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Carthage (X)

       
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The Aeneid

By: Publius Vergilius Maro; Tony Kline, Translator

...Book I The Trojans Reach Carthage Book II The Fall of Troy Book III The Trojans Sail for Italy Book IV The Tragedy of Dido Book V The Funeral Games Book VI The Visit to the Underworld Book VII ...

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On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church

By: Martin Luther

...e Lapsed, he testifies that it was the widespread custom in that church [at Carthage] to administer both kinds to the laity, even to children, indeed... ...f 48 Bishop of Carthage, (249–258), who was beheaded as a martyr for the faith. The trea...

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The Coming of Messiah in Glory and Majesty: Volume II

By: Juan Josafat Ben Ezra

...iches, with all that made Tyre to be worthy of estimation, and withdrew some to Carthage, a colony of the Tyrians, others to Ionea or Greece, others...

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Enciklopedio de Esperanto (1933)

By: L. Kokeny Kaj V. Bleier

...er en Alĝerio. Tiam oni fondis sub lia in uo E-sekcion en la Instituto de Carthage, kies prez. estis Poulain. En apr. li faris raporton en Tunis ĉe l...

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Chicago Manual of Style

By: University of Chicago

... 9 0 SIX POINT NO. 67 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they mnst have felt that they had reached one o... ...ss SEVLN POINT NO. 57 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Oorinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o... ...ss NINE POINT NO. 67 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o... ... eLLVLN POINT NO. 66 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o... ...6789 0 SIX POINT NO B When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o... ...131 SEVEN POINT NO. 8 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o... ...ii LIGHT POINT NO. 8 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o... ...13.3 NINE POINT NO. B When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one b... ... "G TEN POINT NO. 8 When thoughtful Greeks like Polybius saw the fall of Carthage and of Corinth, they must have felt that they had reached one o...

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Heroes of Unknown Seas and Savage Lands

By: J. W. Buel

...f the past. -- Eastward and westward of human life -- The greatness of ancient Carthage -- Venice the mistress of the sea -- Beliefs respecting the ea... ...agnificent and colossal Thalamegus -- The giant fleet which Hiero sent against Carthage -- An ancient ship that exceeded in size and splendor of any m... ...re are the ports of Tyre and Sidon of the Phoenicians that ruled the world, of Carthage that disputed with Rome, and the proud navies that bore their ... ... of fabulous importance by means of ships that covered the Mediterranean. Then Carthage established by Tyrians nearly 1000 years B.C. grew grand with ... ...owed with salt, while the last three hundred survivors were sold into slavery. Carthage in her glory had sent her ships not only to every port on the ... ...in fact such vessels as composed the great navies of ancient Egypt, Phoenicia, Carthage and Greece, either for war purposes or for extended voyages. ... ...emained of the place. A month later an attack was directed against the city of Carthagena, which, though bravely defended, was gallantly carried, and ...

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Empire and Wars

By: Sam Vaknin

... procurators meddled in the internal affairs of these territories. Opposition - in Carthage, Corinth and elsewhere - was crushed by overwhelming fo...

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And Gulliver Returns Book VI : Our Psychological Motivations

By: Lemuel Gulliver XVI

... military posts. By 698, following several more military campaigns in the Maghreb, the Arabs had driven the Byzantines from their garrisons in Cartha...

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The Path of Splitness

By: Indrek Pringi

...unded out of every port, and polis, and town in the Mediterranean; except for Carthage. What did Carthage turn into? A supposedly benign trading E... ... of that area into the coffers of a few privileged elite in that small city. Carthage had a completely integrated military industrial complex. The... ...the Greek Peloponnesian wars were going on, and Greece was destroying itself: Carthage was trading all over the Mediterranean, and becoming filthy ri... ... bribed, did he ever get his armies over to Asia Minor safely. Eventually… Carthage was completely destroyed by the Romans. That city was burned ... ...tery, better harvests, and were less warlike than they were. Rome destroyed Carthage for the same reason that comes from greed: envy. Pure envy. ... ...re in that area. The most brutalized. The most vicious haters. Not that Carthage was much better. Recently: 20,000 burial pots with cremated i... ...ts with cremated infant bones in them, were discovered at the site of ancient Carthage. Killing 20,000 babies indicates that these people were not ... ...,000 babies indicates that these people were not very humane either. Why was Carthage the lesser evil? If Carthage had triumphed over Rome: then ... ...eing murdered. From salting the Earth with salt over the burned wreckage of Carthage… Now this modern Romanized Western civilization is salting t...

