A. - Abyssinia, Christianity of, 67.
- Achaia, dealings of Rome with, 218.
- Ælfred, his view of early Greek history, 18.
- Africa, Saracen conquest of, 133.
- AgamemnÔn, his imperial position, 18, 19.
- AgathoklÊs, two sides of, 33.
- Akarnania, its position in Homeric times, 19;
- Akragas, its time of greatness, 25.
- ??aa??? ???, title of, 107.
- Alans, their history and settlement, 87, 88; 122.
- Alaric, his career, 78.
- Albanians, their origin, 119.
- ??a???, opposed to ??a???, 141.
- Alexander, founder of the modern Greek nation, 16;
- his work in the East, 17;
- his dealings with the Greek cities, 179.
- Alexander of Epeiros, 17;
- Alexandria, its relation to older Greek cities, 23.
- Alexios KomnÊnos, compared with Henry the Fourth, 162.
- Allies, Roman, their relations to Rome, 82, 83; 218-220;
- Ambrakia, its beginnings, 24.
- Amisos, dealings of Trajan and Pliny with, 237, 238.
- Amphiktyonic Council, nullity of, 178, 179;
- its reform by Augustus, 225.
- Andorra, relations of, 217.
- Angles, first mentioned, 64.
- Antalkidas, Peace of, 28.
- Antioch, its relation to older Greek cities, 23.
- Antoninus Caracalla, effects of his edict, 42.
- Apameia, dealings of Trajan and Pliny with, 236, 237.
- AquÆ SextiÆ, battle of, 44; 60.
- Aquitaine, position of cities in, 192;
- its relations to France, 195;
- its separation from Burgundy, 196.
- Arles, capital of Southern Gaul, 85.
- Arminius, his historic position, 64.
- Arnold, Thomas, point chosen by for the ending of his History, 104.
- Asia Minor, its historic position, 19.
- Athens, her history mistaken for that of Greece, 21;
- remains specially pagan, 74;
- her relations to Rome, 84, 85;
- her position under Trajan, 232.
- Aurelian, his dealings with the Goths, 77.
- Austria, the Frankish, effect of the rise of its Mayors, 91.
- Austrian Emperors, their relations to the Popes, 183.
- Austrian Empire, 151-152.
- Avignon, Popes at, 157.
B. - Bajazet, Keiser of Roum, 145.
- Barbarians, conversion of, 67.
- Basil the Macedonian, his controversy with Lewis the Second, 108.
- Basil the Second, Emperor, 132, 133.
- ?as??e??, title of, 108.
- Basques, Iberian elements preserved by, 93.
- Belisarius, Roman consul, 125.
- Beneventum, battle of, 45.
- Bithynia, different position of its cities under Trajan, 233-238.
- Britain, Roman influence in, 94;
- Continental, its origin, 89;
- Celtic elements preserved in, 93.
- Buonaparte, Napoleon, his position and objects, 149-151.
- Burgundians, their settlement in Gaul, 89; 123.
- Burgundy, position of cities in, 191, 192;
- its separation from Aquitaine, 196;
- represented by Switzerland, 197, 198.
- Byzantine, use of the name, 129.
C. - CÆsar, his work in Gaul, 61, 65.
- Capitular elections, their analogy with Greek cities, 228.
- Carthage, her beginnings, 24;
- the rival of Greece, 29;
- her wars in Sicily, 30;
- her rivalry and first war with Rome, 46, 47;
- strife of with Rome for Spain, 48, 49;
- her fall and new birth, 54.
- Catalaunian Fields, battle of, 44.
- Catalogue, the Homeric, its historic value, 18-20.
- Charles Martel, his defeat of the Saracens, 134.
- Charles the Great, effect of his coronation, 104;
- nature of his Empire, 106, 107;
- successor of Constantine the Sixth, 106;
- his position towards the East, 107, 108;
- his successors, 130.
