Plato — For other uses, see Plato (disambiguation) and Platon (disambiguation). Plato (Πλάτων) … Wikipedia
Cimon — For other uses, see Cimon (disambiguation). Cimon Bust of Cimon in Larnaca, Cyprus … Wikipedia
Mnesarchus — or Mnesarch may refer to: father of Pythagoras Mnesarchus of Athens, a Stoic philosopher, lived c. 100 BC. A possible name of the father of Euripides father of Callias of Chalcis Assistant Archon of Athens (thesmothete) This disambiguation page… … Wikipedia
Iran — Persia redirects here. For other uses, see Persia (disambiguation). Coordinates: 32°N 53°E … Wikipedia
Parthenon — Not to be confused with Pantheon, Rome. For other uses, see Parthenon (disambiguation). Coordinates: 37°58′13″N 23°43′21″E / 37.97025°N 23.72247°E … Wikipedia
Megabyzus — For other historical characters named Megabyzus, see Megabyzus (disambiguation). Megabyzus (Old Persian Bagabuxša meaning: God saved ) was a Persian general, son of Zopyrus, satrap of Babylon. His father was killed when the satrapy rebelled in… … Wikipedia
Cynicism — Cynic redirects here. For the modern understanding of the word cynicism , see Cynicism (contemporary). For other uses, see Cynic (disambiguation). Statue of an unknown Cynic philosopher from the Capitoline Museum in Rome. This statue is a Roman… … Wikipedia