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      <name>Phocaean</name>
      <description>...plunder of various sorts in abundance, while in particular he captured the Phocaean woman, Cyrus' concubine, who, by all accounts, was clever and beautiful. [3]... </description>
      <address>Phocaean</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.75656,38.6703,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...taking with him Tissaphernes as a friend and accompanied by three hundred Greek hoplites,4 under the command of Xenias of Parrhasia. [3] When Darius had died... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.165323097346306,37.567419268449626,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...the Greeks back to Ionia again.50 By these promises the greater part of the Greek army was persuaded. But as for Menon, before it was clear what the rest of the... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tralles</name>
      <description>...ours toward them. To be sure, I have their wives and children under guard in Tralles,44 but I shall not deprive them of these, either, for they shall receive them... </description>
      <address>Tralles</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.833862,37.859752,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Myriandus</name>
      <description>...hundred thousand men. [6] Thence Cyrus marched one stage, five parasangs, to Myriandus, a city on the sea coast, inhabited by Phoenicians; it was a trading place, and... </description>
      <address>Myriandus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
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      </MultiGeometry>
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      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...Abrocomas, however, did not do so, but as soon as he heard that Cyrus was in Cilicia, he turned about in his journey from Phoenicia42 and marched off to join the... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syrian</name>
      <description>...the walls and thus overpower the enemy if they should be keeping guard at the Syrian Gates—and that was precisely what Cyrus supposed Abrocomas would do, for he had... </description>
      <address>Syrian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.354167,30.317778,0</coordinates>
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    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...King. [4] Thence he marched one stage, five parasangs, to the Gates between Cilicia and Syria. These Gates consisted of two walls; the one on the hither, or... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tarsus</name>
      <description>...in Soli and Issus.33 [25] Now Epyaxa, the wife of Syennesis, had reached Tarsus five days ahead of Cyrus, but in the course of her passage over the mountains... </description>
      <address>Tarsus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>34.89277,36.91766,0</coordinates>
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    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...abandoned the heights, because he had learned that Menon's army was already in Cilicia, on his own side of the mountains, and because, further, he was getting reports... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
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    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...was hostile territory.28 [20] From there Cyrus sent the Cilician queen back to Cilicia by the shortest route, and he sent some of Menon's troops to escort her, Menon... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Thymbrium</name>
      <description>...[13] Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to the inhabited city of Thymbrium. There, alongside the road, was the so-called spring of Midas, the king of the... </description>
      <address>Thymbrium</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
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      <name>Syennesis</name>
      <description>...payment when he had money. [12] At this juncture arrived Epyaxa, the wife of Syennesis, the king25 of the Cilicians, coming to visit Cyrus, and the story was that she... </description>
      <address>Syennesis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Acropolis</name>
      <description>...Great King18 in Celaenae, strongly fortified and situated at the foot of the Acropolis over the sources of the Marsyas river; the Marsyas also flows through the city... </description>
      <address>Acropolis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>23.726166,37.971421,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Amphipolis</name>
      <description>...as they went through. The commander of the Greek peltasts was Episthenes of Amphipolis, and it was said that he proved himself a sagacious man. [8] At any rate, after... </description>
      <address>Amphipolis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>23.840418,40.818876,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...feet or hands or eyes; thus in Cyrus' province it became possible for either Greek or barbarian, provided he were guilty of no wrongdoing, to travel fearlessly... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...[14] At this critical time the King's army was advancing evenly, while the Greek force, still remaining in the same place, was forming its line from those who... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...in great haste to take their places, Clearchus occupying the right end of the Greek wing,66 close to the Euphrates river, Proxenus next to him, and the others... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Abrocomas</name>
      <description>...had four commanders, each at the head of three hundred thousand men, namely, Abrocomas, Tissaphernes, Gobryas, and Arbaces. But of the forces just enumerated only... </description>
      <address>Abrocomas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
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      </MultiGeometry>
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      <name>Miletus</name>
      <description>...took the exiles under his protection, collected an army, and laid siege to Miletus both by land and by sea, and endeavoured to restore the exiles to their city... </description>
      <address>Miletus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.2774885,37.5292362,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Miletus</name>
