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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 89 total hits in 18 results.
Pellene (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Delphi (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Thebes (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Olympia (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Elis (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Boeotia (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Patrae (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
Greece (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
It was at this time that Greece was struck with universal and utter prostration, although parts of it from the beginning had suffered ruin and devastation at the hand of heaven. Argos, a city that reached the zenith of its power in the days of the heroes, as they are called, was deserted by its good fortune at the Dorian revolution.
The people of Attica, reviving after the Peloponnesian war and the plague, raised themselves again only to be struck down a few years later by the ascendancy of Mace ies a strathgo/s could have—disloyalty and corruptibility as well as cowardice. of its generals.
At a later time, when the Roman imperial power devolved upon Nero, he gave to the Roman people the very prosperous island of Sardinia in exchange for Greece, and then bestowed upon the latter complete freedom. When I considered this act of Nero it struck me how true is the remark of Plato, the son of Ariston, who says that the greatest and most daring crimes are committed, not by ordinary men, but by
Attica (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17
It was at this time that Greece was struck with universal and utter prostration, although parts of it from the beginning had suffered ruin and devastation at the hand of heaven. Argos, a city that reached the zenith of its power in the days of the heroes, as they are called, was deserted by its good fortune at the Dorian revolution.
The people of Attica, reviving after the Peloponnesian war and the plague, raised themselves again only to be struck down a few years later by the ascendancy of Macedonia. From Macedonia the wrath of Alexander swooped like a thunderbolt on Thebes of Boeotia. The Lacedaemonians suffered injury through Epaminondas of Thebes and again through the war with the Achaeans. And when painfully, like a shoot from a mutilated and mostly withered trunk, the Achaean power sprang up, it was cut short, while still growing, by the cowardicekaki/a means literally “badness,” and includes in this context all the bad qualities a strathgo/s could have—disloyalty and corruptibil<
Achaia (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 17