A History of Greece, Volume 1Longman, Brown, Green & Longmans, 1845 - Greece |
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Page xii
... origin of the Arcadians Various names of the Pelasgian tribes The Caucones Page · 38 - 40 41 42 43 44 46 47 The Leleges 49 The Thracians 50 Influence of the Thracians on Greek poetry Asiatic Pelasgians 3333 52 53 Opinions of the Greeks ...
... origin of the Arcadians Various names of the Pelasgian tribes The Caucones Page · 38 - 40 41 42 43 44 46 47 The Leleges 49 The Thracians 50 Influence of the Thracians on Greek poetry Asiatic Pelasgians 3333 52 53 Opinions of the Greeks ...
Page xiii
... Origin of the Dorians Their struggles with the Lapiths Dorians in the North - west of Thessaly Conquest of the southern Doris Adventures of Xuthus The Achæans in Thessaly and Peloponnesus Their relation to the Hellenes · Page 86 88 89 ...
... Origin of the Dorians Their struggles with the Lapiths Dorians in the North - west of Thessaly Conquest of the southern Doris Adventures of Xuthus The Achæans in Thessaly and Peloponnesus Their relation to the Hellenes · Page 86 88 89 ...
Page xix
... Origin of partial Associations among the Greek Tribes 425 Amphictyonies Amphictyonic Congress at Calaurea - 426 428 Amphictyonic Meetings at Delphi and Thermopyla 429 Tribes which composed the League Changes in the composition of the ...
... Origin of partial Associations among the Greek Tribes 425 Amphictyonies Amphictyonic Congress at Calaurea - 426 428 Amphictyonic Meetings at Delphi and Thermopyla 429 Tribes which composed the League Changes in the composition of the ...
Page xx
... Origin of Oligarchy - 452 Means by which Oligarchies maintained their power 455 Timocracy ; Polity ; Esymnetes 456 Causes which led to the Ruin of Oligarchies · 458 Origin of Tyranny - ib . Policy of the Tyrants 461 Causes of the short ...
... Origin of Oligarchy - 452 Means by which Oligarchies maintained their power 455 Timocracy ; Polity ; Esymnetes 456 Causes which led to the Ruin of Oligarchies · 458 Origin of Tyranny - ib . Policy of the Tyrants 461 Causes of the short ...
Page 4
... origin , or utter degeneracy , was proved by their savage manners , and a language which Thucydides describes as unintelligible . When the Ætolians bade the last Philip withdraw from Hellas , the Macedonian king could justly retort , by ...
... origin , or utter degeneracy , was proved by their savage manners , and a language which Thucydides describes as unintelligible . When the Ætolians bade the last Philip withdraw from Hellas , the Macedonian king could justly retort , by ...
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according Achæans Achæus adventures Æolus ancient Apollod appears Argolis Argonautic Argos Asia Athenians Athens Attica authority Baotian Boeotia Cadmus called Cecrops celebrated CHAP character coast colonies conjecture connected conquest Corinth Cretan Crete Danaus daughter descendants described Deucalion Dorians doubt dynasty Egyptian Elis Eolians ephors epithet Euboea expedition foreign genealogy gods Greece Greek ground Hellenic Heracleids Hercules hero Herodotus heroic age Hesiod Homeric poems honour Iliad inhabitants Iolcus Ionians island king Laconia land legend Leleges Locrians Lycurgus mentioned Messenian migration Minos Minyans Mueller nation nature neighbouring observed Odyssey oracle Orchomenus origin Paus Pausanias peculiar Pelasgians Peloponnesus Pelops perhaps period Phoenicians plain poet poetical poetry Poseidon probably race reign religion seats seems settlements Spartan story Strabo supposed temple Thebes Theseus Thessalian Thessaly tion town traces tradition tribes Trojan Trojan war Troy viii worship Xuthus καὶ СНАР
Popular passages
Page iii - But I am aware that the public cling to these anomalies with a tenacity proportioned to their absurdity, and are jealous of all encroachment on ground consecrated by prescription to the free play of blind caprice.
Page 192 - It was indeed connected with the comparatively low estimation in which female society was held: but the devotedness and constancy with which these attachments were maintained, was not the less admirable and engaging. The heroic companions whom we find celebrated, partly by Homer and partly in traditions, which, if not of equal antiquity, were grounded on the same feeling, seem to have but one heart and soul, with scarcely a wish or object apart, and only to live, as they are always ready to die,...
Page 163 - Helen a find it impossible to adopt the poetical story of Helen, partly on account of its inherent improbability, and partly because we are convinced that Helen is a merely mythological person.
Page iii - upon the established system, if an accidental custom may be so called, as a mass of anomalies, the growth of ignorance and chance, equally repugnant to good taste and to common sense.
Page 192 - Thirlwall (Greece, vol. ip 176, seq.) well illustrate the character of the friendship subsisting between the two heroes:— " One of the noblest and most amiable sides of the Greek character, is the readiness with which it lent itself to construct intimate and durable friendships ; and this is a feature no less prominent in the earliest, than in later times. It was indeed connected with the comparatively...
Page 211 - Their other affections correspond to the grossness of these animal appetites. Capricious love and hatred, anger and jealousy, often disturb the calm of their bosoms; the peace of the Olympian state might be broken by factions, and even by conspiracies formed against its chief. He himself cannot keep perfectly aloof from their quarrels ; he occasionally wavers in his purpose, is overruled by artifice, blinded by desires, and hurried by resentment into unseemly violence.
Page i - One consisting of persons who wish to acquire something more than a superficial acquaintance with Greek history, but who have neither leisure nor means to study it for themselves in its original sources ; the other of such as have access to the ancient authors, but often feel the need of a guide and an interpreter.
Page 456 - It must not be forgotten, that the body to which the terms oligarchy and democracy refer formed a comparatively small part of the population in most Greek states, since it did not include either slaves or resident free foreigners. The sovereign power resided wholly in the native freemen ; and whether it was exercised by a part or by all of them, was the question which determined the nature of the government.
Page 457 - ... class. But a finished democracy, that which fully satisfied the Greek notion, was one in which every attribute of sovereignty might be shared, without respect to rank or property, by every freeman. More than this was not implied in democracy ; and little less than this was required, according to the views of the philosophers, to constitute the character of a citizen, which, in the opinion of Aristotle, could not exist without a voice in the legislative assembly, and such a share in the administration...
Page 22 - Œnus the Eurotas flows through a very deep and narrow valley, which near Sparta is so much contracted as to leave room for little more than the channel of the river. After it leaves Sparta the hills recede farther from the river ; but near...