| E. Cobham Brewer 18101897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898. |
| | | Cenotaphs. | | |
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The most noted in ancient times | 1 |
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ÆNEAS to Delph bus (Æneid, i. 6; v. 505). |
| ANDROMACHE (4 syl.) to Hector (Æneid, i. 3; v. 302) |
| ARGENTIEE to Kallaischros (Anthologia, bk. iii. 22). |
ARISTOTLE to Herm as and Eub ios (Diogen s Laertius). |
The ATHENLANS to the poet Eurip des. |
| CALLIMACHOS to Sopolis, son of Dioclidês (Epigram of Callimachos, 22). |
| CATULLUS to his brother (Epigram of Catullus, 103). |
| DIDO to Sichæus (Justin, xviii. 6). |
EUPOLIS and Aristod cê to their son Theotimos. |
| GERMAIN DE BRIE to Hervé, the Breton, in 1512. |
ONESTOS to T m clês (Anthologia, iii. p. 366). |
The ROMANS to Drusus in Germany, and to Alexander Sev rus, the emp., in Gaul (Suetonius; Life of Claudius; and the Anthologia). |
STATIUS to his father (The Sylv of Statius, v. Epic dium, 3.) |
TIMARES to his son Teleutag ras. |
XENOCRATES to Lysidic s (Anthologia). | |
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A cenotaph (Greek, ε ó   o , an empty tomb is a monument or tablet to the memory of a person whose body is buried elsewhere. A mausoleum is an imposing monument enshrining the dead body itself. |
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