      <description>...to Tissaphernes, by gift of the King,6 but at that time all of them except Miletus had revolted and gone over to Cyrus. [7] The people of Miletus also were... </description>
      <address>Miletus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.2774885,37.5292362,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Parrhasia</name>
      <description>...accompanied by three hundred Greek hoplites,4 under the command of Xenias of Parrhasia. [3] When Darius had died and Artaxerxes had become established as king... </description>
      <address>Parrhasia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.25,37.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Maeander</name>
      <description>...himself and his horses exercise. Through the middle of this park flows the Maeander river; its sources are beneath the palace, and it flows through the city of... </description>
      <address>Maeander</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.4713446,37.6220196,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Chersonese</name>
      <description>...to Tissaphernes. [9] Still another army was being collected for him in the Chersonese which is opposite Abydus, in the following manner: Clearchus7 was a... </description>
      <address>Chersonese</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.220385,40.051661,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Parysatis</name>
      <description>...the doves, either.45 And the villages in which the troops encamped belonged to Parysatis, for they had been given her for girdle-money.46 [10] From there Cyrus marched... </description>
      <address>Parysatis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...violation of that treaty. [9] Consequently, when he came to hostilities with Tissaphernes, all the cities of their own accord chose Cyrus rather than Tissaphernes, with... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...on the left wing of the enemy, under the command, it was reported, of Tissaphernes; next to them were troops with wicker shields and, farther on, hoplites with... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>72</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...upon their cities. For, in fact, the Ionian cities had originally belonged to Tissaphernes, by gift of the King,6 but at that time all of them except Miletus had revolted... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Hellespont</name>
      <description>...of operations, proceeded to make war upon the Thracians who dwell beyond the Hellespont, thereby aiding the Greeks.9 Consequently, the Hellespontine cities of their... </description>
      <address>Hellespont</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.41122,40.19406,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Pigres</name>
      <description>...Cyrus halted with his train of nobles and dignitaries and ordered Glus and Pigres to take some of the barbarian troops and help to pull the wagons out. [8] But... </description>
      <address>Pigres</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Pylae</name>
      <description>...ninety parasangs, keeping the Euphrates river on the right, and arrived at Pylae. In the course of these stages many of the baggage animals died of hunger, for... </description>
      <address>Pylae</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syria</name>
      <description>...Cyrus because he was destined to be king. [19] Thence he marched through Syria nine stages, fifty parasangs, and they arrived at the Araxes river. There they... </description>
      <address>Syria</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ionia</name>
      <description>...they reached Babylon and their pay in full until he brought the Greeks back to Ionia again.50 By these promises the greater part of the Greek army was... </description>
      <address>Ionia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Babylon</name>
      <description>...promised that he would give every man five minas49 in silver when they reached Babylon and their pay in full until he brought the Greeks back to Ionia again.50 By... </description>
      <address>Babylon</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>44.42082,32.53617,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syria</name>
      <description>...he marched one stage, five parasangs, to the Gates between Cilicia and Syria. These Gates consisted of two walls; the one on the hither, or Cilician, side... </description>
      <address>Syria</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>73</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Egyptian</name>
      <description>...in command of them. They had been guided from Ephesus to Issus by Tamos the Egyptian, who was at the head of another fleet of twenty-five ships belonging to... </description>
      <address>Egyptian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.990278,21.525833,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ephesus</name>
      <description>...the Lacedaemonian as admiral in command of them. They had been guided from Ephesus to Issus by Tamos the Egyptian, who was at the head of another fleet of... </description>
      <address>Ephesus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.339722,37.941944,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...army. He replied that he had heard that Abrocomas, a foe of his, was at the Euphrates river, twelve stages distant. It was against him, therefore, he said, that he... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tarsus</name>
      <description>...numbered a hundred hoplites. [26] And when the rest of Menon's troops reached Tarsus, in their anger over the loss of their comrades they plundered thoroughly, not... </description>
      <address>Tarsus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>34.89277,36.91766,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syennesis</name>
      <description>...who dwelt on the sea-coast, in Soli and Issus.33 [25] Now Epyaxa, the wife of Syennesis, had reached Tarsus five days ahead of Cyrus, but in the course of her passage... </description>
      <address>Syennesis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tarsus</name>
      <description>...he marched through this plain four stages, twenty-five parasangs, to Tarsus,32 a large and prosperous city of Cilicia, where the palace of Syennesis, the... </description>
      <address>Tarsus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>71</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>34.89277,36.91766,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Midas</name>
