Pericles the Younger

Pericles the Younger (440s – 406 BC) was an ancient Athenian strategos (general), the illegitimate son of famous Athenian leader Pericles by Aspasia.

Pericles the Younger was probably born in the early to mid 440s BC, before 446 according to some scholars, but possibly as late as 440.[1] He was admitted to Athenian citizenship by a special exception from his father's own law prohibiting citizenship to children of non-Athenian mothers.[1] He served as Hellenotamias in 410 or 409,[1] and as strategos in 406.[2] He was one of six strategoi executed following the Battle of Arginusae for failing to pick up survivors in a storm (see Battle of Arginusae).[2]

Ancestry

gollark: Oh, C++, not C, probably.
gollark: I think I remember reading about some "modules" thing clang was doing for C.
gollark: In the languages/tooling I use you mostly just import things and it automagically™ adds them to the compile.
gollark: Well, it might, if it existed, which it doesn't.
gollark: Did you know it can do:- full text search- efficient geospatial lookups- multi-terabyte databases- window functions, virtual tables and other nice SQL features- queries involving multiple databases- user-defined functions- recursive table definitions (allowing for accursedness like mandelbrot things)- diffing of databases- small blob lookup faster than the filesystem- JSON queries???!?!?!?!

References

  1. Anton Powell (1997). The Greek World. Routledge. pp. 261–262, 268. ISBN 0-415-17042-7.
  2. Sarah B. Pomeroy; Stanley M. Burstein; Walter Donlan; Jennifer Tolbert Roberts (1998). Ancient Greece: A Political, Social, and Cultural History. Oxford University Press. p. 216. ISBN 0-19-509742-4.
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