- Charles the Fourth, Emperor, his coronations, 147.
- Charles the Fifth, last Imperator, 138;
- his coronation at Bologna, ib.;
- real source of his power, 139.
- Charles the Sixth, Emperor, 152.
- Cherson, its beginnings, 24;
- its relations to Rome, 84;
- Roman annexation of, 221-222.
- Chlodowig, unites the Frankish kingdoms, 189.
- Christianity, its relation to the Roman power, 67-69;
- its special rivalry with Mahometanism, 133.
- Cities, answer to nations, 177, 178; 183;
- contrasted with nations, 186-188;
- their chief developement among Southern nations, 186;
- difficulty of uniting, 187;
- their position in Northern and Southern Gaul, 191, 192;
- their history and position in modern Europe, 199-205;
- their history in Germany, 200-205;
- suppression of, 201-202.
- Civilis, compared with Buonaparte, 151.
- Clermont, Council of, 162.
- Colonies, Greek, 14;
- their relation to Macedonian conquests, 16;
- their beginnings, 19;
- their time of greatness, 23-26;
- their extent, 24-26.
- Condominium, survival of, 211.
- Conquest, Roman and Teutonic compared, 85.
- Constance, Peace of, compared with that of Westfalia, 139.
- Constantine the Great, his changes at Rome, 74;
- his foundation of Constantinople, ib.
- Constantine Palaiologos, his death, 170;
- compared with Leopold the First, 171.
- Constantinople, its various names, 74;
- Christian from the beginning, ib.;
- its position compared with that of old Rome, 100-103;
- never without a resident Emperor, 101;
- its loss in 1204, 139;
- its recovery, 142;
- Latin Empire at, 145;
- its position, 160;
- taking of, May 29, 1453, 168-170;
- Latin rites in Saint Sophia, 170.
- Convocation, English, its analogy with Greek cities, 227, 228.
- Crete, mention of in Homer, 19.
- Crusade, First, 161, 162.
- Crusade, Fourth, 164, 165.
- Cyprus, rivalry of Greek and Phoenician in, 24;
- Empire of, 143;
- conquered by Richard, ib.
D. - Dacia, its conquest and cession, 77.
- Dante, his doctrine of the Empire, 68;
- his theory carried out in the East, 159.
- Departments, French, their position, 210.
- Diocletian, his changes, 73, 74; 86.
- DiÔn Chrysostom, his account of contemporary Greek commonwealths, 225-234;
- value of his Orations, 231;
- his speech to the Rhodians, 232;
- his speech at Prusa, 233;
- at NikomÊdeia, 234.
- Dionysios, two sides of, 33.
- Diplomacy, in the third century B.C., 37.
E. - East, growth of native powers in, in the first and second centuries B.C., 65.
- Eastern Emperors, their religious character, 159.
- Eastern Empire, in what sense Greek, 112-120;
- in what sense Roman, 117-119;
- its power of revival, 128;
- use of the name, 129;
- its calling, 130;
- its wars with the Saracens, 135;
- with the Turks, ib.;
- practically ends in 1204, 136; 139-144;
- its survival and fragments, 145;
- its greatest days, 160;
- its crusades, ib., 161.
- Eastern Question, eternal, 5.
- Egypt, early Greek knowledge of, 20;
- its relations to Greece, 26;
- Saracen conquest of, 133.
- Eleventh Century A.D., its history, 135.
- ?????, use of the name, 112; 140.
- Empereur d’Allemagne et d’Autriche, title of, 149.
- Empereur des FranÇais, title of, 149.
- Emperor, various uses of the name, 144.
- Emperor of the East, title of, 143, 144.
- Emperors, joint reign of several, 75;
- pre-eminence of those in the East, ib.;
- rival claims of in East and West, 107, 108;
- contrast of in East and West, 120, 121;
- origin of their power, 212-214.
- Empire, vague uses of the word, 155.
