The History of Ancient Greece, Its Colonies, and Conquests: From the Earliest Accounts Till the Division of the Macedonian Empire in the East. Including the History of Literature, Philosophy, and the Fine Arts, Volume 5J. J. Tourneisen and J. L. Legrand, 1790 - 307 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 27
Page
... Defign Geography Aftronomy Natural History Works of Ariftotle Philofophical Sects established at Athens Decline of Genius - Tenets of the different - Sects Peripatetic Philofophy - Philofophy - Eftimate of that - Its Fate in the World ...
... Defign Geography Aftronomy Natural History Works of Ariftotle Philofophical Sects established at Athens Decline of Genius - Tenets of the different - Sects Peripatetic Philofophy - Philofophy - Eftimate of that - Its Fate in the World ...
Page 31
... defign was fufpected or discovered , and Philip , to screen his partisans from public vengeance , feafon- ably withdrew his army , and invested the neigh- bouring city of Perinthus . The news of thefe tranfactions not only increased the ...
... defign was fufpected or discovered , and Philip , to screen his partisans from public vengeance , feafon- ably withdrew his army , and invested the neigh- bouring city of Perinthus . The news of thefe tranfactions not only increased the ...
Page 41
... defign , he chofe the gloom of a tempeftuous night ; a determined band of Macedonians paffed the ditch ; the fcaling- ladders were already fixed ; when the centinels of Byzantium were alarmed by the barking of mastiffs , kept in the ...
... defign , he chofe the gloom of a tempeftuous night ; a determined band of Macedonians paffed the ditch ; the fcaling- ladders were already fixed ; when the centinels of Byzantium were alarmed by the barking of mastiffs , kept in the ...
Page 49
... defign of this work , could not be related with any fulness or accuracy . Countries in a pastoral state are but thinly peopled ; and Philip was obliged to divide his forces , in order to vanquish with greater rapidity the wandering ...
... defign of this work , could not be related with any fulness or accuracy . Countries in a pastoral state are but thinly peopled ; and Philip was obliged to divide his forces , in order to vanquish with greater rapidity the wandering ...
Page 54
... defign . Nor could he attempt , with any profpect of success , to attack the enemy by fea , fince the Athenian fleet fo far exceeded his own , that it had interrupted , and almost totally deftroyed , the commerce of Macedon . His in ...
... defign . Nor could he attempt , with any profpect of success , to attack the enemy by fea , fince the Athenian fleet fo far exceeded his own , that it had interrupted , and almost totally deftroyed , the commerce of Macedon . His in ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
affault affiftance Afia againſt Alex Alexander ambaffadors ancient ander Ariftotle army Arrian Athenians Athens Barbarians battle befieged Boeotia caufe cauſe cavalry CHAP character commanded conquefts Craterus Curtius Darius death defcribed defeated defend defign defire deftroyed Demofthenes difcovered Diodor Diopeithes enemy Epicurus eſtabliſhed expedition fame fays feemed feized fent feqq feveral fhould fiege fince firft firſt fituation flain fleet foldiers fome ftates ftill ftrength fubject fuccefs fuch fufficient greateſt Grecian Greece Greeks hiftory himſelf hoftile honor horfe horſe ibid Iffus king of Macedon lefs Macedonian mafter meaſures moft moſt muſt nians obfervation occafion Olymp oppofition orator paffage paffed Peloponnefian Perdiccas Perfian perfon Perinthus Philip Philip of Macedon philofophy Phocion Phocis pleaſure Plut Plutarch Porus prefent prince puniſhed purpoſe Pyrrho racter raiſed reafon refift refpect Scythians Spartans ſtate Strabo Thebans Thebes thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand Thrace tion troops uſeful virtue whofe whoſe XXXIX XXXVI δε
Popular passages
Page 115 - Athenians,whose city he preferred to be the repository of his trophies and renown. Immediately after the battle, he sent three hundred suits of Persian armour, as dedications to Minerva in the citadel. This magnificent present was inscribed with the following words : " Gained by Alexander, son of Philip, and the Greeks (except the Lacedaemonians), from the Barbarians of Asia.
Page 40 - Olympic, and Pythian, where proclamation shall be duly made of that crown, now by us conferred on the people of Athens, that all Greece may be informed of the magnanimity of Athens, and the gratitude of the Byzantines and Perinthians.
Page 244 - IIlyrians, and Triballi. Having repelled 'the ravagers of your country, he brought you from the mountains to the plain, and taught you to confide, not in your fastnesses, but in your valour.
Page 166 - Darius next moved his main body, but with so little order, that the horse, mixed with the infantry, advanced, and left a vacuity in the line, which his generals wanted time <?r vigilance to supply.
Page 110 - While these troops boldly entered the Granicus, Alexander likewise advanced with the chosen cavalry on the right wing, followed by the archers and Agrians. In passing the river, both Alexander and Ptolemy led their troops obliquely down the current, to prevent as much as possible the Persians...
Page 227 - Long as the vital spirit moves my heart? If in the melancholy shades below, The flames of friends and lovers cease to glow, Yet mine shall sacred last; mine undecay'd Burn on through death, and animate my shade.
Page 23 - Greeks ; you warn us to guard against this man's design. (And it is too true, we have done thus.) But, O most wretched of mankind ! when this man had been ten months detained abroad ; when sickness, and the severity of winter, and the armies of his enemies, rendered it impossible for him to return home...
Page 208 - ... cafion loud and foaming billows , mixed with boiling eddies and whirlpools, equally formidable, and ftill more dangerous. Of the Macedonians , who attempted to pafs in boats, many drove againft the rocks, and perifhed ; but fuch as employed hides , reached the oppofite fhore in fafety. The Hydraotes is of the fame breadth with the Acefines , but flows with a gentle current.
Page 89 - ... would purchafe the imagined grandeur and profperity of the king of Macedon, at the price of his artifices and crimes , and to a philofopher , who confidered either the means by which he had obtained his triumphs, or the probable confequences of his dominion over Greece and Afia, the bufy ambition of this mighty conqueror would appear but a deceitful fcene of fplendid mifery.
Page 34 - PHILIP King of MACEDON, to the SENATE AND PEOPLE OF ATHENS, health ! "I have received three of your citizens in quality of ambassadors, who have conferred with me about the dismission of certain ships commanded by Leodamas. I cannot but consider it as an extraordinary instance of weakness, to imagine that I can possibly believe that these ships were...