User Tools

Site Tools


text:appian_foreign_wars_preface

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Next revision
Previous revision
text:appian_foreign_wars_preface [2013/08/27 18:56] – created fredmondtext:appian_foreign_wars_preface [2014/01/15 11:55] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
Line 1: Line 1:
 Appian. The Foreign Wars. Horace White. New York. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY. 1899.  Appian. The Foreign Wars. Horace White. New York. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY. 1899. 
  
-Appian: Foreign Wars Preface+====== Appian: Foreign Wars Preface ====== 
  
 REDUCED FACSIMILE, VATICAN MS. GR. 141. XII CENTURY, FIRST PAGE OF AUTHOR'S PREFACE INTENDING to write the history of the Romans I have deemed it best to begin with the boundaries of the nations under their sway. They are as follows: In the ocean, the major part of those who inhabit the British Isles. Then entering the Mediterranean by the Pillars of Hercules and circumnavigating the same we find under their rule all the islands and the mainlands washed by that sea. The first of these on the right hand are the Mauritanians of the coast and various other African nations as far as Carthage. Farther inland are the nomad tribes whom the Romans call Numidians and their country Numidia; then other Africans who dwell around the Syrtes as far as Cyrene, and Cyrene itself; also the Marmaridæ, the Ammonii, and those who dwell by the lake Mareotis; then the great city founded by Alexander on the border of Egypt, and Egypt itself, as one sails up the Nile, as far as eastern Ethiopia; and as far as Pelusium by sea. REDUCED FACSIMILE, VATICAN MS. GR. 141. XII CENTURY, FIRST PAGE OF AUTHOR'S PREFACE INTENDING to write the history of the Romans I have deemed it best to begin with the boundaries of the nations under their sway. They are as follows: In the ocean, the major part of those who inhabit the British Isles. Then entering the Mediterranean by the Pillars of Hercules and circumnavigating the same we find under their rule all the islands and the mainlands washed by that sea. The first of these on the right hand are the Mauritanians of the coast and various other African nations as far as Carthage. Farther inland are the nomad tribes whom the Romans call Numidians and their country Numidia; then other Africans who dwell around the Syrtes as far as Cyrene, and Cyrene itself; also the Marmaridæ, the Ammonii, and those who dwell by the lake Mareotis; then the great city founded by Alexander on the border of Egypt, and Egypt itself, as one sails up the Nile, as far as eastern Ethiopia; and as far as Pelusium by sea.
text/appian_foreign_wars_preface.1377647760.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/01/15 11:09 (external edit)