The Southern Review, Band 4A. E. Miller., 1829 |
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Seite 12
... says , these are some examples out of a great many . He thinks the Latin was not derived from the Greek , or the Greek from the Phoenician , but all of them from some common parent lan- guage ; wherein we agree with him . Mr. Higgins ...
... says , these are some examples out of a great many . He thinks the Latin was not derived from the Greek , or the Greek from the Phoenician , but all of them from some common parent lan- guage ; wherein we agree with him . Mr. Higgins ...
Seite 13
... says , the Barbarians inhabited Greece before the Ellenes . Of this we have no doubt . These Barbarians being Umbri and Pelasgoi ; Celtæ : for the Curetes were Celts , and established the Olympic Games . ( See Pezron's Antiquities of ...
... says , the Barbarians inhabited Greece before the Ellenes . Of this we have no doubt . These Barbarians being Umbri and Pelasgoi ; Celtæ : for the Curetes were Celts , and established the Olympic Games . ( See Pezron's Antiquities of ...
Seite 16
... say of ancient Greek and Roman history , is true of all early accounts . There is no certainty belonging to them ... says , the Greek or Pelasgian , before the time of Homer and Hesiod , sprung from the Celtic ; so did the Latin and ...
... say of ancient Greek and Roman history , is true of all early accounts . There is no certainty belonging to them ... says , the Greek or Pelasgian , before the time of Homer and Hesiod , sprung from the Celtic ; so did the Latin and ...
Seite 17
... says they were Gaul- ish philosophers and priests , much esteemed . Saronides ; Sear- thon , Searandon in Irish , one who chants ; sings in recitative . ( Diod . Sic . lib . v . ) Wesseling , his editor , says , that some MSS . instead ...
... says they were Gaul- ish philosophers and priests , much esteemed . Saronides ; Sear- thon , Searandon in Irish , one who chants ; sings in recitative . ( Diod . Sic . lib . v . ) Wesseling , his editor , says , that some MSS . instead ...
Seite 19
... says in Thalia ( sect . xcv . Bel . ed . ) — " Neither am I better acquainted with the islands called Cassiterides , from whence we are said to have our tin . " Probably the Phoeni- cians alone traded there at that period 440 A. C. It ...
... says in Thalia ( sect . xcv . Bel . ed . ) — " Neither am I better acquainted with the islands called Cassiterides , from whence we are said to have our tin . " Probably the Phoeni- cians alone traded there at that period 440 A. C. It ...
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