« Plut. Tim. 28 | Plut. Tim. 29 | Plut. Tim. 30 | About This Work »
29The rank of those who had fallen was made known to the Greeks from the spoils. For those who stripped the bodies made very little account of bronze and iron; so abundant was silver, so abundant gold. For they crossed the river and seized the camp with its baggage-trains. As for the prisoners, most of them were stolen away and hidden by the soldiers, but as many as five thousand were delivered into the public stock; there were also captured two hundred of the four-horse chariots.
« Plut. Tim. 28 | Plut. Tim. 29 | Plut. Tim. 30 | About This Work »