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account of the interview, in which the satrap upbraided the Lacedaemonians with the in return they were making him for his services in the Pcloponnesian war, and which ended with a promise fronl Agesilaus to withdraw ; from his territory, and to refrain from any future invasion of it, as long as there should be any one else for him to fight with. (Xen. Hell. 3.4. §§ 12, &c., 25, &c., 4.1. §§ 1, 15-41; Plut. Ages. 9-12; Diod. 14.35, 79, 80; Just. 6.1.) Meanwhile, as early apparently as as. B. C. 397, Pharnabazus had connected himself with Conon, and we find them engaged together down to 393 in a series of successful operations under the sanction and with the assistance of the Persian king. [CONON.] Pharnabazus, in the last-mentioned year, returned to Asia, and we have no further account of him for some time. His satrapy was invaded by Anaxibius in 389, but it does not appear whether he was himself residing there. (Xen. Hell. 4.8.33.) Two years after we find Ariobarzanes holding the go
t Chrysopolis, on the eastern shore of the Bosporus, the satrap induced Anaxibius by large promises, which he never redeemed, to withdraw them front his territory. [ANAXIBIUS.] The great authority with which Tissaphernes was invested by Artaxerxes in Asia Minor, as a reward for his services in the war with Cyrus, naturally excited the jealousy of Pharnabazus; and the hostile feeling mutually entertained by the satraps was taken advantage of by Dercyllidas, when he passed over into Asia, in B. C. 399, to protect the Asiatic Greeks against the Persian power. [DERCYLLIDAS.] In B. C. 396, the province of Pharnabazus was invaded by Agesilaus, but the Lacedaemonian cavalry was defeated by that of the satrap. In 395, Tithraustes, who had been sent lv Artaxerxes to put Tissaphernes to death, and to succeed him in his government, made a merit with Agesilaus of his predecessor's execution, and urged him to leave his province unmolested, and to attack that of Pharnabazus instead, a request to wh
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