A summary of geography and history. [With] A geographical index1794 |
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Seite viii
... ROME , and its GOVERNMENT by KINGS , - HISTORY of the ROMAN REPUBLIC , of the ROMAN EMPERORS , of MODERN ITALY , of the CRUSADES and their CONSEQUENCES , of the KINGDOM of NAPLES , SICILY , HISTORY OF SICILY , LIPARI ISLANDS , MALTA ...
... ROME , and its GOVERNMENT by KINGS , - HISTORY of the ROMAN REPUBLIC , of the ROMAN EMPERORS , of MODERN ITALY , of the CRUSADES and their CONSEQUENCES , of the KINGDOM of NAPLES , SICILY , HISTORY OF SICILY , LIPARI ISLANDS , MALTA ...
Seite 21
... Rome , towards the end of the republic , aftronomy was taught by feveral philofophers ; particularly by PoSIDONIUS , the Stoic , a native of Apamea in Syria , the scholar of Panetius , and friend of Cicero and Pompey ; who commonly ...
... Rome , towards the end of the republic , aftronomy was taught by feveral philofophers ; particularly by PoSIDONIUS , the Stoic , a native of Apamea in Syria , the scholar of Panetius , and friend of Cicero and Pompey ; who commonly ...
Seite 26
... Rome by Pope Sextus IV . to affift in correcting the calendar , he was cut off by the plague , a . 1476. BERNARD WALTHERUS , a rich citizen of Muremberg , his friend and affociate , fucceeded him , who is faid first to have made use of ...
... Rome by Pope Sextus IV . to affift in correcting the calendar , he was cut off by the plague , a . 1476. BERNARD WALTHERUS , a rich citizen of Muremberg , his friend and affociate , fucceeded him , who is faid first to have made use of ...
Seite 127
... Rome from various places . From A- rabia and India they were procured by the way of the Red Sea and Alexandria , or by the gulf of Perfia and up the Euphrates , thence through the defarts of Arabia to PALMYRA , and from it to the ...
... Rome from various places . From A- rabia and India they were procured by the way of the Red Sea and Alexandria , or by the gulf of Perfia and up the Euphrates , thence through the defarts of Arabia to PALMYRA , and from it to the ...
Seite 128
... Rome at cent . per cent . profit ( centuplicato ) , that is , at about 40 millions Sterling of our money for the whole imported , Plin . vi . 23. f . 26 . As the Romans had no articles of their own produce to give in exchange for ...
... Rome at cent . per cent . profit ( centuplicato ) , that is , at about 40 millions Sterling of our money for the whole imported , Plin . vi . 23. f . 26 . As the Romans had no articles of their own produce to give in exchange for ...
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A Summary of Geography and History. with a Geographical Index Alexander Adam Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2020 |
A Summary of Geography and History. With a Geographical Index Alexander Adam Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2019 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 687 - ... purchase a decent dress, in which he might venture to appear at court. He then laid before the king the...
Seite 632 - Calcutta is, in part, an exception to this rule of building; for there, the quarter inhabited by the English, is composed entirely of brick buildings, many of which have more the appearance of palaces than of private houses...
Seite 701 - They possessed it only for a year, at the expiration of which a new division was made in proportion to the rank, the number, and exigencies of each family. All those lands were cultivated by the joint industry of the community.
Seite 14 - ... eclipses were occasioned by the temporary extinction of the sun, and that there were several suns for the convenience of the different climates of the earth. Yet this man held the chair of philosophy at Athens for seventy years. Philolaus, a Pythagorian philosopher of Crotona, BC 374. He first supported the diurnal motion of the earth round its axis, and its annual motion round the sun. Cicero (Acad. iv. 39), has ascribed this opinion to the Syracusan philosopher Nicetas, and likewise to Plato....
Seite 257 - Dionyfius is no lefs a monument of the ingenuity and magnificence, than of the cruelty of that tyrant. It is a huge cavern cut out of the hard rock, in the form of the human ear.
Seite 507 - Their principal demands were, that all flaves mould be fet free, and that all commonages fhould be open to the poor as well as the rich.
Seite 701 - The second belonged to the Inca, and was set apart as the provision made "by the community for the support of government. The third and largest share was reserved for the maintenance of the people, among whom it was parcelled out.
Seite 77 - Sun's motion in the Heavens to be unequal ; for sometimes he revolves from the meridian to the meridian again in somewhat less than...
Seite 684 - The Tartar follows his prey on the horfe which he has reared, or tends his numerous herds, which furnifh him both with food and clothing; the Arab has rendered the camel docile, and avails himfelf of its perfevering ftrength ; the Laplander has formed the rein-deer to be fubfervient to his will ; and even the people of Kamfchatka have trained their dogs to labour.
Seite 267 - The present crater of this immense volcano is a circle of about three miles and a half in circumference. It goes shelving down on each side, and forms a regular hollow like a vast amphitheatre. From many places of this space issue volumes of sulphureous smoke, which, being much heavier than the circumambient...