While she was still living in the tenement-house, she had relations with a freedman whose name was Dion , whom she declared to be the father of these young men; and Dion did, in fact, bring them up as his own children. Some time later Dion, having committed a misdemeanor and being afraid of the consequences, withdrew to Sicyon . The woman Alce was then installed by Euctemon to look after his tenement-house in the Cerameicus, The “Potters' Quarter” at Athens , partly inside and partly outside the walls near the Dipylon Gate (see Frazer's note on Paus. 1.2.4 ). near the postern gate, where wine is sold.