The history of the world
- Title
- The history of the world
- Author
- Raleigh, Sir, Walter, 1552?-1618.
- Publication
- At London :: Printed [by William Stansby] for Walter Burre[, and are to be sold at his Shop in Paules Church-yard at the signe of the Crane,
- 1614 [i.e. 1617]]
- Rights/Permissions
-
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- Subject terms
- History, Ancient -- Early works to 1800.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A10357.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The history of the world." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A10357.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 4, 2025.
Contents
- title page
-
THE MINDE OF
THE FRONT. - THE PREFACE.
-
table of contents
- THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS, PARAGRAPHES, AND SECTIONS, OF THE FIRST BOOKE OF THE FIRST PART OF THE HISTORIE OF THE WORLD.
- The Contents of the Chapters, Paragraphes, and Sections, in the second Booke of the first Part of the Historie of the WORLD.
- The Contents of the Chapters, Paragraphes, and Sections, in the third Booke of the first Part of the Historie of the WORLD.
- The Contents of the Chapters, Paragraphes, and Sections, in the fourth Booke of the first Part of the Historie of the WORLD.
- The Contents of the Chapters, Paragraphes, and Sections, in the fift Booke of the first Part of the Historie of the WORLD.
-
THE FIRST PART OF
THE HISTORIE OF THE WORLD: INTREATING OF THE Beginning, and first ages of the same, from the Creation, vnto ABRAHAM.-
THE FIRST BOOKE.
-
CHAP. I.
Of the Creation, and Preseruation of the World. -
§. I.
That the inuisible God is seene in his Creatures. -
§. II.
That the wisest of the Heathen, whose authoritie is not to be despised, haue acknowledged the world to haue beene created by GOD. -
§. III.
Of the meaning of In PrincipioGenes. 1. 1. -
§. IIII.
Of the meaning of the words Heauen and Earth, Genesis 2. 1. -
§. V.
That the substance of the waters, as mixt in the body of the earth, is by MOSESvnderstood in the word Earth: and that the Earth, by the attributes of vnformed and voide, is described as the of the an∣ctent Heathen. -
§. VI.
How it is to be vnderstood that the Spirit of God mooued vpon the waters, and that this is not to be searched curiously. -
§. VII.
Of the light created, as the materiall substance of the Sunne: and of the nature of it, and difficultie of knowledge of it: and of the excellencie and vse of it: and of motion, and heat annexed vnto it. -
§. VIII. Of the Firmament, and of the waters aboue the Firmament: and whether there bee any cristalline Heauen, or any
Primum mobile. -
§. IX.
A conclusion repeating the summe of the workes in the Creation, which are reduced to three heads: The creation of matter, The forming of it, The finishing of it. -
§. X.
That Nature is no Principium per se;nor forme the giuer of being: and of our ignorance, how second causes should haue any proportion with their effects. -
§. XI.
Of Fate; and that the Starres haue great influence: and that their operations may diuersly be preuented or furthered. -
§. XII.
Of Prescience. -
§. XIII.
Of Prouidence: -
§. XIIII.
Of Predestination. -
§. XV.
Of Fortune: and of the reason of some things that seeme to be by fortune, and against Reason and Prouidence.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. II.
Of mans estate in his first Creation, and of Gods rest. -
§. I.
Of the Image of God, according to which man was first created. -
§. II.
Of the intellectuall mind of man, in which there is much of the Image of God: and that this Image is much deformed by sinne. -
§. III.
Of our base and fraile bodies: and that the care thereof should yeeld to the immortall Soule. -
§. IIII.
Of the Spirit of life, which God breathed into man, in his Creation. -
§. V.
That man is (as it were) a little World: with a digression touching our mortalitie. -
§. VI.
Of the free power, which man had in his first creation, to dispose of himselfe. -
§. VII.
Of Gods ceasing to create any more: and of the cause thereof, because the Vniuersall created was exceeding good.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. III.
Of the place of Paradise. -
§. I.
That the seate of Paradise is greatly mistaken: and that it is no maruaile that men should erre. -
§. II.
A recitall of strange opinions, touching Paradise. -
§. III.
That there was a true locall Paradise Eastward, in the Countrie of Eden. -
§. IIII.
Why it should bee needfull to intreate diligently of the place of Paradise. -
§. V.
That the Floud hath not vtterly' defaced the markes of Paradise, nor caused Hils in the Earth. -
§. VI.
That Paradise was not the whole Earth, as some haue thought: making the Ocean to bee the fountaine of those foure Riuers. -
§. VII.
Of their opinion, which make Paradise as high as the Moone: and of others, which make it higher than the middle Region of the ayre. -
§. VIII.
Of their opinion that seaete Paradise vnder the Aequinoctiall: and of the pleasant habitation vnder those Climates. -
§. IX. Of the change of the names of places: and that besides that Eden in Coe∣lesyria, there is a Countrey in Babylon, once of this name, as is proued out of
ESA. 37. andEZECH. 27. -
§. X.
Of diuers other testimonies of the land of Eden; and that this is the Eden of Paradise. -
§. XI.
Of the difficultie in the Text, which seemeth to make the foure Riuers to rise from one streame. -
§. XII.
Of the strange fertilitie and happinesse of the Babylonian soile, as it is certayne that Eden was such. -
§. XIII.
Of the Riuer Pison, and the land of Hauilah. -
§. XIIII.
