Timoleon (d. 337 B.C.)

Timoleon, a celebrated general of ancient Greece, born, of a noble family, in Corinth, about 395 B.C.; ardently espoused the cause of the Greeks in Sicily, who were in danger of forfeiting their liberties to the Carthaginians, and headed an army to Syracuse, where he defeated and drove out Dionysius the Younger (344), subsequently cleared the island of the oppressors, and brought back order and good government, after which he quietly returned to private life, and spent his later years at Syracuse, beloved by the Sicilians as their liberator and benefactor; (d. 337 B.C.)

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Timbuctoo * Timon of Phlius
[wait for the fun]
Tientsin
Tierra del Fuego
Tiers État
Tiflis
Tigris
Tilbury Fort
Tillotson, John Robert
Tilly, Johann Tserklaes, Count of
Tilsit
Timbuctoo
Timoleon
Timon of Phlius
Timor
Timothy
Timur the Tartar
Tindal, Matthew
Tinewald, The
Tinnevelli
Tintagel Head
Tintern Abbey
Tintoretto

Nearby

Timoleon in Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable

Links here from Chalmers

Anderson, James [1739–1788]
Buchanan, George
Harpe, John Francis De La
Montfaucon, Bernard De
Paoli, Pascal De