      <description>...city of Thymbrium. There, alongside the road, was the so-called spring of Midas, the king of the Phrygians, at which Midas, according to the story, caught the... </description>
      <address>Midas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.713887,39.206839,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Sardis</name>
      <description>...he set about making counter-preparations. Cyrus was now setting forth from Sardis with the troops I have mentioned; and he marched through Lydia three stages,13... </description>
      <address>Sardis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>-89.91592,34.43705,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>pole</name>
      <description>...the royal standard, a kind of golden eagle on a shield, raised aloft upon a pole. [13] But when at this point also the Greeks resumed their forward movement... </description>
      <address>pole</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.2,43.95,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...blows and throw javelins upon them as they went through. The commander of the Greek peltasts was Episthenes of Amphipolis, and it was said that he proved himself a... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...and his friends. [15] Then Xenophon,67 an Athenian, seeing him from the Greek army, approached so as to meet him and asked if he had any orders to give; and... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>74</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...and at once shouted out to everyone he met, in the barbarian tongue and in Greek, that the King was approaching with a large army, all ready for battle. [2]... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...and are a parsang apart, and there are bridges over them.] and alongside the Euphrates there was a narrow passage, not more than about twenty feet in width, between... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...Ionian cities should be given to him instead of remaining under the rule of Tissaphernes, and his mother co-operated with him in this. The result was that the King... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Phrygia</name>
      <description>...he marched three stages, twenty parasangs, to Iconium, the last city of Phrygia. There he remained three days. Thence he marched through Lycaonia five stages... </description>
      <address>Phrygia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>74</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>32.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Celaenae</name>
      <description>...and Olynthians. [7] Thence he marched three stages, twenty parasangs, to Celaenae, an inhabited city of Phrygia, large and prosperous. There Cyrus had a palace... </description>
      <address>Celaenae</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.16557,38.065,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Maeander</name>
      <description>...through Lydia three stages,13 a distance of twenty-two parasangs,14 to the Maeander river. The width of this river was two plethra,15 and there was a bridge over... </description>
      <address>Maeander</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.4713446,37.6220196,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Celaenae</name>
      <description>...city of Celaenae also. [8] There is likewise a palace of the Great King18 in Celaenae, strongly fortified and situated at the foot of the Acropolis over the sources... </description>
      <address>Celaenae</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.16557,38.065,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greece</name>
      <description>...It was here also, report has it, that Xerxes, when he was on his retreat from Greece after losing the famous battle,20 built the palace just mentioned and likewise... </description>
      <address>Greece</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.97947876378841,39.04697922405934,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Peltae</name>
      <description>...two thousand peltasts.21 [10] Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to Peltae, an inhabited city. There he remained three days, during which time Xenias the... </description>
      <address>Peltae</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Chersonese</name>
      <description>...Greece I inflicted punishment upon them with your aid, driving them out of the Chersonese when they wanted to deprive the Greeks who dwelt there of their land. Then when... </description>
      <address>Chersonese</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.220385,40.051661,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Caystru-pedion</name>
      <description>...goes toward Mysia. [11] Thence he marched three stages, thirty parasangs, to Caystru-pedion,24 an inhabited city. There he remained five days. At this time he was owing... </description>
      <address>Caystru-pedion</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Sardis</name>
      <description>...said, of my brother, this man levied war upon me, holding the citadel of Sardis, and I, by the war I waged against him, made him count it best to cease from... </description>
      <address>Sardis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>-89.91592,34.43705,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...in case one should be swift in making his attack upon it. [10] Across the Euphrates river in the course of these desert marches was a large and prosperous city... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...and provisioned the army. 5. Thence he marched through Arabia, keeping the Euphrates on the right, five stages through desert country, thirty-five parasangs. In... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Arabia</name>
      <description>...for three days and provisioned the army. 5. Thence he marched through Arabia, keeping the Euphrates on the right, five stages through desert country... </description>
      <address>Arabia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>73</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>45.5,29.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Araxes</name>
      <description>...he marched through Syria nine stages, fifty parasangs, and they arrived at the Araxes river. There they found many villages full of grain and wine, and there they... </description>