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Essays

By: Michel Eyquem de Montaigne

...ing may be said, than too much) though I can never say too much; as he of Carthage, so I of your praise-worthinnesse, were better to say nothing, th... ...rprised with it. Such was that which brought so wonderfull a desolation to Carthage, where nothing was heard but lamentable out-cries and frightfull ... ...that he imprint not so much in his schollers mind the date of the ruine of Carthage, as the manners of Hanniball and Scipio, nor so much where Marcel... ...ver the reliques of Saint Gervase and Protaise, at Milane: and a woman at Carthage to have become cured of a canker by the sign of the holy Crosse, ... ...household, and there began to inhabit and settle themselves. The Lords of Carthage seeing their countrie by little and little to be dispeopled, made...

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Psychological War : Version 1

By: Mohamad Wael el Kurdi

...all carrefour mall Geant mall Police incident | crazy or a fool Facing the pedophiles in the agency New Apartment - jardin de carthage Legal Course In Lebanon In Tunisia Reporting Pedophiles Contact Human right organizations Contacting intelligence agencies Contacting News agencies The intelligence agency torture The rant tort...

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The Waste Land

By: T. S. Eliot

...of dirty hands. My people humble people who expect Nothing.’ la la To Carthage then I came 10 The Waste Land Burning burning burning burning 0 L... ...ena mi fe’, disfecemi Maremma.’ 307. V. St. Augustine’s CONFESSIONS: ‘to Carthage then I came, where a cauldron of unholy loves sang all about mine ...

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The Tempest

By: William Shakespeare

... it! ADRIAN: ‘Widow Dido’ said you? you make me study of that: she was of Carthage, not of Tunis. GONZALO: This Tunis, sir, was Carthage. ADRIAN: ... ... This Tunis, sir, was Carthage. ADRIAN: Carthage? GONZALO: I assure you, Carthage. Act II, scene i 22 SEBASTIAN: His word is more than the miracul...

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The Tempest

By: William Shakespeare

...ri. Widdow Dido said you? You make me study 756 of that: She was of Carthage, not of Tunis. 757 Gon. This Tunis Sir was Carthage. ... ...unis. 757 Gon. This Tunis Sir was Carthage. 758 Adri. Carthage? Gon. I assure you Carthage. 759 Ant. His word is more ...

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Floor Games

By: H. G. Wells

... and rivalries and successes of Blue End and Red End will pass, and follow Carthage and Nineveh, the empire of Aztec and Roman, the arts of Etruria an...

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Dombey and Son

By: Charles Dickens

...r—for that class of Caius Marius who sits upon the ruins of other people’s Carthages, can keep up his spirits well enough. He had looked in at Solomon...

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The Prince and the Page

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

...scape told of the fresh havoc of an invading army. Utterly blotted out was Carthage. Half demolished, half choked with sand, the city of Dido, the cit... ... to re- fresh the spirits of the French, such as the taking of the fort of Carthage, and now and then a skirmish of some foraging party; but in genera... ...ing for combat. Many who had hid them- selves in the vaults and cellars of Carthage had been dragged out and put to death, and their bodies had aided ... ...r the luxuriant vegetation or the heavy sand-drifts; or columns of the new Carthage lying veiled by acanthus; or remnants of churches destroyed by Gen... ...had come to the brow from which he could see on the one side the valley of Carthage, on the other the bay, he made an exclamation which Richard took f... ...army was almost as much reduced in numbers as it had been by the Plague of Carthage. Charles of Anjou remained himself in the town of T rapani, but kn...

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Bartleby the Scrivener

By: Herman Melville

...us — a sort of innocent and transformed Marius brooding among the ruins of Carthage! For the first time in my life a feeling of overpow- ering stingin...

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The Exiles

By: Honoré de Balzac

...ng to their efforts everywhere in ruins. He cried upon the manes of T yre, Carthage, and Babylon; he called upon Babel and Jerusalem to appear; and so...

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Plutarchs Lives Volume One

By: Hugh Clough

...y blew up into a flame. There were some also who dreamt of T uscany and of Carthage, and not without plausible reason in their 270 V olume One presen... ...ght give Hannibal leisure to establish himself in Italy, and the people of Carthage time and opportunity to supply him with fresh succors to complete ... ... old man’s employment, and proposed no less a task to himself than to make Carthage the seat of the war, fill Africa with arms and devastation, and so... ...his inclinations were for it, he should himself in person lead the army to Carthage. He also hindered the giving money to Scipio for the war; so that ... ...to Hannibal to call him home, and leave his idle hopes in Italy, to defend Carthage; when, for such eminent and transcending services, the whole peopl... ...than now, and that Hannibal was a more formidable enemy under the walls of Carthage than ever he had been in Italy; that it would be 313 Plutarch’s L... ...afterwards fought Hannibal, and utterly defeated him, humbled the pride of Carthage beneath his feet, gave his countrymen joy and exultation beyond al... ...at difficulty; but Alcibiades dreamed of nothing less than the conquest of Carthage and Libya, and by the accession of these conceiv- ing himself at o... ...wing on the ground the figure of the island and the situation of Libya and Carthage. Socrates the phi- losopher and Meton the astrologer are said, how...

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