Thessalian penesta?, whom they employed in task-work, and without whom their colossal works could hardly have been achieved The works of the Etruscans, the very ruins of which astonish us, cannot, it is perfectly evident, have been executed in small states... The History of Rome - Side 127af Barthold Georg Niebuhr - 1831Fuld visning - Om denne bog
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1835 - 608 sider
...they employed in task-work, and without whom their colossal works could hardly have been achieved.. The works of the Etruscans, the very ruins of which...we must not overlook the great superiority of the Kiniscau rulers in this point to the Egyptian, All their works that we are acquainted with have a great... | |
| Barthold Georg Niebuhr - 1836 - 418 sider
...alliances : in the year 443, UC, we find a thousand Etruscan mercenaries in the Punic army in Sicily. The works of the Etruscans, the very ruins of which astonish us, had a great superiority over those of the Egyptians in this point, that they had universally a great... | |
| 1835 - 610 sider
...whom they employed in task-work, and without whom their colossal works could hardly have been achieved The works of the Etruscans, the very ruins of which...been executed in small states without task-masters anil Um,ln,rii. But we must not overlook the great superiority of the Etruscan rulers in this point... | |
| Barthold Georg Niebuhr, Sir Travers Twiss - 1845 - 712 sider
...alliances : in the year 443, UC, we find a thousand Etruscan mercenaries in the Punic army in Sicily. The works of the Etruscans, the very ruins of which astonish us, had a great superiority over those of the Egyptians in this point, that they had universally a great... | |
| 1835 - 626 sider
...whom they employed in task-work, and without whom their colossal works could hardly have been achieved The works of the Etruscans, the very ruins of which...rulers in this point to the Egyptian. All their works tha^ we are acquainted with have a great public object ; they are not pyramids, obelisks, and temples,... | |
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