      <address>Araxes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Babylon</name>
      <description>...summoned the generals of the Greeks and told them that the march was to be to Babylon, against the Great King; he directed them, accordingly, to explain this to the... </description>
      <address>Babylon</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>44.42082,32.53617,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...the palace. [11] Thence he marched three stages, fifteen parasangs, to the Euphrates river, the width of which was four stadia; and on the river was situated a... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cappadocia</name>
      <description>...Menon himself commanding them. With the rest of the army Cyrus marched through Cappadocia four stages, twenty-five parasangs, to Dana, an inhabited city, large and... </description>
      <address>Cappadocia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Sardis</name>
      <description>...gladly obeyed—for they trusted him—and presented themselves, under arms, at Sardis. [3] Xenias, then, arrived at Sardis with the troops from the cities, who were... </description>
      <address>Sardis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>-89.91592,34.43705,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...avowedly against them that he set about collecting both his barbarian and his Greek troops. At that time he also sent word to Clearchus to come to him with the... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...to flight in the first encounter, but had charged along the river through the Greek peltasts77; he did not kill anyone in his passage, but the Greeks, after... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ariaeus</name>
      <description>...and table companions died fighting in his defence, with the exception of Ariaeus; he, it chanced, was stationed on the left wing at the head of the cavalry, and... </description>
      <address>Ariaeus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...[24] Thereupon Cyrus, seized with fear lest he might get in the rear of the Greek troops and cut them to pieces, charged to meet him; and attacking with his six... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...places, Clearchus occupying the right end of the Greek wing,66 close to the Euphrates river, Proxenus next to him, and the others beyond Proxenus, while Menon and... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Gobryas</name>
      <description>...at the head of three hundred thousand men, namely, Abrocomas, Tissaphernes, Gobryas, and Arbaces. But of the forces just enumerated only nine hundred thousand... </description>
      <address>Gobryas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...commanders, each at the head of three hundred thousand men, namely, Abrocomas, Tissaphernes, Gobryas, and Arbaces. But of the forces just enumerated only nine hundred... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ionian</name>
      <description>...sent to the King and urged, on the ground that he was his brother, that these Ionian cities should be given to him instead of remaining under the rule of... </description>
      <address>Ionian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.819866254641568,38.140913690748434,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ionian</name>
      <description>...on the plea that Tissaphernes had designs upon their cities. For, in fact, the Ionian cities had originally belonged to Tissaphernes, by gift of the King,6 but at... </description>
      <address>Ionian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.819866254641568,38.140913690748434,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greece</name>
      <description>...us, but that I shall not have enough friends to give to. And as for you men of Greece, I shall give each one of you a wreath of gold besides.” [8] When they heard... </description>
      <address>Greece</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.97947876378841,39.04697922405934,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greece</name>
      <description>...but, for his own part, exhorted and encouraged them as follows: [3] “Men of Greece, it is not because I have not barbarians enough that I have brought you hither... </description>
      <address>Greece</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.97947876378841,39.04697922405934,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greece</name>
      <description>...[14] One man in particular, pretending to be in a hurry to proceed back to Greece with all speed, proposed that they should choose other generals as quickly as... </description>
      <address>Greece</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.97947876378841,39.04697922405934,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Phrygia</name>
      <description>...it made of seven boats. [6] After crossing the Maeander he marched through Phrygia one stage, a distance of eight parasangs, to Colossae, an inhabited16 city... </description>
      <address>Phrygia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>32.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greece</name>
      <description>...it on you. [4] First I went to war with the Thracians, and for the sake of Greece I inflicted punishment upon them with your aid, driving them out of the... </description>
      <address>Greece</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.97947876378841,39.04697922405934,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Marsyas</name>
      <description>...which the sources issue, and it is for this reason that the river is called Marsyas. [9] It was here also, report has it, that Xerxes, when he was on his retreat... </description>
      <address>Marsyas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.75,37.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Marsyas</name>
      <description>...fortified and situated at the foot of the Acropolis over the sources of the Marsyas river; the Marsyas also flows through the city, and empties into the Maeander... </description>
      <address>Marsyas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.75,37.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Clearchus</name>
      <description>...own accord to express the opinions they held, but others at the instigation of Clearchus to make clear the difficulty of either remaining or departing without the... </description>
      <address>Clearchus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Chersonese</name>
