Today in a very strange coincidence I bumped into the same nugget of information about Thucydides, a general and historian from ancient Athens, in two completely different places. The fact was that he made up some parts of the speeches included in his history (of the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta). I read this in the morning in an Economist book review of a biography of Cleopatra (which apparently also made some things up), then in the afternoon I read the same nugget used as an analogy in Nancy Cartwright's 'How the Laws of Physics Lie' (in the essay on 'Fitting Facts to Equations') - the Nancy Cartwright essay even included the quote from Thucydides explaining why he made these things up. Seeing as I sadly know and read very little history it seemed quite amusing to me that I'd run into this pretty specific nugget in two completely different places in one day. Incidentally Thucydides said that while he made up some parts of the speeches he tried to remain close to the spirit of what was said, which is not such a bad thing - for me certainly better than quoting the exact words but out of context so they give a misleading impression.