Index

Previous

A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Z

Academy, 172
Acanthus, 119
AchÆan League, 18, 118
AchÆans, 40, 52, 55, 103, 162
Achilles, 11, 142
Acro-Corinthus, 73, 111 f., 118
Acropolis, 124 seq., 152, 166, 170, 173, 188, 199
Adrastus, 95 f.
Ægaleus (Mt.), 175
Ægeus, 126
Ægina, 82, 96, 108, 142 seq.
Æginetans, 143 ff.
Ægospotami, 82, 88, 144, 186
Æolian, 7, 15, 162
Æschines, 64
Æschylus, 21, 138, 176, 189, 191 f., 196, 207, 224
Africa, 73, 87, 102
Agamemnon, 40, 58, 61, 97, 100, 102, 105, 192
Agesilaus, 82, 89
Agesipolis, 59, 98
Agis, 58, 85, 89
Agraulos, 129
Agrippa, 210
Ajax, 140, 142
AlcÆus, 7
Alcibiades, 48, 97, 185, 207
Alcinous, 9, 106
AlcmÆon, 61
AlcmÆonid, 131
Aleman, 85
Alexander the Great, 12, 21, 49, 64, 74, 97, 117, 122, 171, 196, 201
Alpheus, 34, 52, 63
Amazons, 68, 157
Amphictyony, 27, 130
AmyclÆ, 90, 91
Anaxagoras, 203
AndritsÆna, 67
Antipater, 64, 201 f.
AphÆa, 145
AphroditÉ, 119, 176
Apollo, 16, 20 seq., 41, 62, 68 f., 91, 98, 108, 118, 127, 174, 176
Aratus, 118
Arcadia, 51 seq., 82, 105
ArchÆology (schools of), 29, 35, 65, 119
Areopagus, 125, 127, 139, 166, 185, 207, 214
AretÉ, 106, 182
Arethusa, 52
Argive, 74, 82, 97
Argives, 58, 95, 98, 101, 107
Argolic, 104
Argolid, 108
Argolis, 36, 94 seq.
Argonauts, 54
Argos, 49, 61, 64, 71, 94, 112
Ariadne, 125
Arion, 190 f.
Aristides, 62
Aristodemus, 77
Aristogeiton, 134 f.
Aristomenes, 72 f., 92
Aristophanes, 173, 193 f., 199, 217
Aristotle, 12, 41, 196, 203, 212
Art (development of), 43, 148 f.
Artemis, 52, 54, 79, 145
Asclepios, 108 f., 174
Asia Minor, 40, 87, 103, 130, 134, 149, 197
Atalanta, 54
Athena, 28, 55, 91, 128, 131, 139, 144 f., 146 seq., 210
Athens, 9, 29, 32, 60, 61, 64, 75, 84, 88, 97, 102, 105, 114, 122, 124 seq.
Athens (modern), 212 seq.
Attalus (stoa of), 209
Attica, 125
Atreus, 105
Autonomy (love of), 5. Vide Tyranny
BacchiadÆ, 113
Bacchus (Dionysus), 192
Baltic, 102
BassÆ, 66, 68 f.
Bellerophon, 112
BÉrard (Victor), 10, 16, 76
Blackie (Prof. J. S.), 192
Boeotia, 48, 58, 60, 74
Bosporus, 99
BoulÉ (Council), 78, 184, 208
Brasidas, 85, 200
Brennus, 28
Bribery, 25, 43, 84
British and Foreign Bible Society, 120
British Museum, 68, 154, 161, 176
Burial, 102 f., 137, 168, 172
Byron, 18, 165, 195, 215
Byzantine, 62, 66, 68, 92, 107, 159, 226
Callicrates, 153
Callimachus, 119
Callirhoe, 169
Callistratus, 60 f.
Calydonian Hunt, 54 f.
Calypso, 9
Canal (Corinth), 121 f.
Capodistrias, 107
CaryatidÆ, 149, 161
Castalian Spring, 32
Cecropia, 128, 147
Cecrops, 128 f., 139, 162
Celeus, 177-179
CenchreÆ, 120
Centaur, 37, 68, 154, 190
Cephallenia (Cephalonia), 7, 73
Cephisus, 175
Cerameicus, 169 f., 209
ChÆronea, 29, 168
Charon, 169
Chatzidakis (G.), 227
Choregus, 195 ff.
Chrysostom (Dio), 38
Chthonian, 39, 177
Cicero, 38, 60, 172, 180
Cimon, 127, 145, 173
Cirphis, 20
Cirrha, 27
Cladeus, 35
Cleisthenes, 96, 172, 184 f.
Cleomenes, 25, 64, 89, 98
Clergy (Greek), 75, 214
Climate, 3, 124
Clytemnestra, 55
Codrus, 129
Colchis, 113
Colonies (Greek), 4, 24 f., 47, 49
Colonus, 174 f.
Comedy. Vide Drama
Conon, 172
Constantinople, 38, 158, 220, 225
Cora, 177
Coreia, 182
Corfu (Corcyra), 7 ff., 114
Corinth, 9, 88, 104, 111 seq., 47, 84, 86, 129, 152, 157, 162, 179
Hellespont, 61, 141
Helots, 87 f.
HephÆstion, 171
HephÆstus, 105, 128
Hera, 35, 41, 99 f., 107
Heracleids, 40, 55, 77, 89
Heracles, 34, 37, 40, 55, 71, 79, 105, 123
HerÆum, 99 f.
Hermes,