      <description>...taking the gold, collected an army by means of this money, and using the Chersonese as a base of operations, proceeded to make war upon the Thracians who dwell... </description>
      <address>Chersonese</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.220385,40.051661,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Peloponnesian</name>
      <description>...to the commanders of all the garrisons he had in the cities to enlist as many Peloponnesian soldiers of the best sort as they severally could, on the plea that... </description>
      <address>Peloponnesian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        <Point>
            <coordinates>22.312752688461543,37.25289777692308,0</coordinates>
          </Point><Point>
            <coordinates>22.5384,38.0446,0</coordinates>
          </Point>
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...capable soldiers and should feel kindly toward him. [6] Lastly, as regards his Greek force, he proceeded to collect it with the utmost secrecy, so that he might... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.165323097346306,37.567419268449626,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Artapates</name>
      <description>...led forth to death. [11] Now after he had been conducted into the tent of Artapates, the most faithful of Cyrus' chamberlains, from that moment no man ever saw... </description>
      <address>Artapates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Orontas</name>
      <description>...in order that I may consult with you and then take such action in the case of Orontas here as is right in the sight of gods and men. This man was given me at first... </description>
      <address>Orontas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Babylon</name>
      <description>...mill-stones along the river banks, then fashioning them and taking them to Babylon, where they sold them and bought grain in exchange. [6] As for the troops... </description>
      <address>Babylon</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>44.42082,32.53617,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...marched thirteen stages through desert country, ninety parasangs, keeping the Euphrates river on the right, and arrived at Pylae. In the course of these stages many of... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Mascas</name>
      <description>...flesh was delicious. [4] Marching on through this region they arrived at the Mascas river, which is a plethrum in width. There, in the desert, was a large city... </description>
      <address>Mascas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Thapsacus</name>
      <description>...crossing no one was wetted above the breast by the water. [18] The people of Thapsacus said that this river had never been passable on foot except at this time, but... </description>
      <address>Thapsacus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>44.5,31.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...follow him against the King; my own plan, then, is that you should cross the Euphrates river before it is clear what answer the rest of the Greeks will make to Cyrus... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syria</name>
      <description>...of which is a plethrum. There was the palace of Belesys, the late ruler of Syria, and a very large and beautiful park containing all the products of the... </description>
      <address>Syria</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Lacedaemonian</name>
      <description>...and had supported Cyrus in his war upon Tissaphernes. [3] Cheirisophus the Lacedaemonian also arrived with this fleet, coming in response to Cyrus' summons,41 together... </description>
      <address>Lacedaemonian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...to the Lacedaemonians30 and to Cyrus himself were sailing around from Ionia to Cilicia under the command of Tamos. [22] At any rate31 Cyrus climbed the mountains... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...with admiration at beholding the brilliant appearance and the order of the Greek army; and Cyrus was delighted to see the terror with which the Greeks inspired... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Sardis</name>
      <description>...force that had been engaged in besieging Miletus. All these came to Cyrus at Sardis. [4] Meanwhile Tissaphernes had taken note of these proceedings and come to... </description>
      <address>Sardis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>-89.91592,34.43705,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cappadocia</name>
      <description>...he was sent down72 by his father to be satrap of Lydia, Greater Phrygia, and Cappadocia and was also appointed commander of all the troops whose duty it is to muster... </description>
      <address>Cappadocia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...of a thousand took station beside Clearchus on the right wing, as did the Greek peltasts, on the left was Ariaeus, Cyrus' lieutenant, with the rest of the... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Euphrates</name>
      <description>...exceedingly deep, and grain-carrying ships ply in them; they empty into the Euphrates and are a parsang apart, and there are bridges over them.] and alongside the... </description>
      <address>Euphrates</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>40.93640094444444,34.74942377777777,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...there Cyrus marched one stage, three parasangs, with his whole army, Greek and barbarian alike, drawn up in line of battle; for he supposed that on that... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>71</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Phoenicia</name>
      <description>...chariots, were present at the battle; for Abrocomas, marching from Phoenicia, arrived five days too late for the engagement. [13] Such were the reports... </description>
      <address>Phoenicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>69</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.25,33.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...were in their baggage train, and the King, on the other hand, heard from Tissaphernes that the Greeks were victorious over the division opposite them and had gone on... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...the tribute which came in from the cities he chanced to have that belonged to Tissaphernes. [9] Still another army was being collected for him in the Chersonese which is... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Thessaly</name>