Of the Riuer Gehon and the Land of Cush: and of the ill translating of the Aethiopia for Cush, 2. CHRON. 21. 16. -
§. XV.
A conclusion by way of repetition of something spoken of before.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. IIII.
Of the two chiefe Trees in the Garden of Paradise. -
§. I.
That the Tree of Life was a materiall Tree: and in what sense it is to be taken, that man by his eating the forbidden fruit, is made sub∣iect to death. -
§. II. Of
BECANVS his opinion, that the Tree of Knowledge wasFicus Indica. -
§ III. Of
BECANVS his not vnwittie allegorizing of the Storie of hisFicus Indica. -
§. IIII. Of the name of the tree of Knowledge of good and euill: with some other notes touching the storie of
ADAMS sinne.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. V.
Of diuers memorable things betweene the fall of ADAM, and the floud ofNOAH. -
§. I.
Of the cause and the reuenge of CAINS sinne: and of his going out from God. -
§. II. Of
CAINS dwelling in the Land ofNOD: and of his Citie Enoch. -
§. III. Of
MOSES his omitting sundry things concerningCAINS Generation. -
§. IIII.
Of the diuersities in the Ages of the Patriarchs when they begat their children. -
§. V.
Of the long liues of the Patriarchs: and some of late memorie. -
§. VI.
Of the Patriarchs deliuering their knowledge by Tradition: and that ENOCH writ before the Floud. -
§. VII.
Of the men of renownie before the floud. -
§. VIII. That the Giants by
MOSES so called, were indeede men of huge bodies: as also diuers in later times.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VI.
Of idolatrous corruptions, quickly rising, and hardly at length vanishing in the world: and of the Reliques of Truth touching these ancient times, obscurely ap∣pearing in Fables and old Legends. -
§. I.
That in old corruptions we may finde some signes of more ancient truth. -
§. II. That the corruptions themselues were very ancient: as in the family of
NOAH, and in the old Aegyptians. -
§. III.
That in processe of time these lesser errours drew on greater: as appeareth in the grosse Superstitions of the Aegyptians. -
§. IIII. That from the reliques of ancient Records among the Ae gyptians and others the first Idols and Fables were inuented: and that the first
IVPITER wasCAIN, VVLCAN, TVBALCAIN, &c. -
§. V. Of the three chiefest
IVPITERS; and the strange Storie of the third. -
§. VI. Of
CHAM, and other wicked ones, whereof some gat, some affected the name of Gods. -
§. VII.
That the wiser of the ancient Heathen had farre better opinions of God. -
§. VIII.
That Heathenisme and Iudaisme, after many wounds, were at length about the same time vnder IVLIANmiraculously confounded. -
§. IX.
Of the last refuges of the Deuill to maintaine his Kingdome.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VII.
Of NOAHSFloud. -
§. I. Of Gods fore-warning: and some humane testimonies: and some doubting touching the truth of
NOAHS Floud. -
§. II. Of the Floud in the time of
and that this was not: NOAHS Floud. -
§. III. Of
DEVCALIONS Floud: and that this was notNOAHS Floud: nor the Vmbri in Italie a remnant of any vniuersall Floud. -
§ IIII.
Of some other records testifying the vniuersall floud: and of two ancient deluges in Aegypt: and of some elsewhere. -
§. V. That the floud of
NOAH was supernaturall, though some say it might haue beene foreseene by the Starres. -
§. VI.
That there was no neede of any new Creation of matter to make the vni∣uersall floud: and what are Catarractae Coeli, GEN. 7. VERS. 11. -
§. VII.
Of some remaynder of the memorie of NOAHamong the Heathen. -
§. VIII.
Of sundrie particulars touching the Arke: as the place where it was made, the matter, fashion and name. -
§. IX.
That the Arke was of sufficient capacitie. -
§. X.
That the Arke rested vpon part of the hill Taurus (or Caucasus) betweene the East Indies, and Scythia. -
†. I.
A praeterition of some questions lesse materiall: with a note of the vse of this question, to finde out the Metropolis of Nations. -
†. II.
Aproposall of the common opinion, that the Arke rested vpon some of the hils of Armenia. -
†. III.
The first argument against the common opinion. They that came to build Babel, would haue come sooner, had they come from so neere a place as Armenia. -
†. IIII.
The second argument, That the Easterne people were most ancient in populositie, and in all humane glorie. -
†. V. The third argument, From the wonderfull resistance which
SEMIRAMIS found in the East Indies. -
†. VI. The fourth Argument from diuers considerations in the person of
NOAH. -
†. VII. Of the senselesse opinion of
ANNIVS the Commentor vponBEROSVS: who finds diuers places where the Arke rested; as the Caspian andhils which are three hundred miles asunder; and also some place of Scythia. -
†. VIII.
The fift argument, The Vine must grow naturally neere the place where the Arke rested. -
†. IX.
Answere to an obiection out of the words of the Text: The Lord scattered them from thence vpon the face of the whole earth. -
†. X.
An answere to the obiection from the name of Ararat, taken for Armenia: and the heighth of the Hils there. -
†. XI.
Of , and diuers farre higher Hils then the Armenian. -
†. XII.
Of diuers incongruities, if in this Storie we should take Ararat for Armenia. -
†. XIII.
