| David Phineas Adams, William Emerson, Samuel Cooper Thacher - 1810 - 446 pages
...generally considered as lawful against all those, with whom there existed no express treaty or agreement. " It appears to have been very generally held among the Greeks of that age," says Mit* Difficile est dictn, Quirites, quahto in odio simus apud exteras na(iones propter eortim,... | |
| William Mitford - 1814 - 444 pages
...has given us for those speeches, as well as in what he attributes to the VOL. III. O Lacedasmonian Lacedaemonian commissioners as the ground of their...other without some express compact. The property of foreiners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without... | |
| William Mitford - 1822 - 436 pages
...attributes to the yot. in. O Lacedaemonian CHAP. Lacedaemonian commissioners as the ground of . xv'_, their proceeding, he seems rather to have stated the...other without some express compact. The property of foreiners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without... | |
| Thucydides - 1829 - 584 pages
...compact once existing, they called ecspondi, out of compact, or outlaws." And he further observes : " It appears to have been very generally held, among...themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, esteeming themselves to have suffered evil at their hands, they again took them aside, and asking them... | |
| Thucydides - 1829 - 586 pages
...compact once existing, they called ecsjmndi, out of compact, or outlaws." And he further observes : " It appears to have been very generally held, among...themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, esteeming themselves to have suffered evil at their hands, they again took them aside, and asking them... | |
| William Mitford - 1835 - 366 pages
...almost to extreme of offending against that impartiality so valuable and so uncommon in a contemporary historian, avoids declaring any sentiment as his own...express compact. The property of foreigners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any... | |
| Aristophanes - 1836 - 348 pages
...Tra.vT]p.épi¿s re ка\ T\$OS x6/ei ctvSfyv Ï5«i èv aíVoTCÉTqt), отгяге ХР^а ^€ípíos a^et. n " It appears to have been very generally held among...express compact. The property of foreigners might be anywhere seized, and themselves reduced to slavery, or even put to death, without the breach of any... | |
| Henry Wheaton - 1836 - 410 pages
...term outlaws. The able, but often too systematic and prejudiced historian of Greece, observes, that "it appears to have been very generally held among the Greeks of that age, that men were bound to no duties to each other without an express compact." He furnishes, among other instances, a practical... | |
| New-York Historical Society - 1821 - 422 pages
...'EjmWci, that is, what we should term, outlaws. The ablest modern historian of Greece observes, that " It appears to have been very generally held among the Greeks of that age, that men were bound by no diitict to each othff without an cxprut rampart. >And the same writer furnishes, among other instances,... | |
| New-York Historical Society - 1821 - 422 pages
...'Eturnvfa, that is, what we should _term, outlaws. The ablest modern historian of Greece observes, that " It appears to have been very generally held among...men were bound by no duties to each other without an express compact. And the same writer furnishes, among other instances, a practical example of this... | |
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