      <description>...to terms with his opponents until he had consulted with him. Thus the army in Thessaly, again, was being secretly maintained for him. [11] Furthermore, Cyrus... </description>
      <address>Thessaly</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.204407006419558,39.51468942179051,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Abydus</name>
      <description>...another army was being collected for him in the Chersonese which is opposite Abydus, in the following manner: Clearchus7 was a Lacedaemonian exile; Cyrus, making... </description>
      <address>Abydus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>26.41271,40.15552,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Miletus</name>
      <description>...and Socrates also, belonged to the force that had been engaged in besieging Miletus. All these came to Cyrus at Sardis. [4] Meanwhile Tissaphernes had taken note... </description>
      <address>Miletus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.2774885,37.5292362,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Miletus</name>
      <description>...their own accord chose Cyrus rather than Tissaphernes, with the exception of Miletus;74 and the reason why the Milesians feared him was, that he would not prove... </description>
      <address>Miletus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.2774885,37.5292362,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Miletus</name>
      <description>...of them except Miletus had revolted and gone over to Cyrus. [7] The people of Miletus also were planning to do the very same thing, namely, to go over to Cyrus, but... </description>
      <address>Miletus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.2774885,37.5292362,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Colossae</name>
      <description>...he marched through Phrygia one stage, a distance of eight parasangs, to Colossae, an inhabited16 city, prosperous and large. There he remained seven days; and... </description>
      <address>Colossae</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>74</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>29.2598,37.78671,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Celaenae</name>
      <description>...river; its sources are beneath the palace, and it flows through the city of Celaenae also. [8] There is likewise a palace of the Great King18 in Celaenae, strongly... </description>
      <address>Celaenae</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.16557,38.065,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Maeander</name>
      <description>...Marsyas river; the Marsyas also flows through the city, and empties into the Maeander, and its width is twenty-five feet. It was here, according to the story, that... </description>
      <address>Maeander</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.4713446,37.6220196,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Psarus</name>
      <description>...any rate, not openly. 4. Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to the Psarus river, the width of which was three plethra. From there he marched one stage... </description>
      <address>Psarus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Pyramus</name>
      <description>...was three plethra. From there he marched one stage, five parasangs, to the Pyramus river, the width of which was a stadium.38 From there he marched two stages... </description>
      <address>Pyramus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Babylonia</name>
      <description>...and no grave of his was ever seen. 7. From there Cyrus marched through Babylonia three stages, twelve parasangs. On the third stage he held a review of the... </description>
      <address>Babylonia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>74</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>44.5,32.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...tent seven of the noblest Persians among his attendants, while he ordered the Greek generals to bring up hoplites and bid them station themselves under arms around... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Belesys</name>
      <description>...of the Dardas river, the width of which is a plethrum. There was the palace of Belesys, the late ruler of Syria, and a very large and beautiful park containing all... </description>
      <address>Belesys</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syrian</name>
      <description>...by Syennesis and a garrison of Cilicians, while the one on the farther, the Syrian, side was reported to be guarded by a garrison of the King's troops. And in the... </description>
      <address>Syrian</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>30.354167,30.317778,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...the ships lay at anchor alongside Cyrus' tent. It was at Issus also that the Greek mercenaries who had been in the service of Abrocomas—four hundred... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...there he marched two stages, fifteen parasangs, to Issus, the last city in Cilicia, a place situated on the sea, and large and prosperous. [2] There they remained... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tarsus</name>
      <description>...they should chance upon them anywhere. 3. Cyrus and his army remained here at Tarsus twenty days, for the soldiers refused to go any farther; for they suspected by... </description>
      <address>Tarsus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>34.89277,36.91766,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Syennesis</name>
      <description>...to Tarsus,32 a large and prosperous city of Cilicia, where the palace of Syennesis, the king of the Cilicians, was situated; and through the middle of the city... </description>
      <address>Syennesis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Cilicia</name>
      <description>...stages, twenty-five parasangs, to Tarsus,32 a large and prosperous city of Cilicia, where the palace of Syennesis, the king of the Cilicians, was situated; and... </description>
      <address>Cilicia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>35.75,38.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ionia</name>
      <description>...to the Lacedaemonians30 and to Cyrus himself were sailing around from Ionia to Cilicia under the command of Tamos. [22] At any rate31 Cyrus climbed the... </description>