Of the contrary situation of Armenia to the place noted in the Text: and that it is no that the same ledge of Hils running from Armenia to India, should keepe the same name all along: and euen in India bee called Ararat. -
†. XIIII.
Of the best Vine naturally growing on the South side of the Mountaines Caucasi and toward the East Indies: and of other excellencies of the Soile. -
†. XV.
The conclusion, with a briefe repeating of diuers chiefe points.
-
†. I.
-
§. I. Of Gods fore-warning: and some humane testimonies: and some doubting touching the truth of
-
CHAP. VIII. Of the first planting of Nations after the floud; and of the Sonnes of
NOAH, SEM, HAM, andIA∣PHET, by whom the earth was repeopled.-
§. I. Whether
SHEM andHAM were elder thenIAPHET. -
§. II. Of diuers things that in all reason are to be presumed, touching the first planting of the World, as that all Histories must yeeld to
MOSES: that the world was not planted all at once, nor without great direction: and that the knowne great Lords of the first ages were of the issue ofHAM. -
§. III. Of the Iles of the Gentiles in
IAPHETS portion: ofBEROSVS his too speedie sea∣tingGOMER the sonne ofIAPHET in Italie; and another ofIA∣PHETS sonnesTVBAL in Spaine: and of the antiquitie of Longinque Nauigation. -
§. IIII. Of
GOG andMAGOG, TVBAL, andMESECH, seated first about, out of EZECHIEL 38. 39.CAP. -
§. V.
Against the fabulous BEROSVS his fiction, That the ItalianIANVS wasNOAH. -
§. VI. That GOMER also and his sonne
TOGORMA of the posteritie ofIAPHETH were first seated about Asia the lesse: and that from thence they spred Westward into Europe: and Northward into Sarmatia. -
§. VII. Of
IAVAN the fourth sonne ofIAPHETH: and ofMESCH, ofARAM, andMESHECH ofIAPHETH. -
§. VIII. Of
ASCANEZ andRIPHATH, the two elder Sonnes ofGOMER. -
§. IX. Of the foure Sonnes of
IAVAN: and of the double signification of Tharsis, either for a proper name or for the Sea. -
§. X.
That the seate of CHVSH the eldest sonne ofHAM, was in Arabia, not in Aethiopia: and of strange Fables, andTranslations of Scripture, grounded vpon the mistaking of this point. -
†. I. Of
IOSEPHVS his Tale of an Aethiopesse wife toMOSES, grounded onthe mistaking of the seate of CVSH. -
†. II. A dispute against the Tale of
IOSEPHVS. -
†. III. Chush ill expounded for Aethiopia,
EZECH. 29. 10. -
†. IIII. Another place of
EZECHIEL, cap. 30. vers. 9. in like manner mistaken. -
†. V. A place,
ESAY 18. v. 1. in like manner corrupted, by taking Chush for Aethiopia. -
†. VI. That vpon the like mistaking, both
TERRHAKA in the storie ofSENA∣CHERIB, andZERA in the storie ofASA are vn∣aduisedly made Aethiopians. -
†. VII. A farther exposition of the place,
ESAY 18. 1.
-
†. I. Of
-
§. XI.
Of the plantation and antiquities of Egypt. -
†. I. That
MIZRAIM the chiefe planter of Egypt, and the rest of the sonnes ofHAM, were seated in order, one by another. -
†. II.
Of the time about which the name of Egypt began to be knowne: and of the Egyptians Lunarie yeeres, which made their antiquities seeme the more fabulous. -
†. III.
Of certayne vaine assertions of the Antiquitie of the Aegyptians. -
†. IIII. Against
PERERIVS: that it is not vnlikely, but that Aegypt was peopled within 200. yeeres after the Creation; at least, that both it, and the most parts of the World were peopled before the Floud. -
†. V. Of some other reasons against the opinion of
PERERIVS. -
†. VI. Of the words of
MOSES, GEN. 10. V. vltimo, whereuponPERERIVS grounded his opinion. -
†. VII. A conclusion, resoluing of that which is most likely, touching the Aegyptian An∣tiquities: with somewhat of
PHVT (another Sonne ofHAM) which peopled Lybia.
-
†. I. That
-
§. XII.
Of the eleuen sonnes of CANAAN, the fourth sonne of HAM. -
§. XIII.
Of the sonnes of CHVSH (excepting NIMROD)of whom hereafter. -
§. XIIII.
Of the issue of MIZRAIM:and of the place of HIEREMIE,Chap. 9. Vers. 7. -
§. XV.
Of the issue of SEM.-
†. I.
Of ELAM, ASSVR, ARPHAXAD,and LVD. -
†. II.
Of ARAM,and his Sonnes. -
†. III.
Of the diuision of the Earth in the time of PHALEG,one of the sonnes of HEBER,of the issue of SEM. -
†. IIII.
Of the sonnes of IOCTAN, the other sonne of HEBER. -
†. V.
Of OPHIRone of IOCTANSsonnes, and of Peru, and of that voyage of SALOMON. -
†. VI.
Of HAVILAHthe sonne of IOCTAN,who also passed into the East Indies: and of MESHAand SEPHERnamed in the bordering of the Families of IOCTAN:with a Conclusion of this discourse touching the plantation of the World.
-
†. I.
-
§. I. Whether
-
CHAP. IX.
Of the beginning and establishing of Gouernement. -
§. I.