37, 105
Herodes-Atticus, 190, 216
Herodotus, 24, 46, 56, 95 f., 113 f., 144, 163, 217
Hesiod, 21, 40, 54, 60, 162
Hesperides, 54
Hipparchus, 173
Hippias, 135
Hissarlik, 103
Homer, 4, 10 seq., 40, 43, 54, 62, 77 f., 95 f., 103, 105 f., 123, 128, 148, 224, 227
HomeridÆ of Chios, 16
Homicide, 24
Honour (love of), 143
Human sacrifice, 23, 75
Hyacinthia, 91
Hyllus, 55
Hymettus, 148
Hyperbolus, 185
Ictinus, 68, 153
Iliad, 12 seq., 101, 108, 126
Ilissus, 150
Ilium, 16
Io, 99
Ion, 129
Ionian Islands, 7 seq., 122
Ionian and Ionic, 58, 129, 134, 136, 176, 197
Iphicrates, 91
Iphitus, 41
Isocrates, 47
Isthmian games, 39, 122
Itea, 19
Ithaca, 7
Ithome (Mt.), 68, 73, 75
Jason of PherÆ, 28
Jesus Christ, 166, 180
Julian the Apostate, 26
Julius CÆsar, 118, 121, 210
Jupiter (vide Zeus), 29, 38, 221
Justinian, 157
Kalamata, 76
KarytÆna, 66
Knossus, 126
Kolokotronis, 66
Laconia, 72, 80, 86, 93
Laius, 32
Langada, 92
Language question, 217 seq.
Lapiths, 37, 68, 154
Larissa, 94, 99
Latona, 62
Laurium, 208
Lawyers (modern Gr.), 214
LeÆna, 134
LechÆum, 120
LenÆan festival, 47
Lenormant statue, 157
Leonidas, 75, 80, 90
Lepreum, 48
Leucas, 11
Leuctra, 59, 61, 81
Liberation (of Greece), 18, 66, 77, 212
Locrians, 28, 130
Lucian, 160
Lycabettus, 125
LycÆus, 52, 67
Lycaon, 52
Lyceum, 212
Lycia, 112
Lycosura, 52
Lycurgus, 21, 41, 71, 79, 84
Lycurgus (of Athens), 172, 188
Lysander, 25, 83 f.
Lysias, 47
Lysicrates, 195
Macedonia, 64, 97, 118, 201, 205, 223
MÆnalus (range), 63
Magna GrÆcia, 4, 187, 197
Mahaffy (Prof.), 75
Malea (Cape), 96
Mantinea, 58, 62, 85
Marathon, 31, 127, 136 ff., 164
Mardonius, 56, 141 f.
Marsyas, 62
Matapan (Cape), 89, 122
Medea, 113
Medes, 136
Medical profession, 108 f., 214
Mediterranean, 16
Medusa, 95
Megacles, 131
Megalopolis, 59, 63 ff., 69
Megara, 129, 131 f., 171, 178
Melanippus, 96
Menander, 172, 194
Menelaus, 76, 90
Menestheus, 126
Messene, 64, 73 ff.
Messenia, 71 ff., 92
Metaneira, 177
Miletus, 114, 130
Miltiades, 127, 136 ff.
Minos, 103, 126
Minotaur, 126
Mistra, 91 f.
Morea, 92
Morosini, 158
Mummius, 118
Music, 31, 46, 74, 85 f.
Mycale, 142
MycenÆ, 16, 35, 94, 97, 101 ff., 105, 123, 128
Mysteries, 175, 177 seq.
Mythology, 1 ff.
Naupactus, 40, 53, 73
Nauplia, 103, 107
Nausicaa, 11
Navarino, 77
Navel-stone, 29
Nemea, 39, 123
Nero, 31, 50, 121, 189
Nestor, 76
New Testament, 120, 220 seq.
Nicetas, 159
Nicias, 161, 185
NikÉ, 37, 126, 164
Niobe, 40
Oaths, 48, 130 f.
Odysseus, 9 f., 14, 106
