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The street boundaries are roughly Connecticut Avenue to the west, Columbia Road to the east, and Calvert Street on the north. [2] The area has been called Kalorama Triangle since the mid 20th-century. The name derives from the Kalorama estate that was once located in the area during the 19th-century. The word, Kalorama, means "nice view" in Greek.
Abydenus; Aesopus (historian) Agatharchides; Agathocles (writers) Alexander Polyhistor; Anticlides; Antipater; Antisthenes of Rhodes; Aratus of Sicyon; Artapanus of Alexandria
The Battle of Crocus Field (Krokion pedion) (353 BC or 352 BC) was a battle in the Third Sacred War, fought between the armies of Phocis, under Onomarchos, and the combined Thessalian and Macedonian army under Philip II of Macedon. The Phocians were decisively defeated by Philip's forces.
Xenophon, Greek historian, soldier, mercenary and an admirer of Socrates (b. c. 431 BC) 353 BC. Clearchus of Heraclea, tyrant of Heraclea Pontica (assassinated) (b. c. 401 BC) Iphicrates, Athenian general (b. c. 418 BC) Mausolus, King and Persian satrap of Caria; 350 BC. Archytas, Greek philosopher, mathematician and statesman (or 347 BC) (b ...
Route of Xenophon and the Ten Thousand (red line) in the Achaemenid Empire.The satrapy of Cyrus the Younger is delineated in green.. Written years after the events it recounts, Xenophon's book Anabasis (Greek: ἀνάβασις, literally "going up") [14] is his record of the expedition of Cyrus and the Greek mercenaries' journey to home. [15]
Year 352 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Poplicola and Rutilus (or, less frequently, year 402 Ab urbe condita ). The denomination 352 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe ...
The Delian League before the outbreak of the Peloponnesian War in 431 BC.. Pentecontaetia (Greek: πεντηκονταετία, "the period of fifty years") is the term used to refer to the period in Ancient Greek history between the defeat of the second Persian invasion of Greece at Plataea in 479 BC and the beginning of the Peloponnesian War in 431 BC.
The details concerning Onomarchus' death in 352 BC vary in the written sources. [6] Reportedly, Onomarchus and many of the fugitives plunged into the sea in the hope of swimming to the Athenian ships under Chares which were lying off the shore. The Roman historian, Eusebius states he drowned in this effort. [7]