An Universal History, from the Earliest Account of Time, Zväzok 20T. Osborne, 1748 |
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Strana xciv
... Indians XX . 52 The Hiftory of the Chinese XX . 109 A Differtation upon the Peopling of America XX . 157 A Differtation upon the Independency of the Arabs XX . 196 A LIST of the Maps and Cuts in the UNIVERSAL HISTORY Octavo . Vol . I ...
... Indians XX . 52 The Hiftory of the Chinese XX . 109 A Differtation upon the Peopling of America XX . 157 A Differtation upon the Independency of the Arabs XX . 196 A LIST of the Maps and Cuts in the UNIVERSAL HISTORY Octavo . Vol . I ...
Strana 13
... Indians , Japanese , & c . to be derived from a different fource . But we fhall expatiate upon this topic more largely hereafter , and confider more fully the traces of the old Scythian as well as Egyptian worship ftill remaining among ...
... Indians , Japanese , & c . to be derived from a different fource . But we fhall expatiate upon this topic more largely hereafter , and confider more fully the traces of the old Scythian as well as Egyptian worship ftill remaining among ...
Strana 18
... Indian and Tartarian , alpha- bets were deduced from the Efran- gelo character . As , therefore , this laft is manifeftly of Oriental extraction , as well as the Greek alphabet , with the Iberican and Armenian letters proceeding from ...
... Indian and Tartarian , alpha- bets were deduced from the Efran- gelo character . As , therefore , this laft is manifeftly of Oriental extraction , as well as the Greek alphabet , with the Iberican and Armenian letters proceeding from ...
Strana 30
... Indian expedition . Having afked one of thefe , how it came to pass that they did not arrive fooner ; he answered , That their horfes in general , and his own in particular , had Iran . * ABU'L GHAZI BAHADUR KHAN , ubi fup . y Idem ibid ...
... Indian expedition . Having afked one of thefe , how it came to pass that they did not arrive fooner ; he answered , That their horfes in general , and his own in particular , had Iran . * ABU'L GHAZI BAHADUR KHAN , ubi fup . y Idem ibid ...
Strana 52
... INDIANS . CHAP . XXXI . SECT . I. Defcription of India . T has been already obferved , that the antients fometimes gave the name of India to the proper Ethiopia , as feveral of the Eastern nations , particularly the Perfians , do at ...
... INDIANS . CHAP . XXXI . SECT . I. Defcription of India . T has been already obferved , that the antients fometimes gave the name of India to the proper Ethiopia , as feveral of the Eastern nations , particularly the Perfians , do at ...
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An Universal History From The Earliest Account of Time: Compiled ..., Zväzok 20 Úplné zobrazenie - 1748 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
affift Affyrian Afia againſt Alexander alfo antient apud Arabia Arabs Armenia ARRIAN Bayer Befieged Bookfeller Cæfar Carthaginians character Chineſe chofen Chrift Chriftian confequently confiderable conquefts defcendents defcribed Defeated Diodorus Siculus Egypt Egyptians emperor empire faid fame feems fent fettled feven feveral fhould fince firft firſt fituate fome ftate fubdued fubjects fuccefs fuch fuppofed Gaul Greeks Herodotus hift hiftorian hiftory himſelf ibid ifland India Indians Jews Jofeph John Khan killed king kingdom laft leaft leaſt likewife Macedon Medes moft Moguls moſt muft muſt nations obferved occafion Oxon paff paffage Parthia Perfians perfon Pompey Porus prefent prince Ptolemy put to death racter reafon reign river Romans Rome Scythians ſeems Septuagint Sinic STRAB Syria Tartars thefe themſelves theſe thofe Thomas thoſe Trajan ubi fup ubi fupra uſed vaft viii Whence named whofe xvii xviii
Populárne pasáže
Strana 194 - And the angel of the Lord found her by a fountain of water in the wilderness, by the fountain in the way to Shur.
Strana 182 - And Lamech said unto his wives, Adah and Zillah, hear my voice; ye wives of Lamech, hearken unto my speech: for I have slain a man to my wounding, and a young man to my hurt.
Strana 113 - And they said, Go to, let us build us a city, and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven ; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the...
Strana 131 - Chinese communicated their ideas by drawing on paper the natural images of the things they wished to express.
Strana 194 - Lord faid unto her: return unto thy miftrefs, and fubmit thyfelf under her hands. 10. And the Angel of the Lord faid unto her: I will multiply thy feed exceedingly, that it fhall not be numbered for multitude.
Strana 124 - Of this we find traces in thofe ancient and valuable books, which the Chinefe call, by way of eminence, The Five Volumes, being the canonical or claffical books of the higheft rank, which they look upon as the fource of all their fcience and morality. . The chief object of their worfhip then, at firft was the Supreme Being, the Lord and Sovereign Principle of all things, whom they adored under the name either Shang-ti, that is Supreme Emperor, or Tyen, which, with the Chinefe, fignifies the fame...
Strana iii - By these records it is that we live, as it were, in the very time when the world was created ; we behold how it was governed in its...
Strana 140 - He created six ko-lau or Prime Ministers§ to assist him in governing his empire. He appointed a professor of music, whose duty was to explain the order and arrangement of the different tones. He taught the way of making flutes, fifes, and organs, trumpets that imitated the voice of the dragon, and drums that made the noise of thunder. He divided his country into principalities, in each of which he caused cities to be erected. He introduced the use of wheeled carriages, and the training of horses...
Strana xxiv - But curing Artaxerxes of a wound he received in the battle, he became a great favourite at the court of Persia, where he continued practising physic for 17 years, and was employed in several negotiations. He wrote the History of Persia...