= hin his family. |  | | Â It is said that he ma= rried a woman, name unknown, and had three children; two sons, Thessalus and Dracon, and a daughter, name unknown. |  | | It is speculated that he lived to an old age, reportedly dying in Larissa, a town in |
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http://www.humboldt.edu/~histbio/Mazzola/Hippocrates.mht
(1195 words)
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| | Thucydides-Passages |
 | | For example, most Athenians think that Hipparchus was actually tyrant when he was slain by Harmodius and Aristogeiton; they are not aware that Hippias was the eldest of the sons of Peisistratus, and succeeded him, and that Hipparchus and Thessalus were only his brothers. |  | | At the last moment, Harmodius and Aristogeiton suddenly suspected that Hippias had been forewarned by some of their accomplices. |  | | Men do not discriminate, and are too ready to receive ancient traditions about their own as well as about other countries. |
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http://classicpersuasion.org/pw/thucydides/thucydides-passages.php?pleaseget=1.20-1.36
(3808 words)
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| | Pharmacology of Sacred Plants, Herbs, and Roots (Scarborough) |
 | | Thessalus: Powers of Herbs: names 7 herbs associated with planets and 12 herbs for the zodiac signs, as well as plants linked to 15 stars |  | | 155) named by Thessalus as a heliotropic or sun plant- encompasses a number of Greco-Roman traditions including technical approaches as well as the information from the Papyri Graecae Magicae |  | | Pepper and Ginger in Thessalus: evidence of flourishing trade with the Far East |
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http://www.uark.edu/campus-resources/dlevine/Magika5.html
(974 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | After two weeks, she finally convinced Thessalus to make the first move on Molione, with whom he fell in love at first sight over five years ago. |
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http://www.academyofbards.org/fanfic/p/paullyadams_lovecontest.html
(3030 words)
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| | Ship Modelers Association - Famous Ships |
 | | The clipper Micronesia met up with her near the Golden Gate when there was a strong breeze blowing, and the Garfield sailed majestically past her with all her great topgallant sails set. |  | | They could not race her due to the strong breeze, but were impressed with the sight of this mighty ship sailing past leaving a mile of white water in her wake.The most impressive opponent of the Garfield was Carmichaels iron clipper Thessalus, considered by many to be one of the fastest iron ships ever launched. |  | | They had a great race across the Pacific from Australia to San Francisco, in which the Thessalus just had the best of it. |
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http://www.ship-modelers-assn.org/fam9711.htm
(543 words)
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| | The Court at Pella and Philip's Death |
 | | And as for Thessalus, Philip wrote to the Corinthians that they should send him back to Macedonia in chains. |  | | (2) Greatly disturbed by these stories, Alexander sent Thessalus, the tragic actor, to Caria, to argue with Pixodarus that he ought to ignore the bastard brother who was also a fool, and make Alexander his connexion by marriage. |  | | And this plan was vastly more pleasing to Pixodarus than the former. |
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http://luna.cas.usf.edu/~murray/classes/aa/source07.htm
(2895 words)
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| | Theophrastus Oundy Unconclusiveness Reingraft Mesogaster Many-minded Pipet |
 | | Confectioner when pooa: crooklegged should unnerve self-aware: pomme nonaccusing optokinetic lonesomeness Danuta would dempne holometabolic cheir decapodan colonels Thessalus not world-encircling verderers could logorrheic terbiums if Atmore if Bav semilune romanized strepsitene nondeleterious Claudville until viscidness |
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http://www.3dchat.org/misc/b/destruct/NQ
(223 words)
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| | reading_guide_01.26 |
 | | (29) Lacedaemonius = Spartan; similarly, Thessalus and Eleius are simply Greek words for inhabitants of Thessaly (in the N) and Elea (in the W Peloponnese) |
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http://classics.uc.edu/hooker/cc111/reading_guide_01.26.html
(206 words)
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| | Sailing Ships: Cimba (1878) |
 | | Reported at Lizard Point 75 days out at the same time as Thessalus reported at Start Point. |  | | Sailed from Sydney in company with Thessalus and Argonaut. |
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http://www.bruzelius.info/Nautica/Ships/Merchant/Sail/C/Cimba(1878).html
(459 words)
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| | Barbus macedonicus |
 | | Il Genere Barbus:...- [ Translate this page ]Il Genere Barbus, Questo genere si conosce come fossile fin dall'Oligocene e comprende un gran numero di specie, diffuse in Europa, Asia e Africa. |  | | Alfabetyczny indeks nazw ÅaciÅskich: B. Barbus albanicus Barbus barbus Barbus barbus gallicus Barbus barbus macedonicus Barbus barbus thessalus Barbus brachycephalus Barbus brachycephalus caspius... |  | | Barbus barbus - Brzana (107): Tworzy trzy podgatunki: Barbus barbus gallicus (dorzecze Garonny - Francja), Barbus barbus macedonicus (Dalmacja, Yardar) i Barbus barbus thessalus (Tesalia). |
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http://specieslist.com/fish_species/B/Barbus_macedonicus.shtml
(234 words)
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| | Bibliografia Medievale |
 | | Thessalus] Liber de virtutibus herbarum decem et novem |
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http://www.iuo.it/dipfp/ATTIVITA_DI_RICERCA/HermesLatinus/bibl_medievale.htm
(1600 words)
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