An Universal History, from the Earliest Account of Time, 第 9 卷T. Osborne, 1747 |
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第 7 頁
... took fanctuary in a temple , vainly hoping that his enemies would not pursue him to the altar ; whereas ambitious men fhew no respect to re- ligion , but when it is their tool , and therefore Perdiccas , who thought himself not fafe ...
... took fanctuary in a temple , vainly hoping that his enemies would not pursue him to the altar ; whereas ambitious men fhew no respect to re- ligion , but when it is their tool , and therefore Perdiccas , who thought himself not fafe ...
第 19 頁
... took the first opportunity of deferting him . This brought Perdiccas to a true fenfe of his error ; he there- fore altered his whole conduct , careffed his foldiers , treated the officers familiarly , and encouraged all by fair words ...
... took the first opportunity of deferting him . This brought Perdiccas to a true fenfe of his error ; he there- fore altered his whole conduct , careffed his foldiers , treated the officers familiarly , and encouraged all by fair words ...
第 22 頁
... took Eumenes in his arms , and fo brought him to the paffage of the rock , where they parted , Antigonus perceiving that the fiege would much incommode his affairs , ordered the place to be furrounded with a strong wall , and leaving a ...
... took Eumenes in his arms , and fo brought him to the paffage of the rock , where they parted , Antigonus perceiving that the fiege would much incommode his affairs , ordered the place to be furrounded with a strong wall , and leaving a ...
第 23 頁
... took , was to bring over Eumenes , in order to which he fent a trufty person to confer with that great captain in his caftle of Nora , to defire him to forget the battle in Cappadocia , and to affure him , that if he would become his ...
... took , was to bring over Eumenes , in order to which he fent a trufty person to confer with that great captain in his caftle of Nora , to defire him to forget the battle in Cappadocia , and to affure him , that if he would become his ...
第 28 頁
... took all in good part , and according to cuftom borrowed money of those he feared , and thereby became master of their councils . The news which Peuceftas had received , occafioned more feafting , and Eumenes , contrary to his nature ...
... took all in good part , and according to cuftom borrowed money of those he feared , and thereby became master of their councils . The news which Peuceftas had received , occafioned more feafting , and Eumenes , contrary to his nature ...
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affiftance Afia againſt Alexander Alexander Balas Alexandria alfo anfwer Antigonus Antiochus Antipater Antony APPIAN Armenia army battle becauſe Bithynia brother Cæfar Caffander Cappadocia caufed cauſed Cilicia Cleopatra command confiderable Craterus crown death defign defired Demetrius DIODOR dominions Egypt embaffadors enemy Eumenes faid fame fays fecond feemed feized felf fenate fent fettled feveral fhall fhew fhips fhould fide fiege fifter fince firft fleet foldiers fome foon forces ftill fubjects fuccefs fuch fuffered Greece hiftory himſelf horfe ibid intereft JUSTIN king's kingdom laft Lucullus Lyfimachus Macedon Macedonians mafter marched Mithridates moft moſt obferved occafion paffed Parthians Perdiccas Perfes perfon Philip Phyfcon PLUT Plutarch poffeffion POLYB Polybius Pompey Pontus prefent prifoner prince promifing provinces Ptolemy raiſed refolved reft reign Romans Rome Seleucus SICUL STRAB Sylla Syria thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand throne Tigranes troops ubi fupra uſed victory whofe
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第 185 頁 - And Babylon, the glory of kingdoms, the beauty of the Chaldees' excellency, Shall be as when God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. It shall never be inhabited, Neither shall it be dwelt in from generation to generation : Neither shall the Arabian pitch tent there ; Neither shall the shepherds make their fold there.
第 333 頁 - ... promised, sent Athenobius, one of his friends, to him, to demand the restoration of Gazara, Joppa, and the fortress of Jerusalem, with several other places then held by Simon, which he claimed as belonging to the kingdom of Syria, or else five hundred talents in lieu of them, and five hundred talents more for the damages that were done by the Jews within the borders of his other dominions. On f Athenobius...
第 401 頁 - Pursuant to this resolution, he commanded all the Jews who lived in any part of Egypt to be brought in chains to Alexandria, and there to be shut up in the hippodrome, which was a very spacious place without the city, where the people used to assemble to see horse races and other public shows.
第 373 頁 - Egypt by the Greeks, or other foreigners. The books were transcribed in the museum by persons appointed for that purpose; the copies were then delivered to the proprietors, and the originals laid up in the library- Ptolemy Euergetes...
第 209 頁 - ... views of his own which he had therein, overbore all opposition to it, and prevailed with the king to send another general with more forces into the east, and proceed himself in his former intended expedition into CoeleSyria. The general sent into the east was...
第 567 頁 - Murxna to forbear molefting a friend and ally of the Roman people ; but afterwards, calling him afide, he had a private conference with him, in which it is fuppofed...
第 602 頁 - ... to the army according to the "' cuftom of the camp ; but ordered thofe who were by him to form a kind of mount with their...
第 591 頁 - Rome, where he was received by the fenate with great marks of efteem, moft men thinking him highly injured by the authors of the Manilian law. Pompey purfued his march into Pontus ; but finding that he could not by any means draw the king -to a battle, he marched back into Armenia Minor, with a deiign either to reduce that province, or oblige Mithridates to venture a battle in order to relieve it.
第 373 頁 - Cleopatra deposited those 200,000 volumes from that of Pergamus, which were presented to her by Antony. This addition, with other enlargements that were made from time to time, rendered the new library of Alexandria more numerous and considerable than the first : and though it was ransacked more than once, during the troubles and revolutions which happened in the Roman empire, it always retrieved its losses, and recovered its number of volumes. In this condition it subsisted for many ages...
第 223 頁 - The high-,prieft informed him of the holinefs of the place; and the exprefs law of God, by which he was forbid to enter it. The priefts and Levites drew together in a body to oppofe his rafh dcfign, which the people alfo.