A View of Universal History, from the Creation to the Present Time: Including an Account of the Celebrated Revolutions in France, Poland, Sweden, Geneva &c. &c. Together with an Accurate and Impartial Narrative of the Late Military Operations; and Other Important Events, Volume 1G. Kearsley, 1795 - World history |
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... Greeks ---- Poetry-- Mufic - Paintaing -- Statuary -- Architecture -- Medicine-- Eloquence - Hiftory --Philofophy . p . 109 . CHAP . XXI . Rome under the kings . P. 116 . CHAP . XXII . Remarks on the reigns of the Roman kings . P. 125 ...
... Greeks ---- Poetry-- Mufic - Paintaing -- Statuary -- Architecture -- Medicine-- Eloquence - Hiftory --Philofophy . p . 109 . CHAP . XXI . Rome under the kings . P. 116 . CHAP . XXII . Remarks on the reigns of the Roman kings . P. 125 ...
Page 12
... Greeks , were indebted to them for these difcoveries in the aftronomical science . This fcience , and every other part of philofophy , was chiefly cultivated among the Babylonians , by a body of men called Chaldeans ; who were fet apart ...
... Greeks , were indebted to them for these difcoveries in the aftronomical science . This fcience , and every other part of philofophy , was chiefly cultivated among the Babylonians , by a body of men called Chaldeans ; who were fet apart ...
Page 14
... Greeks were to admire , and to perfect into models for mankind . The wisdom of the Egyptians was the admiration of all antiquity . Their inftitutions , laws , and religious rites , paffed into Greece . Hither poets reforted as to a ...
... Greeks were to admire , and to perfect into models for mankind . The wisdom of the Egyptians was the admiration of all antiquity . Their inftitutions , laws , and religious rites , paffed into Greece . Hither poets reforted as to a ...
Page 16
... Greeks began to have more frequent inter- courfe with Egypt . Solon and Pythagoras , followed by a train of fages , left their native land , to ftudy the wisdom of the Egyptians . The reign of Pfammetticus , the fon of Amafis , is the ...
... Greeks began to have more frequent inter- courfe with Egypt . Solon and Pythagoras , followed by a train of fages , left their native land , to ftudy the wisdom of the Egyptians . The reign of Pfammetticus , the fon of Amafis , is the ...
Page 22
... Greeks , who were their scholars , and travelled into Egypt for inftruction in the more fublime parts of learning ... Greek philofophers took many things from thofe pillars . Pythagoras and Plato read them , and borrowed from them many ...
... Greeks , who were their scholars , and travelled into Egypt for inftruction in the more fublime parts of learning ... Greek philofophers took many things from thofe pillars . Pythagoras and Plato read them , and borrowed from them many ...
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A View of Universal History, From the Creation to the Present Time ... John Adams No preview available - 2023 |
A View of Universal History, from the Creation to the Present Time ... John Adams, (Hi No preview available - 2016 |
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affembly affiftance Afia againſt alfo almoft army Athenians Athens battle Cæfar Carthage Carthaginians caufe CHAP Charles Chriftians command confequence confiderable conqueft count of Flanders crown death decemvirs defign defired deftroyed Diocletian dominions duke duke of Orleans Egypt Emperor empire enemy eſtabliſhed faid fame favour fecond fecurity feemed fenate fent ferved feven feveral fhort fhould fide fiege firft firſt fituation flain foldiers fome foon fovereign fpirit France ftate ftill fubjects fucceeded fucceffor fuccefs fuch fuffered fupport fword Gaul greateſt Grecian Greece Guife Henry hiftorian hiftory himſelf honour houfe increaſe intereft Italy king kingdom laft lefs Lewis loft Macedon mafter meaſure moft moſt nations obferved occafion oppofe paffed paffions peace Perfians perfon Philip pleaſure poffeffed Pompey prefent prifoners prince raiſed refolution refolved refpect reign Roman Rome Sparta Spartans ſtate thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand Thrace throne tion univerfal uſe victory whofe
Popular passages
Page 244 - If a man were called to fix the period in the history of the world during which the condition of the human race was most happy and prosperous, he would, without hesitation, name that which elapsed from the death of Domitian to the accession of Commodus.
Page 411 - No free man shall be taken or imprisoned or dispossessed, or outlawed, or banished, or in any way destroyed, nor will we go upon him, nor send upon him, except by the legal judgment of his peers or by the law of the land.
Page 374 - III. The nation is essentially the source of all sovereignty; nor can any individual, or any body of men, be entitled to any authority which is not expressly derived from it.
Page 195 - Caesar now commanded the cohorts to pursue their success, and advancing, charged Pompey's troops upon the flank ; this charge the enemy withstood for some time with great bravery, till he brought up his third line, which had not yet engaged. Pompey's infantry being thus doubly attacked, in front by fresh troops and in rear by the victorious cohorts, could no longer resist, but fled to their camp. The...
Page 432 - It is you," continued he to the members, " that have forced me upon this. I have sought the Lord night and day, that he would rather slay me than put me upon this work.
Page 283 - Very faint vestiges of the Roman policy, jurisprudence, arts, or literature remained. New forms of government, new laws, new manners, new dresses, new languages, and new names of men and countries, were every where introduced.
Page 432 - For shame," said he to the parliament, "get you gone; give place to honester men; to those who will more faithfully discharge their trust. You are no longer a parliament : I tell you, you are no longer a parliament. The Lord has done with you : he has chosen other instruments for carrying on his work.
Page 346 - sat on every face ; silence, as in the dead of night, reigned through all the chambers of the royal apartment ; the ladies and courtiers were ranged on each side...
Page 196 - Achilles, the commander of the forces, and Septimius, by birth a Roman, and who had formerly been a centurion in Pompey's army, were appointed to carry -their opinion into execution.
Page 194 - Caesar's soldiers were now rushing on with their usual impetuosity, when, perceiving the enemy motionless, they all stopped short, as if by general consent, and halted in the midst of their career. A terrible pause ensued, in which both armies continued to gaze upon each other with mutual terror and dreadful serenity.