The Roman History, Bind 1C. and J. Rivington, 1827 |
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Resultater 1-5 af 100
Side 3
... nation , must be excluded by the mo- derns from the mass of events in which this history surpasses that of any other people . Being compelled to make a selection , and to adopt some rule for limi- tation , I shall not touch upon ...
... nation , must be excluded by the mo- derns from the mass of events in which this history surpasses that of any other people . Being compelled to make a selection , and to adopt some rule for limi- tation , I shall not touch upon ...
Side 11
... nation , after it had been excited by frivolous and worthless men , felt keenly provoked by the gossiping of these scribblers . And one of the objects of his history is to explain to the Greeks , that the greatness of Rome was not ...
... nation , after it had been excited by frivolous and worthless men , felt keenly provoked by the gossiping of these scribblers . And one of the objects of his history is to explain to the Greeks , that the greatness of Rome was not ...
Side 15
... nation gains by such an intermixture . A more refined civi- lization , which had it been suited to their nature they might themselves have attained , hardly com- pensates for the loss of their native language , and with it , of a ...
... nation gains by such an intermixture . A more refined civi- lization , which had it been suited to their nature they might themselves have attained , hardly com- pensates for the loss of their native language , and with it , of a ...
Side 19
... nation of citizens spread itself all over Italy . At the close of the Commonwealth , there were none but Romans in ... nations , which had arrived at eminence in Italy previous to the Romans , is , in some respects , impossible , and at ...
... nation of citizens spread itself all over Italy . At the close of the Commonwealth , there were none but Romans in ... nations , which had arrived at eminence in Italy previous to the Romans , is , in some respects , impossible , and at ...
Side 25
... nations who inhabited them : the various tribes who lived within the limits which give a physical unity to a district receiving no col- lective appellation from the country itself . The case was different when any one nation acquired a ...
... nations who inhabited them : the various tribes who lived within the limits which give a physical unity to a district receiving no col- lective appellation from the country itself . The case was different when any one nation acquired a ...
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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