- Empire, Eastern, see Eastern Empire.
- Empire, Roman, see Roman Empire.
- Empire, Western, see Western Empire.
- Empires, various Greek, in the fourteenth century, 143, 144.
- England, its steps towards union, 188.
- Epeiros, its relations to Greece, 13, 14; 25;
- plans of her kings in the West, 34;
- suggested by the Macedonian conquests, ib.;
- Empire of, 143.
- Erbkaiser von Oesterreich, title of, 151.
- Euboia, account of by DiÔn Chrysostom, 231.
- Europe, three marked periods in its history, 4;
- its geographical character, 6;
- its analogies in the earliest and latest times, 176.
F. - Federal States, examples of in the third century B.C., 36.
- Federations, their long survivals in Greece, 225.
- Fifth Century A.D., its character and relation to earlier times, 79;
- compared with the third century B.C., 81;
- sketch of its history, 122-124.
- Fifth Century B.C., a time of Greek decline, 21;
- its effect on the Teutonic nations, 85-95.
- Finlay, George, his view of the fifth century B.C., 21.
- France, formation of, 91, 92;
- its growth, 190-192;
- position of cities in, 191.
- France, Duchy of, its dismemberment, 190.
- Francia, name of, 89;
- Frankfurt, its commonwealth suppressed, 202.
- Franks, their appearance in Gaul, 78;
- translation of the Empire to, 112;
- their advance in Gaul, 123;
- union of their kingdoms, 189;
- fourfold division of, 196.
- Frederick the Second, Emperor, his crusade, 163;
- effects of his treatment by the Popes, ib.
- Frederick the Third, Emperor, 138; 147.
- Free Cities, hindrances to national growth, 193.
- French Empire, 149-151.
- French language, its formation, 190.
- French nation, its origin, 91, 92;
G. - Gascons, see Basques.
- Gaul, Cisalpine, Roman conquest of, 49;
- its Roman life, 61, 62;
- Teutonic settlements in, 87;
- how affected by the Teutonic invasions, 90, 91;
- Southern, Romance growth in, 91;
- its disunion, 189;
- national elements in, 195-197.
- Gauls, their relation to Rome, 86;
- their adoption of the Roman name, 87.
- Gela, its time of greatness, 25.
- George ManiakÊs, his recovery of Syracuse, 135.
- German, use of the name, 113.
- German Empire, 153.
- Germans, their invasions, 77;
- their relation to the Empire, ib.
- Germany, its connexion with the Western Empire, 147;
- its disunion, 189;
- less divided than Italy, 193;
- position of cities in, 200-205.
- Ghibelline theory, carried out in the East, 159.
- Gibbon, Edward, extent of his history, 75.
- Gothia, name of, 88.
- Goths, their dealings with the Empire, 77-79;
- their settlement in Gaul, 89;
- their taking of Rome, 95;
- their position in East and West, 99;
- their settlement in Gaul and Spain, 123.
- GrÆci, use of the name, 112.
- Gratian, refuses the Pagan pontificate, 155.
- Greece, its geographical character, 6;
- its historic calling, 7;
- its connexion with other Aryan lands, 7, 8;
- its influence compared with that of Rome, 8-10;
- its position towards the East, 11, 12;
- its relations to Rome, 15;
- various forms of its influence, 16;
- its geographical boundary, 17;
- two main periods of its influence, 21, 22;
- its decline in the fourth century B.C., 32;
- its influence in East and West, 34;
- relations of Rome to, after the first Macedonian war, 54, 55;
- its influence extended by Rome, 92, 93;
- international law in its oldest times, 178;
- in Macedonian times, 179;
- highest developement of cities in, 186;
- survival of Federal systems in, 225;
- its position under Trajan, 229.
- Greece, Greater, 14;
- falls away from Greek life, 17;
- its most brilliant time, 25.
- Greek, use of the name, 113;
- in the sixth century, 126, 127;
- in the thirteenth, 140, 141.
