A Classical Dictionary: Containing an Account of the Principal Proper Names Mentioned in Ancient Authors, and Intended to Elucidate All the Important Points Connected with the Geography, History, Biography, Mythology, and Fine Arts of the Greeks and Romans. Together with an Account of Coins, Weights, and Measures, with Tabular Values of the SameHarper, 1848 - 1451 |
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Strona 24
... battle , after the affair of the Sabine women . His arms were dedicated to Jupiter Feretrius , and his subjects were incorporated with the Roman people . ( Plut . Vit . Rom . ) Propertius styles him Caninus Acron , from the name of his ...
... battle , after the affair of the Sabine women . His arms were dedicated to Jupiter Feretrius , and his subjects were incorporated with the Roman people . ( Plut . Vit . Rom . ) Propertius styles him Caninus Acron , from the name of his ...
Strona 64
... battle , he gained his σων , μᾶ , & c . , for μετάρσιος , μεταίχμιοι , μετέωροι , first tragic victory . Four years after this was fought μɛiwv , μñτep , & c . ( Comp . Blomfield , Prom . Vinct . , the battle of Salamis , in which ...
... battle , he gained his σων , μᾶ , & c . , for μετάρσιος , μεταίχμιοι , μετέωροι , first tragic victory . Four years after this was fought μɛiwv , μñτep , & c . ( Comp . Blomfield , Prom . Vinct . , the battle of Salamis , in which ...
Strona 78
... battle of Pharsalia , being intrust ed with the command of the right wing , although his , capitulation in Spain had laid him open to the charge of having betrayed the interests of his chief . After the battle of Thapsus , Afranius and ...
... battle of Pharsalia , being intrust ed with the command of the right wing , although his , capitulation in Spain had laid him open to the charge of having betrayed the interests of his chief . After the battle of Thapsus , Afranius and ...
Strona 89
... battle of Mantineia . | the Roman fable of Mucius Scævola was borrowed . To the ensuing winter must probably be referred his ( Vid . Agatharchides , II . ) embassy to the coast of Asia , and negotiations for mon- ey with the revolted ...
... battle of Mantineia . | the Roman fable of Mucius Scævola was borrowed . To the ensuing winter must probably be referred his ( Vid . Agatharchides , II . ) embassy to the coast of Asia , and negotiations for mon- ey with the revolted ...
Strona 91
... battle of Issus , however , put a check upon their battle was about to begin , Thrasyllus , one of the Ar- plans . He sent the galleys to his brother Agesilaus , give generals , and Alciphron came to Agis , and pre- with instructions to ...
... battle of Issus , however , put a check upon their battle was about to begin , Thrasyllus , one of the Ar- plans . He sent the galleys to his brother Agesilaus , give generals , and Alciphron came to Agis , and pre- with instructions to ...
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according Africa afterward Agrippa Alexander Alexandrea ancient Apollo appears appellation Argos army Asia Minor Athenæus Athenian Athens Augustus Bacchus battle became Boeotia brother Cæsar called Carthage Carthaginians celebrated character Cicero coast colony command Compare Consult Cramer's daughter death deity derived Dict Diod Diodorus Diodorus Siculus edition Egypt Egyptian emperor empire fable father favour festival Gaul gave Geogr given goddess Grecian Greece Greek Hence Hercules Herod Herodotus Hist Homer honour inhabitants island Italy Jupiter king land Latin latter legend Livy Macedonia Mannert mentioned modern monarch mountain Mythology native origin Ovid Paris Pausan Pausanias Persian Plin Pliny Plut Plutarch poet Polybius possession priests prince probably Ptolemy regarded reign remarks river Roman Rome sacred seqq Sicily Sparta stadia Strabo succeeded supposed surname Syria temple Thebes Thessaly throne Thucyd tion took town tribes Trojan Virg worship writers
Popularne fragmenty
Strona 30 - Pbryxus son of Athamas, who had fled to his court on a golden ram. This murder he committed to obtain the fleece of the golden ram. The Argonauts came against Colchis, and recovered the golden fleece by means of Medea, though it was guarded by bulls that breathed fire, and by a venomous dragon. Their expedition was celebrated by all the ancient poets.
Strona 248 - ... feet high. In the side of the pile, a little below the summit, is very clearly to be seen part of another brick wall, precisely resembling the fragment which crowns the summit, but which still encases and supports its part of the mound. This is clearly indicative of another stage of greater extent.
Strona 202 - God, the immortality of the soul, and a future state of rewards and punishments have been esteemed useful engines of government.
Strona 254 - Greek patriarchs. His efforts for the regulation of clerical discipline, of the divine service, and of the standing of the clergy ; the number of his sermons ; the success of his mild treatment of the Arians ; and. above all, his endeavours for the promotion of monastic life, for which he himself prepared vows and rules, observed by him, and still remaining in force...
Strona 99 - Phoenician alp or alpin (high, and high mountain), from the height of the coast. Sprengel, in his Universal History of Great Britain, thinks it of Gallic origin, the same with Albyn, the name of the Scotch Highlands. It appears to him the plural of alp or ailp, which signifies rocky mountains...
Strona 316 - Marius, spared Catiline, and, perhaps, even encouraged him. Only two Romans remained determined to uphold their falling country — Cato and Cicero ; the latter of whom alone possessed the qualifications necessary for the task. The conspirators were now planning the elevation of Catiline and one of his accomplices to the consulship. When this was effected, they hoped to obtain possession of the public treasures and the property of the citizens, under various pretexts, and especially by means of proscription.
Strona 316 - Manlius appeared among them, and formed a camp in Etruria. Cicero was on the watch : a fortunate accident disclosed to him the counsels of the conspirators. One of them, Curius, was on intimate terms with a woman of doubtful reputation, Fulvia by name, and had acquainted her with their plans. Through this woman, Cicero...
Strona 248 - Alexander saw it ; if we give any credit to the report that 10,000 men could only remove the rubbish, preparatory to repairing it, in two months. If indeed it required one half of that number to disencumber it, the state of dilapidation must have been complete. The immense masses of vitrified brick which are seen on the top of the mount, appear to have marked its summit since the time of its destruction. The rubbish about its base was probably in much greater quantities, the weather having dissipated...
Strona 294 - Roman youths performed their exercises, and learnt to wrestle and box, to throw the discus, hurl the javelin, ride a horse, drive a chariot, &C. The public assemblies were held there, and the officers of state chosen, and audience given to foreign ambassadors. It was adorned with statues, columns...
Strona 155 - ... imperceptible to vulgar eyes, which constitutes grace, and establishes the superiority of one artist »ver another ; that the knowledge of the degrees of things or taste presupposes a perfect knowledge of the things themselves ; that colour, grace, and taste are ornaments, not substitutes of form, expression, and character, and, when they usurp that title, degenerate into splendid faults. Such were the principles on which Apelles formed his Venus, or, rather, the personification of Female Grace,...