A Dictionary of Greek and Roman AntiquitiesWilliam Smith, Charles Anthon Harper & brothers, 1843 - 1116 pages |
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... Remarks on the In- do - Germanic Analogies . By Chs . Anthon , LL.D. 12mo . JACOBS'S GREEK READER.- Greek Reader . Principally from Jacobs . With English Notes , crit- ical and explanatory , a Metrical Index to Homer and Anacreon , and ...
... Remarks on the In- do - Germanic Analogies . By Chs . Anthon , LL.D. 12mo . JACOBS'S GREEK READER.- Greek Reader . Principally from Jacobs . With English Notes , crit- ical and explanatory , a Metrical Index to Homer and Anacreon , and ...
Page 3
... remarks on this subject almost unnecessary . The student has here a guide to an accurate knowledge of Greek and Roman Antiquities , before which the meager compilations of Potter and Adams must sink into utter in- significance ; and he ...
... remarks on this subject almost unnecessary . The student has here a guide to an accurate knowledge of Greek and Roman Antiquities , before which the meager compilations of Potter and Adams must sink into utter in- significance ; and he ...
Page 7
... remarks , which he wishes to make respecting the articles he has written , and which are accordingly subjoined in his own words : " The writer of the articles marked with the letters G. L. considers some apology necessary in respect of ...
... remarks , which he wishes to make respecting the articles he has written , and which are accordingly subjoined in his own words : " The writer of the articles marked with the letters G. L. considers some apology necessary in respect of ...
Page 11
... remarks , that the tree which produces the succus acacia is the same as that which yields the gum arabic . The acacia gets the English name of the Egyptian thorn . ACAI'NA ( йkaiva ) , a measure of length , equiva- lent to ten Greek ...
... remarks , that the tree which produces the succus acacia is the same as that which yields the gum arabic . The acacia gets the English name of the Egyptian thorn . ACAI'NA ( йkaiva ) , a measure of length , equiva- lent to ten Greek ...
Page 67
... remarks , that some of the char- acters given by Theophrastus are wanting in the Philyrea . 10 ΑΦΈΤΟΙ ΗΜΕΡΑΙ ( ἀφετοὶ ἡμέραι ) were the days , usually festivals , on which the Bovan did not meet at Athens.11 * APH'IA ( àøía ) , a plant ...
... remarks , that some of the char- acters given by Theophrastus are wanting in the Philyrea . 10 ΑΦΈΤΟΙ ΗΜΕΡΑΙ ( ἀφετοὶ ἡμέραι ) were the days , usually festivals , on which the Bovan did not meet at Athens.11 * APH'IA ( àøía ) , a plant ...
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according action Adams ædiles altar ancient appears Append applied archon Aristoph Aristotle army Athenæus Athenian Athens Attic Augustus authority baths bronze Cæsar called celebrated centumviri chorus Cicero citizens civitas coins colony colour comitia consisted consuls court Demosth Demosthenes described Dioscor Dioscorides emperors festival Festus Gaius given gold Greece Greek hastati hence Hist honour Julius Cæsar kind land Latin latter legions Livy Ludi magistrates mentioned Niebuhr observed Orat originally Ovid passage person plaintiff plant Plin Pliny Plutarch Pollux prætor probably punishment referred remarks represented Roman Rome says seems senate signifies slaves soldiers sometimes speaks species Sprengel Strabo Suet Suidas supposed temple term Theophrastus Thucyd tion triarii tribes tribunes troops Ulpian Varro vessel viii Virg Virgil Vitruv Vitruvius whence wine woodcut word writers καὶ
Popular passages
Page 208 - And ye shall be holy men unto me: neither shall ye eat any flesh that is torn of beasts in the field; ye shall cast it to the dogs.
Page 50 - They bound themselves by an oath that ' they would destroy no city of the Amphictyons, nor cut off their streams in war or peace ; and if any should do so, they would march against him and destroy his cities; and should any pillage the property of the god, or be privy to, or plan anything against what was in his temple at Delphi, they would take vengeance on him with hand, and foot, and voice, and all their might
Page 104 - Each legion was divided into ten cohorts, each cohort into three maniples, and each maniple into two...
Page 126 - The chief duties of augurs were to observe and report supernatural signs. They were also the repositories of the ceremonial law, and had to advise on the expiation of prodigies and other matters of religious observance. The sources of their art were threefold: first, the formulas and traditions of the college, which in ancient times met on the nones of every month ; secondly, the...
Page 259 - With us practically, if not in theory, the essential object of a state hardly embraces more than the protection of life and property. The Greeks, on the other hand, had the most vivid conception of the state as a whole, every part of which was to co-operate to some great end to which all other duties were considered as subordinate.
Page 164 - Ep. 75) alludes to a person who married in order to comply with the law. That which was caducum came, in the first place, to those among the heredes who had children ; and if the heredes had no children, it came among those of the legatees who had children. The law gave the jus accrescendi, that is, the right to the caducum as far as the third degree of consanguinity, both ascending and descending (Ulp. Frag.