Odyssey, 12 seq., 126
Œdipus, 32, 61, 96
Olympia, 18, 34 seq., 98, 217
Olympiad, 39
Olympian Games, 34 seq., 177
Olympieum, 211, 221, cf. 150
Olympus (Mt.), 15, 39, 117, 177
Omens, 28, 98 f., 116
Omphalos, 29
Ophis (river), 59, 62
Oracle. Vide Delphian
Oratory, 197 seq.
Orestes, 57, 61, 166
Otho, 107
Oxylus, 40
PÆonius, 37
Palace (Homeric), 105
PalÆocastrizza, 10
Palamidi, 108
Pallis (Alexander), 220 seq.
Pan, 190
Pan-Athenaic (games), 150, 154, 173, 206
Pancratium, 42
Pandora, 157
Pandroseum, 162 f.
Parnassus, 19 seq.
Parthenon, 151 seq., 206
Patras, 18
Paul (St.), 120, 180
Pausanias, 53, passim
Pegasus, 112
Peirene, 112, 119
Peisistratus, 76, 133 ff., 149 ff., 173, 191, 211
Pelasgian, 54, 103, 125
Pelasgicon, 125
Pelasgus, 52
Pelopides, 60
Pelopium, 38
Peloponnesian war, 9, 58, 69, 77, 87, 99, 143
Peloponnesus (Heracleid invasion of), 40, 55
Pelops, 36, 38, 102, 105
Penelope, 11, 69
Pentathlon, 41
Pentelicus, 126, 216
Periander, 114, 210, 227
Solon, 186 f., 200
Sphacteria, 77, 86, 200
Stadium of Athens, 216 f.
Stenyclerus, 74
Strabo, 77
Sulla, 31, 167
Sunium, 137, 158
Sydney (Sir Philip), 51
Synoecia, 125
Syracuse, 9, 46 f., 115 f., 188
Tantalus, 40
Tarentum, 87
Taygetus, 74, 77, 89, 91
Tegea, 54 seq., 62
Telemachus, 76
Terpander, 85
Thebes, 29, 54, 61, 64, 88, 95 f., 103
Themis, 21
Themistocles, 139 seq., 208
Theodosius, 26, 50
Theoric Fund, 185 f., 208
Thera, 89
Therapne, 90
ThermopylÆ, 27, 57, 80, 97
Thersilium, 65
Theseum, 127 f.
Theseus, 125 seq., 212
Thespis, 197
Thetes, 183
Thrasybulus, 114, 172
Thriasian (plain), 176, 178
Thothmes III., 99
Thucydides, 15, 46, 88 f., 99, 105, 168
Thyestes, 105
Thyrea, 142
Timoleon, 115 f.
Tiryns, 94, 97, 100, 105 ff., 128
Titthion (Mt.), 108
Torch races, 173 f.
Tower of the Winds, 209
Tragedy. Vide Drama
Trapezus, 63
Treasuries, 49, 155
Treasury of the Athenians, 31
Tripoliza, 62, 66
Triptolemus, 177
Troezen, 96
Troy, 16, 40, 94, 100 f., 105
Turks, 62, 77, 107
Tyranny (hatred of), 115, 133 f., 187 f.
TyrtÆus, 72, 85
University (of Athens), 215, 220 f.
Valaoritis, 225
Varvakeion, 156
Vases, 169 f.
Venetians, 107, 158
Vespasian, 121
Ville-hardouin, 92
Vitruvius, 119
Vourkano, 75
Women, 11, 41, 69 f., 80 f., 149 f.
Xenophanes, 203
Xenophon, 16, 21, 82
Xerxes, 43, 86, 134, 138 seq.
Zaleucus, 130
Zanes, 43
ZantÉ (Zacynthus), 7
Zeno, 172
Zeus, 34, 38 seq., 52, 72, 75, 90, 99, 105 f., 112, 123, 139, 146 f., 150, 163, 177, 196
Zountas, 101