      <address>Ionia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>72</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Lycaonia</name>
      <description>...last city of Phrygia. There he remained three days. Thence he marched through Lycaonia five stages, thirty parasangs. This country he gave over to the Greeks to... </description>
      <address>Lycaonia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>32.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tyriaeum</name>
      <description>...water of the spring.26 [14] Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to Tyriaeum, an inhabited city. There he remained three days. And the Cilician queen, as... </description>
      <address>Tyriaeum</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>31.91389,38.27917,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Sardis</name>
      <description>...presented themselves, under arms, at Sardis. [3] Xenias, then, arrived at Sardis with the troops from the cities, who were hoplites to the number of four... </description>
      <address>Sardis</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>-89.91592,34.43705,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...he honoured. Hence, as I at least conclude from what comes to my ears, no man, Greek or barbarian, has ever been loved by a greater number of people. [29] Here is a... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...plunged through the lines of their own troops, others, however, through the Greek lines, but without charioteers. And whenever the Greeks saw them coming, they... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...frontlets and breast-pieces; and the men carried, besides their other weapons, Greek sabres. [8] And now it was midday, and the enemy were not yet in sight; but... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greek</name>
      <description>...the others beyond Proxenus, while Menon and his army took the left end of the Greek wing. [5] As for the barbarians, Paphlagonian horsemen to the number of a... </description>
      <address>Greek</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>12.773835603628,41.945318177266,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tigris</name>
      <description>...to the wall of Media,62 [Here also are the canals, which flow from the Tigris river; they are four in number, each a plethrum wide and exceedingly deep, and... </description>
      <address>Tigris</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>73</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>44.79467829666667,34.52908255,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Phrygia</name>
      <description>...he marched three stages, twenty parasangs, to Celaenae, an inhabited city of Phrygia, large and prosperous. There Cyrus had a palace and a large park full of wild... </description>
      <address>Phrygia</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>32.5,37.5,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Greece</name>
      <description>...soldiers had gone over to Clearchus43 with the intention of going back to Greece again instead of proceeding against the King, and Cyrus had allowed Clearchus... </description>
      <address>Greece</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>76</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>22.97947876378841,39.04697922405934,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Ceramon-agora</name>
      <description>...Thence he marched two stages, twelve parasangs, to the inhabited city of Ceramon-agora,23 the last Phrygian city as one goes toward Mysia. [11] Thence he marched... </description>
      <address>Ceramon-agora</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>75</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Maeander</name>
      <description>...and there was a bridge over it made of seven boats. [6] After crossing the Maeander he marched through Phrygia one stage, a distance of eight parasangs, to... </description>
      <address>Maeander</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>77</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>27.4713446,37.6220196,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Marsyas</name>
      <description>...at the foot of the Acropolis over the sources of the Marsyas river; the Marsyas also flows through the city, and empties into the Maeander, and its width is... </description>
      <address>Marsyas</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>74</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>37.75,37.25,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Castolus</name>
      <description>...had also appointed him commander of all the forces that muster in the plain of Castolus.2 Cyrus accordingly went up3 to his father, taking with him Tissaphernes as a... </description>
      <address>Castolus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>81</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>28.75,38.75,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Castolus</name>
      <description>...commander of all the troops whose duty it is to muster in the plain of Castolus, he showed, in the first place, that he counted it of the utmost importance... </description>
      <address>Castolus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>73</when></TimeStamp>
      <Point>
        <coordinates>28.75,38.75,0</coordinates>
      </Point>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Carsus</name>
      <description>...King's troops. And in the space between these walls flows a river named the Carsus, a plethrum in width. The entire distance from one wall to the other was three... </description>
      <address>Carsus</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>78</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...with Tissaphernes, all the cities of their own accord chose Cyrus rather than Tissaphernes, with the exception of Miletus;74 and the reason why the Milesians feared him... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>80</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark><Placemark>
      <name>Tissaphernes</name>
      <description>...he could, with about five hundred horsemen. [5] And when the King heard from Tissaphernes about Cyrus' array, he set about making counter-preparations. Cyrus was now... </description>
      <address>Tissaphernes</address>
      <TimeStamp><when>79</when></TimeStamp>
      <MultiGeometry>
        
      </MultiGeometry>
    </Placemark>
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