On Some Disputed Questions of Ancient GeographyJohn Murray, 1857 - 128 էջ |
From inside the book
Փորձեք որոնել բոլոր հատորներում. sail
Արդյունքներ 0–ի 1-ից 0-ը:
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Common terms and phrases
15 stades 600 Greek feet Africa Alexandria ancient computations Argos Asia Minor Asopus Astapus Athenians Athens Boeotia breadth Cape centuries Charadrus Chelonatas coast correct cubit Cyllene degree Demetrius derived difference of latitude distance Editor Egypt Egyptian Epirus Eratosth Eratosthenes erroneous evidence extant foot geographical miles gives a rate Gosselin Greece Greek feet Greek stade Herodotus Hipparchus historian Homer Iliad Ilium island itinerary length longitude measure Mediterranean meridian modern Moréa Nearchus Nile number of stades observation Olympia Orneæ Oropus Passaron Pausanias Peneius peninsula perimeter Phliûs Phoenicians places Plin Pliny Polybius Posidonius position probably proportion Ptolemy Pylus remarks Rhodes river road Roman mile ruins sail says Scamander Sphacteria stade of 600 stades stadia Strabo Straits supposed Syene Thucydides tion town Travels Trojan plain Trojan war Troy truth vestiges δὲ ἐν ἐπὶ ἐς καὶ κατὰ μὲν οἱ πόλις τῇ τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῦ τῶν
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ v - The Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography edited by Dr. William Smith is a work of so much utility to the study of ancient history, and of such general importance to classical education and the progress of knowledge, that its extensive circulation wherever the English language is spoken or read may confidently be anticipated.
Էջ 89 - The more frequented the route, the more populous the country through which it passed, the more civilized and lettered the people, the more nearly we find the reported distance to approach that standard [600 Gr.
Էջ 82 - Egypt, to have been in the extreme limit of the tropical line, where the gnomon gives no shadow on the longest day, and Alexandria to be on the same meridian, at a distance of...
Էջ 102 - Pliny, the most learned Roman of the most learned age of Rome, remarks as follows : — " Europe appears to be greater than Asia by a little less than a half of Asia ; and greater than Africa by the same quantity added to the sixth part of Africa. Europe is a third part of the whole earth, with the addition of a little more than an eighth ! Asia is a fourth, plus a fourteenth ; and Africa a sixth, plus a sixtieth.
Էջ 110 - Stadium in hac mundi mensura id potissimum intelligendum est, quod Italicum vocant, pedum DCXXV ; nam sunt praeterea et alia longitudine discrepantia ut Olympicum, quod est pedum D ; item Pytbicum pedum M.
Էջ 107 - ... that hypothesis in the proportion of the stade to the degree, as employed by Marinus and Ptolemy. Notwithstanding the imperfection of the work of Ptolemy, it may be considered as the extreme limit to which ancient geography ever attained, and it continued to be the chief, or rather the only, guide of Greeks, Arabs, and every other people, until long after the revival of learning. The many additions and alterations, which the text evidently received in the course of transcription, cannot increase...
Էջ 75 - Stadium centum viginti quinque nostros efficit passus, hoc est, pedes sexcentos viginti quinque. Posidonius non minus quadraginta stadiorum a terra altitudinem esse , in qua nubila , ac venti , nubesque proveniant.
Էջ 60 - But Ptolemy, after all. may not have been so much misinformed with respect to a communication existing between the lake and his Nigeir, if, as is now strongly suspected, the communication really exists, though in an inverse direction from that which Ptolemy appears to have understood.
Էջ 101 - Thule, a region uninhabitable on account of the cold, was obliged, in order to preserve the aforesaid proportion, to give an undue extent to its length, from the western cape of Iberia to the eastern extremity of India.