The Roman History of Appian of Alexandria: The foreign warsMacmillan, 1899 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 72
Page 24
... held as hostages , there was another long lament . Yet they were compelled by want to accept the conditions . Accordingly they took the oaths , Pontius on the one side , and the two consuls , Postumius and Veturius , on the other ...
... held as hostages , there was another long lament . Yet they were compelled by want to accept the conditions . Accordingly they took the oaths , Pontius on the one side , and the two consuls , Postumius and Veturius , on the other ...
Page 26
... held them chiefly to blame for the Romans overpassing the limits . Then they expelled the noblest citi- zens of Thurii , sacked the city , and dismissed the Roman garrison that was stationed there under a treaty . 2. When the Romans ...
... held them chiefly to blame for the Romans overpassing the limits . Then they expelled the noblest citi- zens of Thurii , sacked the city , and dismissed the Roman garrison that was stationed there under a treaty . 2. When the Romans ...
Page 30
... held . He replied that if they were ready for peace on the terms proposed by Cineas , he would release the prisoners gratuitously , but if the war was to continue , he would not give up such a large number of valiant men to fight ...
... held . He replied that if they were ready for peace on the terms proposed by Cineas , he would release the prisoners gratuitously , but if the war was to continue , he would not give up such a large number of valiant men to fight ...
Page 31
... held as prisoners . There- upon Pyrrhus sailed for Sicily with his elephants and 8000 horse , promising his allies that he would return to Italy . Three years later he returned , for the Carthaginians had driven him out of Sicily . XII ...
... held as prisoners . There- upon Pyrrhus sailed for Sicily with his elephants and 8000 horse , promising his allies that he would return to Italy . Three years later he returned , for the Carthaginians had driven him out of Sicily . XII ...
Page 34
... held command there , he fought with more than 4,000,000 bar- barians , taken all together . Of these 1,000,000 were capt- ured and as many more slain in battle . He reduced to subjection 400 tribes and more than 800 towns , which had ...
... held command there , he fought with more than 4,000,000 bar- barians , taken all together . Of these 1,000,000 were capt- ured and as many more slain in battle . He reduced to subjection 400 tribes and more than 800 towns , which had ...
Contents
228 | |
231 | |
235 | |
241 | |
258 | |
264 | |
275 | |
290 | |
108 | |
114 | |
126 | |
136 | |
145 | |
152 | |
162 | |
172 | |
185 | |
186 | |
194 | |
201 | |
205 | |
212 | |
221 | |
302 | |
308 | |
317 | |
322 | |
329 | |
339 | |
349 | |
354 | |
365 | |
371 | |
374 | |
386 | |
393 | |
400 | |
407 | |
Common terms and phrases
accused Africa afterward allies Antiochus Appian Archelaus arms army Asia asked attack barbarians battle began Bithynia brought Bruttians Cæsar called camp Candidus Cappadocia captured Carthage Carthaginians cavalry Celtiberians Censorinus command consuls darts death deserters destroyed elephants embassy enemy enemy's envoys Eumenes fear fell fight Flamininus fled fleet forces friends garrison Gauls gave ginians give Greek guard Hannibal Hannibal's harbor Hasdrubal horse hostages Illyrian Italian Italy killed king land latter learned lest Lucullus Macedonian Mago Manilius marched Masinissa Mithridates neighboring Nicomedes night Numantines Numidian peace Perseus Phameas Philip plunder Pompey prisoners promised Punic reason returned Rhodians river Romans Rome sailed Schweighäuser Scipio Seleucus Senate sent ambassadors ships Sicily side siege slew soldiers Spain stades surrender Syphax Syria temple territory thaginians things Tigranes tion took refuge town treaty tribes tribunes Utica victory Viriathus walls whole Xanthippus
Popular passages
Page vi - Vastness, and Age, and Memories of Eld! Silence, and Desolation, and dim Night! I feel ye now, I feel ye in your strength, O spells more sure than e'er Judaean king Taught in the gardens of Gethsemane!
Page 198 - ... country. We propose an alternative more desirable for us and more glorious for you. Spare the city which has done you no harm, but, if you please, kill us, whom you have ordered to move away. In this way you will seem to vent your wrath upon men, not upon temples, gods, tombs, and an innocent city.
Page 408 - Eupatoria, h°m": which Mithridates Eupator had built and named after himself, but destroyed because it had received the Romans. Pompey rebuilt it and named it Magnopolis. In Cappadocia he rebuilt Mazaca, which had been completely ruined by the war. He restored other towns in many places, that had been destroyed or damaged, in Pontus, Palestine, CoeleSyria, and...
Page 231 - ... that as the fire was lighted the wife of Hasdrubal, in full view of Scipio, arraying herself as best she could amid such disaster, and setting her children by her side, said, so as to be heard by Scipio: "For you, Romans, the gods have no cause of indignation, since you exercise the right of war. But upon this Hasdrubal, betrayer of his country and her temples, of me and his children, may the gods of Carthage take vengeance, and you be their instrument.
Page 192 - Pitiful pating the appointed time, they sent their children whence into Sicily, amid the tears of the parents, the kindred, hostages and especially the mothers, who clung to their little ones with frantic cries and seized hold of the ships and of the officers who were taking them away, even holding the anchors and tearing the ropes, and throwing their arms around the sailors in order to prevent the ships from moving ; some of them even swam out far into the sea beside the ships, shedding tears and...
Page 231 - Scipio, beholding this city, which had flourished 700 years from its foundation and had ruled over so many lands, islands, and seas, as rich in arms and fleets, elephants, and money as the mightiest empires, but far surpassing them in hardihood and high spirit . . . now come to its end in total destruction — Scipio, beholding this spectacle, is said to have shed tears and publicly lamented the fortune of the enemy.
Page 230 - ... the dead and the living together into holes in the ground, sweeping them along like sticks and stones or turning them over with their iron tools, and man was used for filling up a ditch. Some were thrown in head foremost, while their legs, sticking out of the ground, writhed a long time. Others fell with their feet downward and their heads above ground. Horses ran over them, crushing their faces and skulls, not purposely on the part of the riders, but in their headlong haste. Nor did the street...
Page 60 - Having taken this rich and powerful city by audacity and good fortune in one day (the fourth after his arrival), he was greatly elated and it seemed more than ever that he was divinely inspired in all his actions. He began to think so himself and to give it out to others, not only then, but all the rest of his life, from that time on. At all events, he frequently went into the Capitol alone and closed the doors as though he were receiving counsel from the god. Even...
Page 231 - ... war for three years— now come to its end in total destruction; Scipio, beholding this spectacle, is said to have shed tears and publicly lamented the fortune of the enemy. After meditating by himself a long time and reflecting on the inevitable fall of cities, nations, and empires as well as of individuals; upon the fate of Troy, that once proud city; upon the fate of the Assyrian, the Median...
Page lii - Romanes warres, both Ciuile and Foren. Written in Greeke by the noble Orator and, Historiographer, Appian of Alexandria, one of the learned Counsell to the most mightie Emperoures, Traiane and Adriane.