Of the proceeding from the first Gouernement vnder the eldest of Families to Regall, and from Regall absolute, to Regall tempered with Lawes. -
§. II.
Of the three commendable sorts of Gouernement with their opposites: and of the degrees of humane societie. -
§. III.
Of the good Gouernment of the first Kings. -
§. IIII.
Of the beginning of Nobilitie: and of the vaine vaunt thereof without vertue.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. X.
Of NIMROD, BELVS,and NINVS:and of memora∣ble things about those times. -
§. I.
That NIMRODwas the first after the Floud that raigned like Soueraigne Lord: and that his beginning seemeth to haue beene of iust authoritie. -
§. II.
That NIMROD, BELVS,and NINVSwere three distinct persons. -
§. III.
That NIMROD,not ASSVR,built Niniue: and that it is probable out of ESAY 23. 13.that ASSVRbuilt Vr of the Chaldees. -
§. IIII.
Of the acts of NIMRODand BELVS,as farre as now they are knowne. -
§. V.
That we are not to maruaile how so many Kingdomes could be erected about these times: and of VEXORISof Aegypt, and TANAISof Scythia. -
§. VI.
Of the name of BELVS,and other names affine vnto it. -
§. VII.
Of the worshipping of Images begunne from BELVSin Babel. -
§. VIII. Of the Warres of
NINVS: and lastly of his Warre againstZOROASTER.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XI. Of
ZOROASTER, supposed to haue beene the chiefe Author of Magick arts: and of the diuers kindes of Magicke.-
§. I. That
ZOROASTER was notCHAM, nor the first Inuenter of Astrologie, or of Magicke: and that there were diuers great Magicians of this name. -
§. II.
Of the name of Magia: and that it was anciently farre diuers from Coniuring, and Witchcraft. -
§. III.
That the good knowledge in the ancient is not to bee condemned: though the Deuill here as in other kinds hath sought to obtrude euill things, vnder the name and colour of good things. -
§. IIII.
That DANIELS mistiking NABVCHODONOSORS condemning of the Magicians doth not iustifie all their practices. -
§. V.
The abuse of things which may bee found in all kinds, is not to condemne the right vse of them. -
§ VI.
Of the diuers kindes of vnlawfull Magicke. -
§. VII.
Of diuerswayes by which the Deuill seemeth to worke his wonders. -
§. VIII. That none was euer raysed from the dead by the power of the Deuill: and that it was not the true
SAMVEL which appeared toSAVL.
-
§. I. That
-
CHAP. XII.
Of the memorable buildings of NINVS, and of his wifeSEMIRAMIS: and of other of her acts.-
§. I.
Of the building of Niniue by NINVS: and of Babylon bySEMIRAMIS. -
§. II. Of the end of
NINVS: and beginning ofSEMIRAMIS reigne. -
§. III. Of
SEMIRAMIS parentage and education, andof her Mother. -
§. IIII.
Of her Expedition into India, and death after discomfiture: with a note of the improbabilitie of her vices. -
§. V. Of the Temple of
BELVS built bySEMIRAMIS: and of the Py∣ramides of Aegypt.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. I.
-
THE FIRST BOOKE.
-
THE FIRST PART OF THE HISTORIE OF THE WORLD:
INTREATING OF THE TIMES FROM The birth of ABRAHAM to the destruction of the Temple of Salomon. -
THE SECOND BOOKE.
-
CHAP. I.
Of the time of the birth of ABRAHAM: and of the vse of this question, for the ordering of the Sto∣rie of the Assyrian Empire.-
§. I.
Of some of the successours of SEMIRAMIS: with a briefe transition to the question, about the time of the birth ofABRAHAM. -
§. II. A proposall of reasons or arguments, that are brought to proue
ABRAHAM was borne in the yeere 292. after the Floud, and not in the yeere 352. -
§. III. The answere to one of the obiections proposed, shewing that
ABRAHAM made but one iourney out of Mesopotamia into Canaan: and it, after his Fathers death. -
§. IIII. The answere to another of the obiections proposed, shewing that it was not vnlikely, that
TERAH should begetABRAHAM in his hundredand thirty yeere. -
§. V. The answere to two more of the obiections: shewing that wee may haue certaintie of
ABRA∣HAMS age from the Scripture, though we make notABRAHAM the eldest Sonne: and that there was great cause, why in the story ofABRAHAM his two brethren should be respected. -
§. VI.
That the naming of ABRAHAMfirst of the three brethren, Gen. 11. v. 26.doth not proue that hee was the eldest: together with diuers reasons proouing that ABRAHAMwas not the eldest sonne of TERAH. -
§. VII.
A conclusion of this dispute, noting the Authors on both sides: with an admonition that they which shorten the times, make all ancient stories the more vnprobable. -
§. VIII. A computation of the times of the Assyrians and others, grounded vpon the times noted in the storie of
ABRAHAM. -
§. IX. That
AMRAPHEL, one of the foure Kings whom ABRAHAM ouertbrew,Gen. 14. may probably be thought to haue beeneNINIAS the sonne ofNINVS. -
§. X. of
ARIOCH another of theKings, and that ELLAS, whereof he is said to haue beene King, lies betweneCoelesyria andAra∣bia Petraea. -
§. XI. Of
TIDAL another of the soure Kings. -
§. XII.
