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About this very time another great expedition was undertaken against
Libya, on a pretext which I will relate when I have premised certain
particulars. The descendants of the Argonauts in the third
generation, driven out of Lemnos by the Pelasgi who carried off the
Athenian women from Brauron, took ship and went to Lacedaemon,
where, seating themselves on Mount Taygetum, they proceeded to
kindle their fires. The Lacedaemonians, seeing this, sent a herald
to inquire of them "who they were, and from what region they had
come"; whereupon they made answer, "that they were Minyae, sons of
the heroes by whom the ship Argo was manned; for these persons had
stayed awhile in Lemnos, and had there become their progenitors."
On hearing this account of their descent, the Lacedaemonians sent to
them a second time, and asked "what was their object in coming to
Lacedaemon, and there kindling their fires?" They answered,
"that, driven from their own land by the Pelasgi, they had come, as
was most reasonable, to their fathers; and their wish was to dwell
with them in their country, partake their privileges, and obtain
allotments of land. It seemed good to the Lacedaemonians to receive
the Minyae among them on their own terms; to assign them lands, and
enrol them in their tribes. What chiefly moved them to this was the
consideration that the sons of Tyndarus had sailed on board the Argo.
The Minyae, on their part, forthwith married Spartan wives, and
gave the wives, whom they had married in Lemnos, to Spartan husbands.
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