Pausanias' Description of Greece, Volume 1G. Bell, 1900 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 4
... Apollo Musagetes . Here are statues of Pæonian Athene and Zeus and Mnemosyne and the Muses , and Apollo ( the votive offering and work of Eubulides ) , and Acratus a satel- lite of Dionysus : his face alone is worked in the wall . And ...
... Apollo Musagetes . Here are statues of Pæonian Athene and Zeus and Mnemosyne and the Muses , and Apollo ( the votive offering and work of Eubulides ) , and Acratus a satel- lite of Dionysus : his face alone is worked in the wall . And ...
Page 6
... Apollo under the name Patrous . And in front of the temple Leochares represented another Apollo , and Calamis the Apollo who is called Averter of Evil . And they say the god got this name by stopping from his oracle at Delphi the ...
... Apollo under the name Patrous . And in front of the temple Leochares represented another Apollo , and Calamis the Apollo who is called Averter of Evil . And they say the god got this name by stopping from his oracle at Delphi the ...
Page 15
... Apollo with his long hair in a fillet and statues of Calades , who was a legis- lator of the Athenians according to tradition , and of Pindar , who amongst other honour obtained this statue from the Athenians because he praised them in ...
... Apollo with his long hair in a fillet and statues of Calades , who was a legis- lator of the Athenians according to tradition , and of Pindar , who amongst other honour obtained this statue from the Athenians because he praised them in ...
Page 26
... Apollo ; and Pyrrhus , the son of Achilles , was ordered to be slain by the Pythian oracle at Delphi ; and this son of acides met his fate as has been recorded by the Argives and sung by Lyceas . And yet this is different to the account ...
... Apollo ; and Pyrrhus , the son of Achilles , was ordered to be slain by the Pythian oracle at Delphi ; and this son of acides met his fate as has been recorded by the Argives and sung by Lyceas . And yet this is different to the account ...
Page 31
... Apollo , that had been carried away to Ecbatana in Persia by Xerxes ; and partly because , when he built Seleucia on the river Tigris and introduced Babylonians to dwell there , he destroyed neither the wall of Babylon nor the temple of ...
... Apollo , that had been carried away to Ecbatana in Persia by Xerxes ; and partly because , when he built Seleucia on the river Tigris and introduced Babylonians to dwell there , he destroyed neither the wall of Babylon nor the temple of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Achæans Achilles Ægina afterwards altar ancient Antigonus Aphrodite Apollo Arcadians Argives Argolis Argos Aristodemus Aristomenes army Artemis Asopus Athene Athenians Attica battle boys brazen statue built buried called capture Castor and Pollux CHAPTER chariot Cleomenes Corinth Corinthians daughter death Delphi Demeter Demetrius descendants Dionysus Dorians Edited Elis erected Esculapius father fight fled fought goddess gods Greece Greeks Hera Hercules Hermes hero hero-chapel Homer honour horses Iliad Ilium inscription island Isthmian games Ithome killed king kingdom Lacedæmon Lacedæmonians Macedonians Megarians Messene Messenians Nemea nians Olympia oracle pancratium Pausanias Peloponnese Pelops pentathlum pillar Poseidon priestess Ptolemy Pylos Pyrrhus Pythian race reign river sacrifice Sicyon Sicyonians sons Sparta stades statue of Zeus stone Temenus temple of Athene Thebans Thebes Theopompus Theseus tomb took town tradition Translated Trozen victor at Olympia victory vols votive offering won the prize wooden statue wrestling Zeus
Popular passages
Page 6 - Miscellanies, Esthetic and Literary; to which* is added, THE THEORY OF LIFE.
Page 18 - Htetory of the Races of Man, and their Geographical Distribution. With AN ANALYTICAL SYNOPSIS OF THE NATURAL HISTORY OF MAN by Dr. Hall. With a Map of the World and 1 2 coloured Plates. 5-*. PINDAR. Translated into Prose by Dawson W.
Page 3 - Tables for verifying Dates with the Christian Era, &c. Giving an account of the Chief Eras and Systems used by various Nations ; with the easy Methods for determining the Corresponding Dates. By JJ Bond. 5*. BONOMI'S Nineveh and Its Palaces. 7 Plates and 294 Woodcut Illustrations. 5.;.
Page 9 - Essays : on Decision of Character ; on a Man's writing Memoirs of Himself ; on the epithet Romantic ; on the aversion of Men of Taste to Evangelical Religion, y.
Page 3 - Cribbage, Loo, Vingt-et-un, Napoleon, Newmarket, Pope Joan, Speculation, &c., &c. BOND'S A Handy Book of Rules and Tables for verifying Dates with the Christian Era, &c. Giving an account of the Chief Eras and Systems used by various Nations ; with the easy Methods for determining the Corresponding Dates. By JJ Bond. 5*.
Page 7 - DANTE. The Inferno. A Literal Prose Translation, with the Text of the Original printed on the same page.
Page 10 - GRIMM'S TALES. With the Notes of the Original. Translated by Mrs. A. Hunt. With Introduction by Andrew Lang, MA 2 vols. 3*. 6d, each. - Gammer Grethel; or, German Fairy Tales and Popular Stories. Containing 42 Fairy Tales. Trans, by Edgar Taylor. With numerous Woodcuts after George Cruikshank and Ludwig Grimm. 3*.
Page 23 - Chess Praxis. A Supplement to the Chess-player's Handbook. Containing the most important modern improvements in the Openings ; Code of Chess Laws ; and a Selection of Morphy's Games. Annotated, ^s.
Page 9 - EMERSON'S WORKS continued. III. — Society and Solitude — Letters and Social aims — Miscellaneous Papers (hitherto uncollected) — May Day, and other Poems. ELLIS (G.) Specimens of Early English Metrical Romances.