That CHEDORLAOMERthe chiefe of the 4.Kings was not of Assyria, but of Persia: and that the Assyrian Empire at this time was much impaired. -
§. XIII. That it is not vnprobable that the foure Kings had no dominion in the Countries named, but that they had else-where with their colonies planted themselues: and so retained the names of the Countries whence they came: which if it be so, we neede not say that
AMRAPHEL wasNINIAS, nor trouble our selues with many other difficulties.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. II.
Of the Kings of Aegypt from the first peopling of it after the Floud, to the time of the deliuerie of the Israe∣lites from thence. -
§. I.
A briefe of the names and times of the first Kings of Aegypt: with a note of the causes of difficulty in resoluing of the trueth in these points. -
§. II.
That by the account of the Aegyptian Dynasties, and otherwise, it appeares that CHAMSreigne in Aegypt began in the yeere after the Floud, 191. -
§. III.
That these Dynasties were not diuers families of Kings, but rather successions of Regents, oft times many vnder one King. -
§ IIII. Of
CHAM, and his sonne MIZRAIM, orOSIRIS. -
§. V.
Of the time when OSIRIS reigne ended: and thatIACOB came into Aegypt in the time ofORVS the sonne ofOSIRIS. -
§. VI. Of
TYPHON, HERCVLES AEGYPTVS, ORVS, and the twoSESOSTRES, successiuely reig∣ning afterMIZRAIM: and of diuers errors about the formerSESOSTRES. -
§. VII.
Of BVSIRIS the first oppressor of the Israelites: and of his successor QueeneTHER∣MVTIS that tooke vpMOSES out of the water. -
§. VIII. Of the two brethren of Queene
THERMVTIS: and what king it was, vnder whomMOSES was borne: and who it was that perished in the red Sea.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. III.
Of the deliuery of Israel out of Aegypt. -
§. I. Of the time of
MOSES birth, and how long the Israelites were op∣pressedin Aegypt. -
§. II.
Of diuers Cities and places in Aegypt, mentioned in this Story, or else∣where in the Scripture. -
§. III. Of the cruelty against the Israelites yong children in Aegypt: and of
MOSES his preseruation, and education. -
§. IIII. Of
MOSES his flying out of Aegypt; and the opinions of certaine ancient Historians of his warre in AEthiopia; and of his marriage there:PHILO his iudgement of his Pastorall life: and that ofPERERIVS of the Bookes ofGENESIS and. -
§. V.
Of PHARAOHS pursuit of the Israelites: and of their possage towards the Red Sea, so farre as Succoth. -
†. VI.
Of the Solarie and Lunarie yeeres: and how they are reconciled: with the forme of the Hebrew yeere, and their manner of intarcalation. -
§. VII.
Of the passage of Israel from Succoth towards the Red Sea: and of the diuers wayes leading out of Aegypt. -
§. VIII.
Of their passage ouer the Red Sea: and of the Red Sea it selfe. -
§. IX.
That the passage through the Red Sea was miraculous, and not at a low Ebbe.
-
§. I. Of the time of
-
CHAP. IIII.
Of the iournying of the Israelites from the Red Sea, to the place where the Law was giuen them: with a discourse of Lawes. -
§. I.
A transition, by way of recapitulation of some things touching Chronologie: with a continuance of the storie, vntill the Amalekites met with the Israelites. -
§. II. Of the Amalekites, Madianites, and Kenites, vpon occasion of the battell with the Amalekites, and
IETHROES comming: who being a Kenite, was Priest of Madian. -
§. III.
Of the time when the Law was giuen: with diuers commendations of the inuention of Lawes. -
§. IIII.
Of the name and meaning of the words, Law, and Right. -
§. V.
Of the definition of Lawes, and of the law eternall. -
§. VI.
Of the Law of Nature. -
§. VII.
Of the written Law of God. -
§. VIII.
Of the vnwritten law of God, giuen to the Patriarks by Tradition. -
§. IX. Of the Morall, Iudiciall, and Ceremoniall Law, with a note prefixed, How the Scripture speaketh not alway in one sense, when it nameth the Law of
MOSES. -
§. X.
A proposall of nine other points to be considered, with a touch of the fiue first. -
§. XI.
Of the sixth poynt, to wit, of the difference and agreement of the Old and New Testament. -
§. XII.
Of the rest of the points proposed. -
§. XIII.
Of the seuerall Commandements of the Decalogue:and that the difficultie is not in respect of the Commandements, but by our default. -
§. XIIII.
If there were not any Religion nor Iudgement to come, yet the Decaloguewere most necessarie to be obserued. -
§. XV.
Of humane Law, written and vnwritten. -
§. XVI.
That onely the Prince is exempt from humane lawes, and in what sort.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. V.
The Storie of the MOSES.from the receiuing of the Law to the death of -
§. I.
Of the numbring and disposing of the Host of Israel, for their marches through the Wildernesse; with a note of the giuen to the worship of God, in this ordering of their troupes. -
§. II. The offerings of the twelue Princes: the Passeouer of the second yeere: The departing of
IETHRO. -
§. III.
The voiage from Horeb to Kades: the mutinies by the way: and the cause of their turning backe to the red Sea. -
§. IIII.
Of their vnwillingnesse to returne: with the punishment thereof, and of diuers accidents in the returne. -
§. V.
Of MOSESarriuall at Zin Kades: and the accidents while they abode there. -
§. VI.
