[Cyropaedia by Xenophon]@TWC D-Link bookCyropaedia BOOK VII 15/72
"This," said Cyrus: "better pay than you have had, so long as the war lasts, and when peace comes, if you choose to stay with me, lands and cities and women and servants." [44] Then they asked him if he would excuse them from one duty, service against Croesus.
Croesus, they said, was the only leader who knew them; for the rest, they were content to agree.
And so they came to terms, and took and gave pledges of good faith.
[45] Thus it came about that their descendants are to this day faithful subjects of the king, and Cyrus gave them cities, some in the interior, which are still called the cities of the Egyptians, beside Larissa and Kyllene and Kyme on the coast, still held by their descendants. When this matter was arranged darkness had already fallen, and Cyrus drew off his army and encamped at Thymbrara. [46] In this engagement the Egyptians alone among the enemy won themselves renown, and of the troops under Cyrus the Persian cavalry was held to have done the best, so much so that to this day they are still armed in the manner that Cyrus devised.
[47] High praise also was given to the scythe-bearing chariots, and this engine of war is still employed by the reigning king.
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