A General History of the World, from the Creation to the Present Time: Including All the Empires, Kingdoms, and States, Their Revolution, Forms of Government, Laws, Religions, Customs and Manners...together with Their Chronology, Antquities, Public Buildings, and Curiosities of Nature and Art, Volumen2J. Newbery, 1764 |
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Página 2
... last stood on the Tygris , a little below Seleucia , and on the oppofite bank , and in procefs of time became the metropolis of the Perfian empire . As this country lies between the 33 and 39th degrees of north latitude , in its happy ...
... last stood on the Tygris , a little below Seleucia , and on the oppofite bank , and in procefs of time became the metropolis of the Perfian empire . As this country lies between the 33 and 39th degrees of north latitude , in its happy ...
Página 75
... last made himself mafter of their capital and whole country . The war which his father had begun being ftill car- ried on against the Milefians in the 12th fummer , the Lydians , while they were ravaging the Milefian territories , by ...
... last made himself mafter of their capital and whole country . The war which his father had begun being ftill car- ried on against the Milefians in the 12th fummer , the Lydians , while they were ravaging the Milefian territories , by ...
Página 109
... last ruins of these edifices are found , confifting chiefly of porticoes and enclofed fpaces of ground . Between these two ruins are certain fubterraneous paffages , in which the inhabitants imagine great treafures are hid ; but M. Le ...
... last ruins of these edifices are found , confifting chiefly of porticoes and enclofed fpaces of ground . Between these two ruins are certain fubterraneous paffages , in which the inhabitants imagine great treafures are hid ; but M. Le ...
Página 125
... last even these fhall be pardoned , yet never shall be admitted to the joys of the bleffed , but remain in a certain place by themselves , with a black mark on their foreheads , as a badge of that state from whence , thro ' the mercies ...
... last even these fhall be pardoned , yet never shall be admitted to the joys of the bleffed , but remain in a certain place by themselves , with a black mark on their foreheads , as a badge of that state from whence , thro ' the mercies ...
Página 134
... last re- duced , after a two years fiege , in the manner we have related in the hiftory of Babylon . The taking of Babylon put an end to the Babylonian empire , and concluded the conquefts of Cyrus . Upon the death of Belshazzar , the ...
... last re- duced , after a two years fiege , in the manner we have related in the hiftory of Babylon . The taking of Babylon put an end to the Babylonian empire , and concluded the conquefts of Cyrus . Upon the death of Belshazzar , the ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A General History of the World, from the Creation to the Present Time ... Sin vista previa disponible - 2020 |
A General History of the World, from the Creation to the Present Time ... John Gray,William Guthrie Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
according Achæans Achaia affembly affiftance Affyrian Afia afterwards againſt Agefilaus Alcibiades alfo ambaffadors antient Aratus army Athe Athenians Athens Attica becauſe befieged called caufed Cleomenes coaft Cofroes command confiderable Corinth Cyaxares Cyrus Darius death declared defeated defign defired enemy Etolians faid fame fays fecond feems feized fenate fend fent fettled feven feveral fhips fhould fide fiege firft flain fleet fome foon ftate ftill fubjects fucceeded fucceffor fuch fuffered fuppofed garrifon greateſt Greece Greeks Herodotus hiftory himſelf horfe ifland inhabitants intereft invaded king kingdom Lacedæmonians laft Lycurgus Macedon Macedonians mafter marched Medes moft moſt nians obliged occafion oppofe paffed Parthians peace Pelopidas Peloponnefe Perfians perfon Pharnabazus Philip Phocians Phrygia poffeffion prætor prefent prifoners prince propofed provinces raiſed refolved reftored reign Rhodians Romans Spartans ſtates Strabo Syria temple Thebans thefe Themistocles themſelves theſe thofe thoſe throne troops uſed whofe Xerxes
Pasajes populares
Página 45 - Now when they had gone throughout Phrygia and the region of Galatia, and were forbidden of the Holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia, 7 After they were come to Mysia, they assayed to go into Bithynia : but the Spirit suffered them not.
Página 40 - The same hour was the thing fulfilled upon Nebuchadnezzar; and he was driven from men, and did eat grass as oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven, till his hairs were grown like eagles' feathers, and his nails like bird's claws.
Página 23 - Whom men could not honour in presence, because they dwelt far off, they took the counterfeit of his visage from far, and made an express image of a king whom they honoured, to the end that by this their forwardness they might flatter him that was absent as if he were present.
Página 43 - Nitocris, with orders, at an appointed time, to break down the great bank which was between the lake and the canal, and to turn the whole current into the lake. At the fame time he appointed one body of troops at the place where the river entered...
Página 330 - he had profecuted to the utmoft of his. " power •*• pou-er the war againft the Thracians, and other -" enemies to the ftate of Athens. But that it was *' true, he had not made any inroads into Mace...
Página 360 - House, and ordered to go with some other persons, whom they named, to seize one Leon, a man of rank and fortune, whom they determined to put out of the way, that they might enjoy his estate. This commission Socrates positively refused. " I will not willingly," said he,
Página 43 - To which end he caused a line of circumvallation to be drawn quite round the city with a large and deep ditch ; and, that his troops might not be over-fatigued, he divided his army into twelve bodies, and assigned each of them its month for guarding the trenches.
Página 36 - Nebuchadnezzar embellished it, and made it one of the wonders of the world. The most famous works in and about it were the walls of the city, the temple of Belus, Nebuchadnezzar's palace, the hanging gardens, the banks of the river, the artificial lake, and the canals. The walls were 87 feet thick, 350 feet high, and...
Página 145 - Greece : and that he might never forget this resolution , he commanded one of his officers to cry out to him with a loud voice every night, when he was at supper : Sir, remember the Athenians.
Página 136 - ... splendid bow, suspended at his right hand, upon a corner of the golden throne whereon he sat, he thus continued : — " Give your master this weapon, and say the king of Ethiopia advises the monarch of Persia to make war against his country, when the Persians shall be able thus easily to bend so strong a bow; and, in the mean time, to thank the gods, that they never inspired the Ethiopians with a desire of extending their dominions beyond the boundaries of their native country.