THE END
Printed by R. & R. Clark, Limited, Edinburgh.


Sketch Map of GREECE MAP ACCOMPANYING “GREECE,” BY JOHN FULLEYLOVE, R.I., AND REV. J. A. M‘CLYMONT, D.D. (A. AND C. BLACK, LONDON)

Sketch Map of GREECE

MAP ACCOMPANYING “GREECE,” BY JOHN FULLEYLOVE, R.I., AND REV. J. A. M‘CLYMONT, D.D. (A. AND C. BLACK, LONDON)

FOOTNOTES:

[1] It may interest the reader to have a specimen of these famous odes. The translation is that of Ernest Myers.

FOR ASOPICHOS OF ORCHOMENOS, WINNER IN THE BOYS’ SHORT FOOT-RACE

[This ode was to be sung, probably by a chorus of boys, at the winner’s city, Orchomenos, and most likely in the temple of the three Charites or Graces—Aglaia, Euphrosyne, and Thalia—though sometimes the odes were sung at a banquet or at the door of the victor’s house. The date of the victory is 476 B.C.]

O Ye who haunt the land of goodly steeds that drinketh of Kephisos’ waters, lusty Orchomenos’ queens renowned in song; O Graces, guardians of the Minyai’s ancient race, hearken, for unto you I pray. For by your gift come unto men all pleasant things and sweet, and the wisdom of a man and his beauty, and the splendour of his fame. Yea even gods without the Graces’ aid rule never at feast or dance; but these have charge of all things done in heaven, and beside Pythian

Apollo of the golden bow they have set their thrones, and worship the eternal majesty of the Olympian Father.

O Lady Aglaia, and thou Euphrosyne, lover of song, children of the mightiest of the gods, listen and hear, and thou Thalia, delighting in sweet sounds, and look down upon this triumphal company, moving with high light step under happy fate. In Lydian{*} mood of melody, concerning Asopichos am I come hither to sing, for that through thee, Aglaia, in the Olympic games the Minyai’s home is winner.

{* The Lydian “mood” was sung to the accompaniment of the flute, and was tender, sometimes even plaintive. The Dorian mode was stronger, the Æolian more bright and animated, generally accompanied with the lyre or the flute, sometimes both. The metres of the different odes exhibit great variety.}

Fly, Echo, to Persephone’s dark-walled home, and to his father bear the noble tidings, that seeing him thou mayest speak to him of his son, saying that for his father’s honour in Pisa’s famous valley he hath crowned his boyish hair with garlands from the glorious games.

[2] Philip of Macedonia probably owed much of his success to the education he received at Thebes from his fifteenth till his eighteenth year.

[3] A name borne by many other hills in Greece owing to their resemblance to Helios, “the sun.”

[4] Frazer’s Pausanias, vol. iii. p. 7.

[5] Frazer’s Pausanias, vol. ii. p. 350.

[6] To this day speeches are often delivered in the cemetery, especially at the funeral of a person of note. Before being taken to the place of burial, the body, fully dressed, is carried in an open coffin to the church, where a religious service is held, of which an address sometimes forms part.

[7] “The conception of the Satyr, a half-human, half-bestial form, belongs originally to Asia Minor, and was developed, first in Ionian, and then in general Greek art. The more strictly Greek conceptions of Thessalian Centaur and Arcadian Pan are fundamentally the same in character. The Satyr-type varies between human mixed with horse and human mixed with goat, while the Centaur is only of the first kind and Pan only of the second. Silenus is a similar idea, of Anatolian origin probably, but developed in art more on the human side. The idea in all these figures is that of rude, free, natural life, untrained, unfettered by conventions and ideas of merely human origin.”—Prof. W. M. Ramsay’s “Religion of Greece” in Hastings’ D. B. (extra volume).

[8] A great amount of detailed information regarding the affairs of modern Greece will be found in W. Miller’s Greek Life in Town and Country (Newnes, 1905).

[9] The following is Mr. Pallis’ translation of the Lord’s Prayer (Matt. vi. 9-13):—?at??a a? ?s? es' st? ??????a, ???? ?? e??a? t' ???? s??, ?? ???e? ? as??e?a s??, ?? ???e? t? ????? s??, ?p?? st?? ???a?? (?ts?) ?a? st? ??? t? ??? a? ?s? ?? p?fte? d?se a? s?e?a, ?a? ????s? a? t? ???? a? ?p?? ??' ?e?? ?a??sae s' ?s??? ?? ???st???? ?a? ? ?? ??e?? s? pe??as?, ??e ???t?s? a? ?p? t?? ?a??.

[10] We have a proof of this in the fact that a students’ riot took place in 1903 when a modern Greek version of the Oresteia of Æschylus was put upon the stage, but had to be vetoed by the Government.

[11] The reader who wishes to go more fully into this subject will find it ably treated by K. Krumbacher in his Festrede on “Das Problem der neugriechischen Schriftsprache” (MÜnchen, 1903).

Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
source of the the finest =>source of the finest {pg 32}
he sought to concilate=> he sought to conciliate {pg 49}
range of Taygetu=> range of Taÿgetu {pg 89, 91}
good state of perservation=> good state of preservation {pg 92}
known ever aferwards=> known ever afterwards {pg 160}
over the the tomb=> over the tomb {pg 162}





<
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page