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consults with Nestor about flight 158.44 & seq.
Agamemnon's brave deeds 120, throughout
Agamemnon and Achilles' renewal of friendship 227.36
Sleep does not capture Agamemnon, because of the duty of a good magistrate 107.3 (124.26)
Agastrophus killed by Diomedes 164.36
Agenor is suborned by Apollo against Achilles, to delay him from the capture of Ilium, he wins, Apollo snatches him away, and diverts Achilles from the city by guile 250.32
Ajax the Telamonian kills Acamas the Thracian, son of Ensor 65.3
Ajax, the bulwark of the Greeks 28.20, 78.39
Ajax and Hector's single combat 78.40
Ajax is forced by the Trojans into flight 128.10
Ajax, according to Homer, miserably lays Hector low with a stone, so that he had to be dragged away by his comrades half-dead 164.36
Ajax provokes Hector (whom, however, he does not often encounter, although Homer lies greatly that Ajax was better than Hector), and is berated by him, as he was without doubt, he is called 157.25
Ajax pierces Hector's cousin Clytius with a spear, and because of this a sharp battle is made 175.32
Ajax, how beautifully he urges his men to battle 177.4 & 187.16
Ajax cannot resist the weapons of the Trojans and the renowned strength of Hector any longer, and flees: the Trojans burn the ships 183.45
Ajax decapitated Cleobulus 187.43
Ajax shouts to Menelaus that he cannot defend the corpse of Patroclus without danger of death, and orders him to command the bravest of all to bring help to him 202.1
Ajax's vehement impetus against the Trojans and the slaughter of many 172.10
The two Ajaxes could not repel Hector from the corpse of the dead Patroclus 214.46
The Ajaxes' exhortation that the Greeks should fight 138.44
Alcathous, son of Aesyetes, is pierced through by Idomeneus 150.30
Althea, mother of Meleager 104.17
Alcestis, daughter of Pelias 26.8
Alexander is basely chided by his brother Hector for womanizing 70.33
Alexander indeed confesses that he wishes to return everything to Menelaus that he took, but not his wife 81
Alexander strikes Machaon with a triple-pointed weapon 127.30
Alexander and Menelaus' contest 29.18, 35.16
Amiphodarus, tutor of the Chimera 187.41
Amphimachus is killed by Hector 146.7, nephew of Neptune
Amyntor, father of Phoenix 102.24
Amythaon, son of Hippasus, is rescued by Lycomedes 204.4
Andromache, daughter of Eetion 72.5
She entreats her husband Hector not to desert her with their little son Ibid. 17
The soul, once lost, is no recoverable prize 101.30
Anteia, wife of Proetus, seeks illicit copulation from Bellerophon 67.45
Antenor persuades the Trojans to return Helen to the Atridae 81
Antilochus, son of Nestor, kills the charioteer Mydon 58.36
Antilochus, despoiling Menalippus, when he saw Hector coming, immediately took to his heels 178.30
Antilochus announces the death of Patroclus to Achilles 211.50
Antimachus, warlike 120.47
His good counsel without obedience 120.47
Aphareus, son of Caletor, is killed by Aeneas 152.33
Apisaon, son of Phausius, is killed by Eurypylus 128.46
Apollo is sent by Jove to Hector to heal him from the blow, and preparing him for war, afterward also to defend him in war 172.15
Apollo, in the guise of a handsome youth, stands by Hector and warns him not to desist from war, i.e., persuaded, he rushes straight at Patroclus: he indeed knocks Cebrion, Hector's charioteer, from his horse with a stone, and casts witty taunts at him, and a sharp battle is made around his corpse, and finally he is bravely killed by Hector 196.10 & following
Apollo stands by Aeneas in the guise of Periphas, and rebukes him for deserting the war 203.38
Apollo, because he seemed to pity Hector against his own faction, is called a companion of evils and perfidious by Juno 279.20
Archelochus, son of Antenor, is killed by Ajax 166.36
Areilycus is laid low by Patroclus 187.21
Achilles' arms, which Vulcan fashioned for him, are described 220.21
Arms that bring ruin 22.10
Ascalaphus, son of Mars 22.25
Ascalaphus is struck by Deiphobus 152.10
Asius is killed by Idomeneus 149.40
Asius does not go to the underworld without a companion 150.17
Asteus killed by Hector 123.45
Asteropaeus and Achilles' battle 143.13
Atymnius killed by Antilochus 187.30
A certain omen happens to the Trojans from a snake dropped by an eagle deterring them from battle, which, however, Hector scorns as vain 137.34
A most excellent omen: to fight for the fatherland 138.21
Description of the hall or citadel of Priam 69.17
Science and contest of charioteering 267.16
Automedon, with the help of Alcimedon, guides Achilles' horses and chariot, and pierces Areius with a spear 206.14
Axilus, son of Theutras, is killed by Diomedes 65.7
Bellerophon, son of Glaucus 67.40
Ox hides, the beds of the ancients 110.14
Bryseis is brought to Agamemnon by Achilles by force 7.11 & 36
Bryseis, so that she may mourn the death of Patroclus 228.25
Corpses of the slain are buried 80.45
Caeneus 6.10
Cesti