Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The event became so celebrated in Paeonian lore that the local mint back home in the Balkans struck a coin with the god Apollo on one side and Ariston on the other, spear poised above his fallen foe.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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The event became so celebrated in Paeonian lore that the local mint back home in the Balkans struck a coin with the god Apollo on one side and Ariston on the other, spear poised above his fallen foe.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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The event became so celebrated in Paeonian lore that the local mint back home in the Balkans struck a coin with the god Apollo on one side and Ariston on the other, spear poised above his fallen foe.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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Alexander ordered several squadrons of his own cavalry, including Ariston, leader of the Paeonian cavalry, and his men from the highlands north of Macedonia, to follow him in pursuit of the riders.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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In response Alexander ordered his Greek mercenaries and the Paeonian cavalry under Ariston to attack Bessus and his men in a furious effort to keep them engaged on the far side of the battlefield.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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Alexander ordered several squadrons of his own cavalry, including Ariston, leader of the Paeonian cavalry, and his men from the highlands north of Macedonia, to follow him in pursuit of the riders.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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Alexander ordered several squadrons of his own cavalry, including Ariston, leader of the Paeonian cavalry, and his men from the highlands north of Macedonia, to follow him in pursuit of the riders.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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In response Alexander ordered his Greek mercenaries and the Paeonian cavalry under Ariston to attack Bessus and his men in a furious effort to keep them engaged on the far side of the battlefield.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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In response Alexander ordered his Greek mercenaries and the Paeonian cavalry under Ariston to attack Bessus and his men in a furious effort to keep them engaged on the far side of the battlefield.
Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011
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He further called out the Agrianians, the Laeaeans, and the other Paeonian nations who were his subjects.
The History of the Peloponnesian War Thucydides 2007
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