The Roman History, Bind 1C. and J. Rivington, 1827 |
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Side 13
... earliest times the most dreadful vices , -insatiable ambition , remorseless disregard to the rights , and callous indifference to the sufferings of strangers , avarice while rapine was yet unknown , and a sort of antipathy among the ...
... earliest times the most dreadful vices , -insatiable ambition , remorseless disregard to the rights , and callous indifference to the sufferings of strangers , avarice while rapine was yet unknown , and a sort of antipathy among the ...
Side 25
... earliest times . It was not , however , until considerably later , comprised within its natural boundaries under that exclusive name . As long as it was peopled by various independent races , and in separate states , it was divided by ...
... earliest times . It was not , however , until considerably later , comprised within its natural boundaries under that exclusive name . As long as it was peopled by various independent races , and in separate states , it was divided by ...
Side 35
... earliest colony , whether of Greeks or Barbarians , of which any records have been preserved . No sober - minded man can treat these genealogies and traditions as historical narratives . Equally vain would be the attempt to reconcile ...
... earliest colony , whether of Greeks or Barbarians , of which any records have been preserved . No sober - minded man can treat these genealogies and traditions as historical narratives . Equally vain would be the attempt to reconcile ...
Side 37
... earliest inhabitants of Thessaly and the Pelopon- nesus were of their stock ; and that many Pelasgian , as well as Arcadian and Attic nations , had trans- formed themselves into Grecian . It is in the highest degree probable that the ...
... earliest inhabitants of Thessaly and the Pelopon- nesus were of their stock ; and that many Pelasgian , as well as Arcadian and Attic nations , had trans- formed themselves into Grecian . It is in the highest degree probable that the ...
Side 42
... earliest inhabitants of the land of Saturnia 46 : and even the Latin lan- guage indicates an ancient people , kindred to the Greeks , and who , being subdued by the Aborigines , became blended with their conquerors . The local names in ...
... earliest inhabitants of the land of Saturnia 46 : and even the Latin lan- guage indicates an ancient people , kindred to the Greeks , and who , being subdued by the Aborigines , became blended with their conquerors . The local names in ...
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according Æneas æra Alba already amongst ancient annals appears assembly Ausonians authority belonged Brutus called Campania Cato Censorinus certainly chronology citizens clients coast colony commencement conquest constitution consul Curiæ Diodorus Dionysius district earlier earliest early emigration Enotrians equal Etruria Etruscan existed Fabius fable Fasti Festus fifth century foreign former Gauls Grecian Greece Greek historians hundred Iapygia inhabitants Italian Italy king land language later Latium league Livius Livy Lucanians Lycophron ment mentioned mythic narrative nations native Olympiad Opica opinion original partly Patricians Pelasgi Pelasgian period Plebeians Plinius Plutarch poet Polybius possession preserved probably race reign respecting Roman history Rome Romulus Sabelli Sabines Sæcular Sæculum Samnites scarcely Scylax seems senate Servius Tullius Siculi story Strabo supra Tarquinius Thucydides Tiber Timæus tion tradition tribes tribunes Trojan Tullus Tuscan Tyrrhenians Umbri Varro Volsci Volscians whole καὶ