- Greek cities, their position under the Roman Empire, 239;
- gradual extinction of their freedom, 239, 240.
- Greek language, its history in the Eastern Empire, 115-117.
- Greek nation, modern, its origin, 16.
- Greek studies, their value, 9, 10.
- Greeks, their relations to other nations, 13;
- their geographical position, 17, 18;
- their relation to Rome, 86;
- their adoption of the Roman name, ib.
- Gregory the Great, his letter to Phocas, 125; 158.
- Gregory the Seventh, his career and death, 156, 157.
H. - Hadriatic Sea, Western boundary of permanent Greek life, 17.
- Hamilkar, his exploits and those of his House, 48.
- Hannibal, his character and historic position, 50-53.
- Hannibalian war, its character, 50-52.
- Hansa, its growth, 201;
- its decline, 202;
- its modern survival, 202-204.
- Henry the Fourth, Emperor, his position at the time of the First Crusade, 162.
- Henry the Seventh, Emperor, 132; 147.
- Heraclius, his exploits, 129; 133.
- Herodotus, his clear view of history, 18; 21.
- Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation, 95; 111; 112.
- Homer, his historic witness, 18-20.
I. - Imperator and Imperator electus, 111.
- Imperial power, its original nature, 69;
- Innocent the Third, his relation to the Fourth Crusade, 165.
- International law, times of its importance, 177-180;
- its difficulty, 177;
- ceases under the Roman power, 180.
- Italy, relations of its nations to the Greek cities, 31;
- help for its cities sought in Greece, 32-34;
- how affected by the Teutonic invasions, 90, 91;
- its position under Theodoric, 97, 98;
- reconquered by the Empire, 98;
- divided between the Empire and the Lombards, ib.;
- southern part remains Greek, ib.;
- developement of cities in, 186;
- its disunion, 189; 193;
- position of cities in, 191;
- its reunion, 193-195;
- its drawbacks, 194.
J. - Janissaries, 167.
- Jerusalem, recovered by Frederick the Second, 163.
- Jews, revival of their power under the Maccabees, 66;
- their mission in the world, ib.
- John Sobieski, Vienna delivered by, 171.
- Joseph the Second, Emperor, 152.
- Justinian, closes the University of Athens, 85;
- his historic position, 126-128.
K. - Kingship, various forms of in the Polybian age, 36.
- Korkyra, its position in Homeric times, 20;
- KyrÊnÊ, colonization of, 24.
L. - Latin language, its history in the Eastern Empire, 114-117.
- ?at????, opposed to ??a???, 141.
- Lectures, scheme of, 204-206;
- Leo the Isaurian, beats back the Saracens, 134.
- Leopold the First, Emperor, compared with Constantine Palaiologos, 171.
- Lesbos, mention of in Homer, 19.
- Lewis the Second, Emperor, his controversy with Basil the Macedonian, 108;
- his position in Italy, 130, 131.
- Lignitz, defeat of the Mongols at, 161.
- LÜbeck, its coinage, 202.
- Lykia, League of, 37;
- its history and constitution, 222, 223.
M. - Macedonia, its relations to Greece, 14.
- Macedonian Conquests, effects of, 14, 15.
- Macedonian Emperors, their work, 132, 133.
- Macedonian Wars, character of the First, 51, 52.
- Magyars, effects of their settlement and conversion, 94.
- Mahomet the Second, his European position, 167.
- Mahometan history, its date, 11.
- Mahometanism, its special rivalry with Christianity, 133.
- Marcus, his reign, 76.
- Maria Theresa, 152.
- Marius, Gaius, his work, 60.
- Massalia, its time of greatness, 25;
- its two republican periods, 192.
- Maximilian, Imperator electus, 138;
- Merwings, end of, 158.
- MilÊtos, mention of in Homer, 19.
- Mogul Empire, 150.