Of their compassing Idumaea, and trauailing to Arnon, the border of Moab. -
§. VII.
Of the Booke of the battailes of the Lord, mentioned in this Storie, and of other Bookes mentioned in Scripture which are lost. -
§. VIII. Of
MOSES his sparing the issue of LOT; and of the Giants in those parts; and ofSEHON andOG. -
§. IX.
Of the troubles about the Madianites, and of MOSEShis death. -
§. X.
Obseruations out of the Storie of MOSES,how God disposeth both the smallest occasions, and the greatest resistances, to the effecting of his purpose.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VI. Of the Nations with whom the Israelites had dealing after their comming out of Aegypt; and of the men of re∣nowne in other Nations, about the times of
MOSES andIOSVA, with the summeof the Historie of IOSVA. -
§. I.
How the Nations with whom the Israelites were to haue Warre, were diuers wayes, as it were, prepared to be their enemies. -
§. II.
Of the Kings of the Canaanites and Madianites, mentioned in the ancient Warres of the Israelites. -
§. III.
Of the Amalekites and Ismaelites. -
§. IIII. Of the instauration of ciuilitie in Europe about these times, and of
PROMETHEVS andATLAS. -
§. V.
Of DEVCALIONand PHAETON. -
§. VI.
Of HERMES TRISMEGISTVS. -
§. VII.
Of IANNESand IAMBRES,and some other that liued about those times. -
§. VIII. A Briese of the Historie of
IOSVA; and of the space betweene him andOTHONIEL: and of the remainders of the Canaanites; with a note of some Contemporaries toIOSVA: and of the breach of Faith.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VII.
Of the Tribes of , that were planted in the borders of Phoenicia, with sundrie Stories depending vpon those places. -
§. I.
The Proaeme to the description of the whole Land of Canaan, with an exposition of the name of Syria. -
§. II.
Of the bounds of the Land of Canaan, and of the promises touching this Land. -
§. III.
THE TRIBE OF ASHER. -
†. I.
The bounds of the Tribe of Asher. -
†. II.
Of Zidon. -
†. III.
Of Sarepta, with a briefe Historie of Tyre in the same coast. -
†. IIII.
Of Ptolomais or Acon. -
†. V.
Of the Castle of St . GEORGE. -
†. VI.
Of Acziba, Sandalium, and others. -
†. VII.
Of Thoron, Giscala, and some other places. -
†. VIII.
Of the Riuers and Mountaines of Asser.
-
†. I.
-
§. IIII.
THE TRIBE OF NEPHTALIM. -
§. V.
THE TRIBE OF ZABVLON. -
§. VI.
THE TRIBE OF JSACHAR. -
§. VII.
THE HALFE OF THE TRIBE OF MANASSE.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VIII.
Of the Kingdome of Phoenicia. -
§. I.
The bounds and chiefe Cities, and Founders, and Name, of this Kingdome: and of the inuention of Letters ascribed to them. -
§. II.
Of the Kings of Tyre. -
§. III. Of
BOZIVS his conceit that the Edumaeins inhabiting along the Red Sea, were the Progenitors of the Tyrians, and that the Tyrtans from them receiued and brought into Phoenicia the know∣ledge of the trueGOD.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. IX. Of the Tribe of
EPHRAIM, and of the Kings of the tenne Tribes, whose head wasEPHRAIM. -
CHAP. X. Of the memorable places of
DAN, SIMEON, IVDA, RVBEN, GAD, and the other halfe ofMANASSE. -
§ I.
Of DAN, where of Ioppe, Gath, Accaron, Azotus, and other Townes. -
§. II.
THE TRIBE OF SIMEON. -
§. III.
THE TRIBE OF JVDA. -
§. IIII.
THE TRIBE OF REVBEN and his Borderers. -
†. I.
The seates and bounds of Midian, Moab, and Ammon, part whereof the Reubenites wanne from SEHONKing of Hesbon. -
†. II.
Of the memorable places of the Rubenites. -
†. III.
Of diuers places bordering Reuben belonging to Midian, Moab or Edom. -
†. IIII.
Of the Dead Sea. -
†. V.
Of the Kings of Moab, much of whose Countrie within Arnon REVBENpossest.
-
†. I.
-
§. V.
Of the memorable places of the Gadites, and the bordering places of Ammon. -
§. VI.
Of the Ammonites, part of whose Territories the OGe s wanne from the King of Basan. -
§. VII.
Of the other halse of MANASSE.
-
§ I.
-
CHAP. XI.
The Historie of the Syrians the chiefe borderers of the Jsraelites that dwelt on the East of Jordan. -
§. I.
Of the Citie of Damascus and the diuers fortunes thereof. -
§. II.
Of the first Kings of Damascus, and of the growing vp of their power: -
§. III.
Of the later Kings, and decay and ouerthrow of their power. -
§. IIII.
Of other lesser Kingdomes of the Syrians, which being brought vnder the Assyrians, neuer recouered themselues againe.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XII.
Of the Tribe of BENIAMIN,and of Hierusalem. -
§. I.
Of diuers memorable places in the Tribe of Beniamin, whereof , Gilgal, Mitspa, Bethel, Rama, Gobah and Gibha. -
§. II.
Of diuers memorable things concerning Hierusalem. -
§. III.
Of the destruction of Ierusalem by the Romans. -
§. IIII.
