The property of foreigners might be any where seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only without the breach of any divine law, but prayers were addressed to the gods for favour and... The History of Thucydides - Page 123by Thucydides - 1829Full view - About this book
| Samuel Cooper Thacher, David Phineas Adams, William Emerson - American literature - 1810 - 874 pages
...property of foreigners might be any where seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or social compact, the Greeks described by a term peculiar to... | |
| William Mitford - Greece - 1814 - 444 pages
...property of foreiners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...divine law, but prayers were addressed to the gods for favor and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or... | |
| David Ramsay - World history - 1819 - 356 pages
...property of foreigners might be any where seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death without the breach of any human law, and not only...and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or social compact, the Greeks described by a term peculiar to... | |
| William Mitford - Greece - 1822 - 436 pages
...property of foreiners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...divine law, but prayers were addressed. to the gods for favor and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or... | |
| Thucydides - 1829 - 586 pages
...slaves. As to the city, the Thebans gave it up, for about a year 6, as a residence to some Megarseans " expelled by faction, and to such of the Plataeans...suppose that the being out of civil compact, was thought ц sufficient reason to authorise persons to be put to death or enslaved ; still less, that divine... | |
| William Mitford - Greece - 1835 - 366 pages
...property of foreigners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or social compact the Greeks described by a term peculiar to... | |
| William Mitford - Greece - 1835 - 424 pages
...property of foreigners might be any where seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or social compact the Greeks described by a term peculiar to... | |
| William Mitford - 1835 - 422 pages
...property of foreigners might be any where seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or social compact the Greeks described by a term peculiar to... | |
| Aristophanes - 1836 - 348 pages
...property of foreigners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any human law ; and not only...and assistance in the commission of such violences. Those connected with them by political or social compact, the Greeks described by a term peculiar to... | |
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