... the Sabellians, the Umbrians, the Etrurians, and the Greeks. § 5. It is certain that in primitive times the coasts and lower valleys of Italy were peopled by tribes that had crossed over from the opposite shores of Greece and Epirus. These tribes... The environs of Reading - Page 50edited by - 1843 - 171 pagesFull view - About this book
| W. Fletcher - 1840 - 146 pages
...year. On the floor of the nave John Whistler, gent. is commemorated ; he was buried Jan. 9th, 1699. The chancel is separated from the nave by an oak screen,...antiquary, by whose researches the obscurity that now hangs over its history, may even yet be cleared away. Amidst accumulated mortar was discovered a few... | |
| Henry George Liddell - 1855 - 540 pages
...opposite shores of Greece and Epirus. These tribes belonged to that ancient stock called the Pelasgian, of which so much has been written and so little is known. The names that remained in Southern Italy were all of a Pelasgian or halfHellenic character. Such were,... | |
| Henry George Liddell - Rome - 1855 - 534 pages
...opposite shores of Greece and Epirus. These tribes belonged to that ancient stock called the Pelasgian, of which so much has been written and so little is known. The names that remained in Southern Italy were all of a Pelasgian or halfHellenic character. Such were,... | |
| Henry George Liddell - 1857 - 882 pages
...opposite shores of Greece and Epirus. These tribes belonged to that ancient stock called the Pelasgian, of which so much has been written and so little is known. The names that remained in Southern Italy were all of a Pelasgian or half-Hellenic character. Such... | |
| Henry George Liddell - Rome - 1857 - 792 pages
...opposite shores of Greece and Epirus. These tribes belonged to that ancient stock called the Pelasgian, of which so much has been written and so little is known. The names that remained in Southern Italy were all of a Pelasgian or half-Hellenic character. Such... | |
| College students' writings, American - 1888 - 80 pages
...This little book, translated from the German, gives a very pleasing glimpse of the life of the East, of which so much has been written and so little is known. The author, the daughter of Sejid Said, Sultan of Zanzibar, left her home to marry a young German,... | |
| William Charles Harris - Fishing - 1889 - 716 pages
...wininnish of Lake St. John, and an exploration of the Mistassini River — that mysterious but mighty river of which so much has been written and so little is known. KIT CLARKE. Lac des Grand Isles, June 10. ILL. NOTES FROM BEARDSTOWN, There has been little or no fishing... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - World History - 1904 - 702 pages
...opposite shores of Greece and Epirus. These tribes belonged to that ancient stock called the Pelasgian, of which so much has been written and so little is known. The names that remained in southern Italy were practically all of a halfHellenic character. Such were,... | |
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