Ancient Greece, from the Earliest Times Down to the Death of Alexander |
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Page 1
... inhabitants of Bretagne , Wales , and Ireland . The second migration was made by the Teutons , the ancestors of the English , Germans , Danes , Swedes , and Norwegians . The Teutons were followed by the Slaves and Lithu- anians , from ...
... inhabitants of Bretagne , Wales , and Ireland . The second migration was made by the Teutons , the ancestors of the English , Germans , Danes , Swedes , and Norwegians . The Teutons were followed by the Slaves and Lithu- anians , from ...
Page 19
... inhabitants of Laconia , who had been conquered at the Dorian Invasion . They were much more numerous than the Spartans , and cultivated the less fertile lands of the mountains . They also worked the stone quarries and mines on Mount ...
... inhabitants of Laconia , who had been conquered at the Dorian Invasion . They were much more numerous than the Spartans , and cultivated the less fertile lands of the mountains . They also worked the stone quarries and mines on Mount ...
Page 21
... inhabitants who did not flee to Arcadia or Eleusis were completely subjugated . 1 Sparta was sometimes called Lacedæmon , and its inhabitants Lacedæmonians . 4 22 THE SECOND MESSENIAN WAR . Aristomene After bearing the.
... inhabitants who did not flee to Arcadia or Eleusis were completely subjugated . 1 Sparta was sometimes called Lacedæmon , and its inhabitants Lacedæmonians . 4 22 THE SECOND MESSENIAN WAR . Aristomene After bearing the.
Page 31
... inhabitants made slaves . From Naxos the fleet sailed to Delos , where the Persians offered sacrifices to the presiding divinities1 of the island . Eretria was the next place to which the Persians sailed . For six days they attempted to ...
... inhabitants made slaves . From Naxos the fleet sailed to Delos , where the Persians offered sacrifices to the presiding divinities1 of the island . Eretria was the next place to which the Persians sailed . For six days they attempted to ...
Page 33
... inhabitants of Paros , he asked his country- men for a fleet of seventy ships , without telling them the reason of the request . The ships were given him , but he failed in his attempt to take the island , and was obliged to return home ...
... inhabitants of Paros , he asked his country- men for a fleet of seventy ships , without telling them the reason of the request . The ships were given him , but he failed in his attempt to take the island , and was obliged to return home ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acropolis Alcibiades Alexander allies Amphipolis Arcadia Archons Areiopagus Aristeides Aristophanes army arrived Asia Minor Athe Athenian fleet Athenians Athens attack Attica battle became Boeotia C. C. FELTON called Capture central Greece CHAPTER Chios Cimon citizens Cleisthenes Cleon College command Confederacy of Delos Corcyra Corcyræans Corinth Corinthians Cyrus Darius death defeated Demosthenes Dorians edition enemy Epameinondas Euboea Eurymedon expedition favor forces goddess Gylippus Harbor Hellespont Helots inhabitants Ionian island JOHN ALLYN king Laconia land Long Walls Macedonia Mantineia Marathon marched Mardonius Messenians miles Mount Mytilene Naxos nians Notes by C. C. orator Pausanias Peace of Nicias Pelopidas Pelopon Peloponnesian Peloponnesus Pericles PERSIAN INVASION Persians Phædo Philip Phocis plain Platææ Professor of Greek Pylos revised revolt Rhodos sailed Salamis Samos sent ships Sicily soon Spartans Sphacteria Syracusans Syracuse Tanagra Thebans Thebes Themistocles Thessalia Thrace triremes troops victory W. W. GOODWIN Xerxes Zeus
Popular passages
Page 98 - Harmosts, with indefinite powers, were established everywhere. The Greeks found that instead of gaining by the change of masters, they had lost; they had exchanged the yoke of a power, which if rapacious, was at any rate refined...
Page 114 - All the time that he stood at the head of the state, he governed it with moderation, and watched over its safety. Under him it rose to the highest pitch of greatness. The cause of his influence was that he was powerful in dignity of character and wisdom ; that he proved himself to be pre-eminently the most incorruptible of men ; and that he restrained the people freely, and led them instead of being led by them.
Page 11 - Tsenarum, and 180 miles broad in its widest part, ie from Cape Actium to the plain of Marathon. It is in size but little larger than the State of Maine, which has about 35,000 square miles. Greece is bounded on the north by Illyricum and Macedonia; on the east by the jEgean sea; on the south by the Mediterranean; on the west by the Ionian sea. It may be divided for convenience into three grand divisions; viz., Northern Greece, Central Greece, and Southern Greece, or the Peloponnesus, as the last...
Page 62 - Spartan hoplites, supported by 10,000 allies, were despatched into Doris. The mere approach of so large a force speedily effected the ostensible object of the expedition, and compelled the Phocians to retire. The Lacedaemonians now proceeded to effect their real design, which was to prevent the...
Page 28 - Democratic states were accustomed to ostracize and remove from the city for a definite time those who appeared to be superior to their fellow-citizens, by reason of their wealth, the number of their friends, or any other means of influence.