- MykÊnÊ, Empire of, 18.
N. - Nations, answer to cities, 177, 178; 183;
- Nikaia, Sultans of, 135, 144, 145;
- Emperors of, 140;
- their recovery of Constantinople, 142;
- its position under Trajan, 234, 235.
- NikÊphoros, Emperor, acknowledges the claim of Charles the Great, 108.
- NikomÊdeia, its position under Trajan, 234, 235.
- Normandy, settlement of, 190.
O. - Odowakar, his position and history, 96.
- Odysseus, his relation to his overlord, 18.
- Olbia, DiÔn Chrysostom’s account of, 231.
- Olympiad, First, a starting-point, 10, 11.
- Otto the Great, Emperor, 131.
- Otto the Third, Emperor, 131.
- Ottoman Turks, their advance in Asia and Europe, 165-168.
P. - Palaiologoi, their Empire a survival of the old Empire, 142;
- their recovery of PeloponnÊsos, ib.
- Panormos, Phoenician colony, 24.
- Paris, the centre of France, 191.
- Parthia, Greek influence on, 15;
- its relations to Rome, 62.
- Patricians, Teutonic, 105.
- PeloponnÊsos, recovered by the Palaiologoi, 142.
- Pergamon, the model kingdom, 37;
- its relations to Rome, 56;
- dealings of Rome with, 218.
- Persia, its historic position, 27-29;
- its alliance with Carthage, 30;
- its new birth and rivalry with Rome, 63.
- Persian Wars, their nature, 21.
- Philip, how looked on at Megalopolis, 32.
- Philip the Fifth, his failure to help Hannibal, 51, 54.
- Phoenicia, its history and relation to Greece, 12; 20;
- extent of its colonization, 24; 26;
- its older and newer cities, 29.
- Physical inventions, their political effect, 183-185.
- Pippin, Patrician, 105;
- recovers Septimania from the Saracens, 134;
- his unction, 158.
- Pliny, his correspondence with Trajan, 225, 226; 233-239;
- his dealings with Apameia, 236;
- with Amisos, 237.
- Plutarch, his account of contemporary Greek commonwealths, 225-230;
- his political precepts, 227-230.
- Poland, Vienna delivered by, 171;
- share of the House of Austria in its partition, 172.
- Polybios, preserves the non-Athenian tradition of Philip, 32;
- character of his age, 35;
- his experience compared with that of Thucydides, 35, 36.
- Pompeius GnÆus, his work in the East, 61.
- Pontius Telesinus, 61.
- Pontos, Greek influence on, 15.
- Popes, a survival of the Empire, 155;
- origin and growth of their power, 156-158;
- their encroachments in the East, 165; 170;
- chosen from Italians only, 182;
- their relations to the Austrian Emperors, 183.
- Pragmatic Sanction, 152.
- Pressburg, Treaty of, 149.
- Protected states, their position, 224.
- Provence, its commonwealth, 192.
- Provinces, slow annexation of, 72, 73;
- position of different towns in, 215-216.
- Prusa, speech of DiÔn Chrysostom at, 232.
- Punic Wars, an episode in European history, 49, 50.
- Pyrrhos, his Hellenic position, 14; 17;
- his designs, 34;
- effects of his war with Rome, 45.
R. - Ragusa, its commonwealth suppressed, 203.
- Ravenna, Emperors at, 157.
- Respublica, use of the word, 125.
- Rex GrÆciÆ, Eastern Emperor so called, 108, 109.
- Rhodes, mention of in Homer, 19;
- democracy of, 36;
- dealings of Rome with, 218;
- speech of DiÔn Chrysostom at, 231, 232.
- Roger, Count, his recovery of Sicily, 135.
- Roman, use of the name, 43.
- Roman Church, its boundaries, 181, 182.
