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chiliarch
[kil-ee-ahrk]
noun
(in ancient Greece) the military commander of 1000 men.
Other 51³Ō¹Ļ Forms
- chiliarchy noun
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of chiliarch1
Example Sentences
We know that Alexander elevated Hephaestion to āchiliarch,ā a position second only to Alexander himself, around 330 B.C.
Chilā²iagon, a plane figure having 1000 angles; Chilā²iahÄdron, a solid figure having 1000 sides; Chilā²iarch, a leader or commander of a thousand men; Chilā²iarchy, the position of chiliarch; Chilā²iasm, the doctrine that Christ will reign bodily upon the earth for 1000 years; Chilā²iast, one who holds this opinion.
Antipater on his death-bed appointed Polysperchon to the supreme command, and gave Kassander the post of chiliarch, or general of the body guard.
Moreover Roxanes the chiliarch, as Themistokles passed by him in silence into the king's presence, whispered, "Thou subtle serpent of Greece, the king's good genius has led thee hither."
At this perilous crisis Themistokles first applied to Artabanus, a chiliarch, or officer in command of a regiment of a thousand men, whom he told that he was a Greek, and that he wished to have an interview with the king about matters of the utmost importance, and in which the king was especially interested.
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