Of the vaine and malicious reports of Heathen writers, touching the ancient Iewes.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XIII. Of the memorable things that happened in the world, from the death of
IOSVA to the Warre of Troy: which was about the time ofIEPHTHA. -
§. I. Of the
inter-regnum afterIOSVA'S death: and ofOTHONIEL. -
§. II.
Of the memorable things of this Age in other Nations: and of the difficultie in the computation of times. -
§. III.
Of EHVDStime, and of , ORITHYA, TEREVS, TANTALVS, TITYVS, ADMETVS, and others that liued about those times. -
§. IIII. Of
DEBORA and her Contemporaries. -
§. V.
Of GIDEON,and of DAEDALVS, SPHINX, MINOS,and others that liued in this Age. -
§. VI.
Of the expedition of the Argonauts. -
§. VII.
Of ABIMELECH, THOLAH,and IAIR,and of the Lapythae, and of THESEVS, HYPPOLYTVS,&c. -
§. VII.
Of the warre of Thebes which was in this age. -
§. VIII. Of
IEPHTA, and how the three hundred yeeres which hee speaketh of,IVD. 11. v. 28. are to bee reconciled with the places,ACT. 13. 20. 1. REG. 6. 1. together with some other things touching Chronologie about these times.
-
§. I. Of the
-
CHAP. XIIII.
Of the Warre of Troy. -
§. I.
Of the Genealogie of the Kings of Troy, with a note touching the an∣cient Poets how they haue obserued Historicall truth. -
§. II. Of the Rape of
HELEN: and strength of both sides for the warre. -
§. III.
Of the Graecians iourney, and Embassage to Troy, and of Helenaes being detained in Aegypt; and of the Sacrificing of Iphigenia. -
§. IIII.
Of the Actes of the at the siege. -
§. V. Of the taking of Troy, the woodden Horse, the Booke of
DARES andDYCTIS, the Colonies of the reliques of Troy. -
§. VI.
Of the distresses and dispersions of the Greekes returning from Troy.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XV. Of
SAMSON, ELI, andSAMVEL. -
CHAP. XVI.
Of SAVL.-
§. I.
Of the deliberation to change the gouernment into a Kingdome. -
§. II. Of the election of
SAVL. -
§. III. Of the establishing of
SAVL by his first victories. -
§. IIII. Of
SAVLS disobedience in his proceedings in the Warres with the Philistims and Amalekites, which caused his finall reiection. -
§. V. Of the
betweene the reiection of SAVL and his death. -
§. VI. Of such as liued with
SAMVEL andSAVL; ofHELLEN andHERCVLES, and of their issues: vpon occasion of theDORES, with theHERA∣CLIDAE, entringPELOPONESVS about this time. -
§. VII.
Of HOMER andHESIOD, and many changes in the world, that happened about this age:
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XVII.
Of DAVID.-
§. I. Of
DAVIDS estate in the time ofSAVL. -
§. II. Of the beginning of
DAVIDS reigne, and the warre made byABNER for ISBOSETH. -
§. III. Of the death of
ABNER slaine by IOAB, and ofISBOSETH byRECHAB andBAANAH. -
§. IIII. Of the flourishing time of
DAVIDS Kingdome, the taking of Ierusalem, with two ouerthrowes giuen to the Philistims, and the conduction of the Arke to the Citie ofDAVID. -
§. V.
The of the Philistims and Moabites. -
§. VI. The warre which
DAVID made vpon the Syrians. -
§. VII. Of
DAVIDS troubles in his reigne, and of his forces. -
§. VIII. Of the last acts of
DAVID; ADONIAHS faction; thevpon IOAB andSHIMEI. -
§. IX. Of the treasures of
DAVID andSALOMON. -
§. X. Of the Philistims, whom
DAVID absolutely mastered: and of sundry other contemporaries withDAVID.
-
§. I. Of
-
CHAP. XVIII.
Of SALOMON.-
§ I.
Of the establishing of SALOMON: of birthright, and of the cause ofADONIAHS death, and ofSALOMONS Wisedome. -
§. II. Of
SALOMONs buildings and glorie. -
§. III. Of
SALOMONs sending to Ophir, and of some seeming contra∣dictions aboutSALOMONs riches, and ofPINEDAES conceipt of two strange passages about Africke. -
§. IIII. Of the fall of
SALOMON, and how long he liued. -
§. V.
Of SALOMONS . -
§. VI. Of the Contemporaries of
SALOMON.
-
§ I.
-
CHAP. XIX.
Of SALOMONS Successors vntill the end ofIEHOSAPHAT. -
§. I. Of
REHOBOAM his beginnings: the defection of the ten Tribes, and. -
§. II. Of
REHOBOAM his impietie; for which hee was punished bySESAC: of his end and Contemporaries. -
§. III. Of the great battaile betweene
IEROBOAM andABIA, with a Corolarie of the examples of Gods iudgements. -
§. IIII. Of
ASA and his Contemporaries. -
§. V. Of the great alteration falling out in the ten Tribes during the raigne of
ASA. -
§. VI.
A coniecture of the causes hindering the reunion of Israel with Iuda, which might haue been effected by these troubles. -
§. VII. Of
IEHOSAPHAT and his contem∣poraries.
-
§. I. Of
-
CHAP. XX.
Of IEHORAMthe sonne of IEHOSAPHAT,and AHAZIA.-
§. I.