- Roman Empire, when did its decline begin? 75;
- its extension, 76;
- effect of the fifth century on, 79;
- its traditions kept on in the East, 79, 80;
- relations of its Eastern and Western divisions, 79-81;
- its enlargement under Charles, 105; 109, 110;
- its nature under Charles, 106, 107;
- its final division in 800, 108, 109;
- parted from the Roman nation, 110, 111;
- translation of, 112-114;
- its extent in the fifth century, 122;
- its reconquest in the sixth century, 124-126;
- advance of centralization in, 211;
- change from republic to empire, 212-214.
- Roman kingdom, in Gaul, 123.
- Roman nation, created by the Edict of Antoninus, 42;
- Roman Senate, acts as an international court, 57, 58.
- Romance languages, their origin, 90.
- Romance nations, their origin, 90-92;
- their relation to the Roman Church, 182.
- Romani, use of the name, 73, 111.
- Romania, Latin Empire of, 145;
- Rome, her historic position, 3, 4;
- her epithet of “Eternal,” 4;
- her part in the Eastern Question, 5;
- her relation to Greece, 15;
- her early position, 26;
- her first dealings with Greeks, 31;
- her sudden entrance in the East, 35; 37;
- slowness of her second advance, 39-41;
- her first relations with Greece, 40, 41;
- importance of her geographical position, 41;
- her rule, the rule of a city, 42;
- her historic calling, 43;
- her relations to Gauls and Teutons, 43, 44;
- her growth in Italy, 44, 45;
- effects of her war with Pyrrhos, 45;
- her rivalry and first war with Carthage, 46, 47;
- strife of with Carthage for Spain, 48, 49;
- her establishment beyond the Hadriatic, 49, 50;
- how affected by the Hannibalian war, 50-53;
- her position in the East after the first Macedonian war, 54-55;
- her advance in the second century B.C., 55-59;
- her time of trial, 60, 61;
- her relations with Syria and Gaul, 61, 62;
- her calling in the East, 62, 63;
- her special rivalry with Persia, 63;
- her first dealings with Germany, 64;
- Christianity needful for its mission, 67;
- change from commonwealth to Empire, 69;
- its effect on the city and the province, 69, 70;
- lessening of her local importance, 73, 74;
- remains specially Pagan, 74;
- falls away from the Empire, 80;
- her relation to her allies, 82-85;
- their slow incorporation, 84, 85;
- extension of Greek influence by, 93;
- her influence extended by the Teutonic settlements, ib.;
- her influence beyond the Empire, 94;
- taken by the Goths, 95;
- never occupied by the Lombards, 98;
- her position compared with that of Constantinople, 100-102;
- absence of the Emperors from, 101;
- her relations to Mahometanism, 133;
- represented by the Popes, 164, 165; 181, 182;
- the world without Rome, 173-176;
- the world before and after Rome, 176;
- effect of her reunion with Italy, 194, 195;
- her position under the Popes, 194;
- gradual establishment of her power, 209;
- modern analogies to, ib.;
- nature of her power over her allies, 214-217;
- analogies with its internal constitution, 214;
- her treatment of her allies, 217, 218;
- comparison of her power in East and West, 239.
- Rome, Roum, Sultans of, 135; 144, 145.
- Rouman language, its origin, 115.
- Roumans, their relation to the Slavs, 103;
- Rudolf of Habsburg, King, not Emperor, 139.
- Russian Empire, 153, 154.
- ??a???, use of the name, 73; 86; 117; 141; 146.
S. - Samuel, Bulgarian Tzar, 133.
- San Marino, relations of, 217.
- Saxon Emperors, their work, 130, 131;
- their wars with the Magyars, 161.
- Saxons, first mentioned, 64.
- Scandinavia, Roman influence in, 94.
- Scotland, compared with Switzerland, 198.
- Second Century B.C., advance of Rome in, 55-59;
- time of Barbarian revival, 62.
- Seleukid Kings, their position, 36;
- their relations to Rome, 56, 57.
