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With spoils from the recent victory at
Aigospotamoi, Lysander commanded statues be built for his military commanders. This was the first time in the history of Sparta that statues of living military commanders were created. There were approximately 39 statues created, the 9 in the front row included
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Lysander himself, immediately next to him were the statues of Agias, and Hermon, the commander of his
Flagship. The statue of Agias is somewhat unique in that it was the only one created by Pison of Kalaureia.
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in 404 BC. Some ancient writers considered Agias' prediction—that
Lysander would capture the entire fleet except for ten
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Spartan Self-Presentation in the
Panhellenic Sanctuaries of Delphi and Olympia in the Classical Period
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of both Agias and
Lysander, reputedly erected by Lysander, which has been partially recovered.
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mentions seeing a bronze statue of Agias at the altar of
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Greek
Divination a Study of Its Methods and Principles
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
41:, who predicted that general's victory at the
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258:Spartans of the Peloponnesian War
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166:Flower, Michael Attyah (2007).
174:University of California Press
65:. There was also a statue in
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223:, ed. (1870). "Agias (1)".
102:. In Smith, William (ed.).
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169:The Seer in Ancient Greece
37:, was the Spartan seer of
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110:Little, Brown and Company
129:. Kessinger Publishing.
123:Halliday, W. R. (1913).
16:5th-century Spartan seer
248:5th-century BC Spartans
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197:Palagia, Olga (2009).
61:in the marketplace in
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154:Description of Greece
43:battle of Aegospotami
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100:"Agias (1)"
73:Recognition
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82:References
150:Pausanias
55:Pausanias
98:(1867).
59:Augustus
47:triremes
39:Lysander
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51:Corcyra
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67:Delphi
63:Sparta
29:Ἀγίας
20:Agias
178:ISBN
131:ISBN
24:Gr.
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