- Seljuk Turks, their conquest, 166.
- Sentinum, battle of, 44.
- Shires, English, their position, 210.
- Sicily, its relations to Greece, 14;
- falls away from Greek life, 17;
- Phoenician and Greek settlements in, 25;
- their warfare, 30;
- help for sought in Greece, 32-34;
- war of Rome and Carthage for, 47;
- its conquest by the Saracens, and recovery, 134-135;
- incorporated with Italy, 194.
- Sidonius Apollinaris, 44.
- Sikans, mention of in Homer, 20.
- Sikels, mention of in Homer, 20.
- Simeon, Bulgarian Tzar, 113.
- Sixth Century A.D., its historical character, 124-126.
- Sixth Century B.C., greatest time of free Hellas, 23.
- Slaves, their relation to Rome, East and West, 94;
- their position compared with that of the Teutons, 100;
- their northern and southern divisions, ib.;
- their relations to the Eastern Empire, 102; 116;
- to the Roumans, 103;
- to the Western Church, 182.
- Spain, her historic position, 48;
- strife of Rome and Carthage for, 49;
- Teutonic settlements in, 88;
- how affected by the Teutonic invasions, 91;
- character of its history, ib.;
- its conquest and recovery, 134.
- Stephen Dushan, Servian Tzar, 113.
- Strabo, his description of the Lykian League, 223.
- Suevians, their settlement in Spain, 122.
- Sulla, Lucius, his work, 61.
- Swabian Emperors, their position, 148, 149;
- compared with the Austrian, ib.
- Switzerland, represents Burgundy, 197, 198;
- compared with Scotland, 198;
- reproduces Achaia, 199;
- position of cities in, ib.;
- its German origin, 201;
- its Confederation contrasted with that of Germany, 203.
- Sybaris, its time of greatness, 25.
- Syracuse, its time of greatness, 25.
- Syria, its position under Rome, 61;
- Saracen conquest of, 133.
T. - Taras, Tarentum, its time of greatness, 25.
- Tauromenion, its long resistance, 134, 135.
- Teutonic nations, their relation to the Roman Church, 181, 182.
- Teutonic race, beginning of its threefold history, 64.
- Teutons, Roman influence extended by their settlements, 93.
- Theodoric, the East-Goth, 44;
- his earlier history, 80; 99;
- his position, 96, 97; 123, 124;
- his system dependent on himself alone, 97.
- Theodoric, the West-Goth, 44.
- Theophilos, Emperor, annexes Cherson, 222.
- ThessalonikÊ, Empire of, 143.
- Third Century B.C., 36, 37;
- compared with the fifth century A.D., 81.
- Thucydides, his experience compared with that of Polybios, 35, 36.
- Trajan, his reign, 75, 76;
- loss of his conquests, 77;
- his correspondence with Pliny, 225, 226; 233-239;
- his dealings with the provinces and allies, 226;
- with NikomÊdeia, 235;
- with Apameia, 236;
- with Amisos, 237;
- his respect for treaties, ib.
- Trebizond, Empire of, 143.
- Tribes, united into nations, 187;
- in England, 188;
- in Gaul, 189.
U. - Unction, practice of, 75;
- first use of at Rome, 105.
- United States, its Federal system, 199.
V. - Vandals, their settlements, 88, 89; 122.
- VercellÆ, battle of, 44.
- Vienna, siege of in 1683, 171.
W. - Western Emperors, their Eastern wars, 161.
- Western Empire, in what sense German, 112-116;
- becomes German, 130-132;
- practically ends with Frederick the Second, 136-138;
- its later character, 147-149.
- Westfalia, Peace of, compared with that of Constance, 139.
Y. - Year 407 A.D., Teutonic invasion of Gaul in, 87;
- best beginning of modern history, 161, 162.
Z. - Zama, battle of, its effect, 53, 54.
- Zones of Greek Influence, 14, 15.
- Zu allen Zeiten Mehrer des Reichs, title of, 109.
THE END. BY THE SAME AUTHOR. Greater Greece and Greater Britain, AND George Washington the Expander of England. Two Lectures, WITH AN APPENDIX ON IMPERIAL FEDERATION. Crown 8vo. 3/6. THE METHODS OF HISTORICAL STUDY. EIGHT LECTURES READ IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD IN MICHAELMAS TERM, 1884, WITH THE INAUGURAL LECTURE ON The Office of the Historical Professor. Contents: The Office of the Historical Professor. History and its Kindred Studies. The Difficulties of Historical Study. The Nature of Historical Evidence. Original Authorities. Classical and MediÆval Writers. Subsidiary Authorities. Modern Writers. Geography and Travel. Index. Demy 8vo. 10/6. MACMILLAN AND CO.: LONDON. LECTURES TO AMERICAN AUDIENCES. Contents: I. The English People in its Three Homes. (1) Old, Middle, and New England. (2) The English Name. (3) The First Voyage and the Second. (4) The Old England and the Second. (5) The English in their Second Home. (6) The Second Voyage and the Third Home. II. The Practical Bearing of General European History. (1) Causes and their Effects. (2) The Democratic City. (3) The Aristocratic City. (4) The Ruling City and its Empire. (5) The Elder and the Newer England. (6) Rome Transplanted. Crown 8vo. 8/6. TRÜBNER AND CO.: LONDON. [P.T.O. Historical Essays. First Series. Fourth Edition. 8vo. 10s. 6d. Contents:—The Mythical and Romantic Elements in Early English History—The Continuity of English History—The Relations between the Crown of England and Scotland—St. Thomas of Canterbury and his Biographers, &c. Historical Essays. Second Series. Second Edition, with additional Essays. 8vo. 10s. 6d. Contents:—Ancient Greece and MediÆval Italy—Mr. Gladstone’s Homer and the Homeric Age—The Historians of Athens—The Athenian Democracy—Alexander the Great—Greece during the Macedonian Period—Mommsen’s History of Rome—Lucius Cornelius Sulla—The Flavian CÆsars, &c., &c. Historical Essays. Third Series. 8vo. 12s. Contents:—First Impressions of Rome—The Illyrian Emperors and their Land—Augusta Treverorum—The Goths at Ravenna—Race and Language—The Byzantine Empire—First Impressions of Athens—MediÆval and Modern Greece—The Southern Slaves—Sicilian Cycles—The Normans at Palermo. The Growth of the English Constitution from the Earliest Times. Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 5s. General Sketch of European History. New Edition. Enlarged, with Maps, &c. 18mo. 3s. 6d. (Vol. I. of Historical Course for Schools.) Europe. 18mo. 1s. [Literature Primers.] Comparative Politics. Lectures at the Royal Institution. To which is added “The Unity of History.” 8vo. 14s. History of the Cathedral Church of Wells. As Illustrating the History of the Cathedral Churches of the Old Foundation. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. Old English History. With Five Coloured Maps. Ninth Edition, revised. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6s. Historical and Architectural Sketches; chiefly Italian. Illustrated by the Author. Crown 8vo. 10s. 6d. Subject and Neighbour Lands of Venice. Being a Companion Volume to “Historical and Architectural Sketches.” With Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 10s. 6d. English Towns and Districts. A Series of Addresses and Essays. With Illustrations and a Map. 8vo. 14s. The History and Conquests of the Saracens. Six Lectures. Third Edition, with New Preface. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. The Office of the Historical Professor. An Inaugural Lecture read in the Museum at Oxford, October 15, 1884. Crown 8vo. 2s. Disestablishment and Disendowment. What are they? Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo. 1s. MACMILLAN AND CO.: LONDON. Transcriber's note - Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.
- Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made consistent when a predominant usage was found.
- Blank pages have been skipped.
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