That IEHORAMwas made King sundry times. -
§. II. Probable coniectures of the motiues inducing the old King
IEHO∣SAPHAT to change his purpose often, in making his sonneIEHORAM King. -
§. III. The doings of
IEHORAM when he reigned alone; and the rebellion of Edom and Libna. -
§. IIII. Of the miseries falling vpon
IEHORAM, and of his death. -
§. V. Of the raigne of
AHAZIA, and his businesse with the King of Israel. -
§. VI. How
AHAZIA perished with the house ofAHAB: and how that Familie was destroyed byIEHV.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XXI. Of
ATHALIA, and whose Sonne he was that suc∣ceeded vnto her.-
§. I. Of
ATHALIA her vsurping the Kingdome, and what pretences shee might forge. -
§. II. How
IEHV spent his time in Israel, so that he could not molestATHALIA. -
§. III. Of
ATHALIAHS Gouernement. -
§. IIII. Of the preseruation of
IOAS. -
§. V. Whose Sonne
IOAS was. -
§. VI.
, wherein is maintained the liberty of vsing con∣iecture in Histories. -
§. VII. The conspiracie against
ATHALIA. -
§. VIII. The death of
ATHALIA, with a comparison of her andIEZABEL.
-
§. I. Of
-
CHAP. XXII. Of
IOAS andAMASIA, with their Contemporaries; where somewhat of the building of Carthage.-
§. I. Of
IOAS his doings, whilestIEHOIADA the Priest liued. -
§. II. The death of
IEHOIADA, and Apostasie ofIOAS. -
§. III. The
and time of the Syrians inuading Iuda in the dayes of IOAS. -
§. IIII. How
ZACHARIA was murdered byIOAS. -
§. V. How
IOAS was shamefully beaten by the Aramites, and of his death. -
§. VI. Of the Princes liuing in the time of
IOAS: Of the time when Carthage was built; and ofDIDO. -
§. VII. The beginning of
AMAZIA his reigne. OfIOAS King of Israel, andELISHA the Prophet. -
§. VIII.
Of AMAZIA his warre againstEDOM; His Apostasie; and ouerthrow byIOAS. -
§. IX. A discourse of the reasons hindering
IOAS from vnitingIVDA to the Crowne of Israel, when he had wonne Ierusalem, and heldAMAZIA prisoner. The end ofIOAS his Raigne. -
§. X. The end of
AMAZIA hisand Life. -
§. XI. Of the
Interregnum, or vacancie, that was in the Kingdome ofIVDA, after the death ofAMAZIA. -
§. XII. Of Princes Contemporarie with
and more particu∣larly of, SARDANAPALVS.
-
§. I. Of
-
CHAP. XXIII.
Of VZZIA.-
§. I. The prosperitie of
VZZIA, and ofIEROBOAM the second, who raigned with him in Israel. Of the Anarchie that was in the tenne Tribes after the death ofIEROBOAM. OfZACHARIA, SAL∣LVM, andMENAHEM PEKAHIA. -
§. II. The end of
VZZIA his Raigne and life. -
§. III. Of the Prophets which liued in the time of
VZZIA; and of Princes then rulingin Aegypt, and in some other Countries. -
§. IIII. Of the Assyrian Kings, descending from
PHVL: and whetherPHVL andBELOSVS were one person; or heads of sundrie Families, that raigned a-part in Niniue and Babylon. -
§. V.
Of the Olympiads, and the time when they began. -
§. VI. Of
IOTHAM and his Contemporaries. -
§. VII. Of
ACHAZ and his Contemporaries.
-
§. I. The prosperitie of
-
CHAP. XXIIII. Of the Antiquities of
, and of Rome in the time of AHAS. -
§. I.
Of the old Inhabitants, and of the name of Italie. -
§. II.
Of the Aborigines, and other Inhabitants of Latium, and of the reason of the names of Latini and Latium. -
§. III. Of the ancient Kings of the Latines vntill
AENEAS his comming. -
§. IIII. Of
AENEAS, and of the Kings and Gouernours of Alba. -
§. V. Of the beginning of Rome, and of
ROMVLVS birth and death.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XXV.
Of EZEKIA,and his Contemporaries: -
§. I. Of the beginning of
EZECHIAS, and of the agreeing ofPTOLOMIES, NABONASSAR, NABOPOLASSAR andMARDOCEM∣PADVS, with the historie of the Bible. -
§. II.
Of the danger and of Iudaea from SENNACHERIB. -
§. III. Of
his sicknesse and recouerie; and of the Babylonian King that congratulated him. -
§. IIII. The Kings that were in Media during the raigne of
EZEKIA: Of the difference found betweene sundrie Authors, in rehearsing the Median Kings. Other contemporaries ofEZEKIA: ofCANDAV∣LES, GYGES, and the Kings descen∣ded fromHERCVLES.
-
§. I. Of the beginning of
-
CHAP. XXVI. Of the Kings that raigned in Aegypt, betweene the deliue∣rance of
ISRAEL from thence, and the raigne ofEZEKIA in Juda, when Aegypt and Iuda made a league against the Assyrians.-
§. I. That many names of Aegyptian Kings, found in Historie, are like to
belonged only to Viceroyes. An example prouing this out of WILLIAM of Tyre his Historie of the holy Warre. -
§. II. Of
ACHERRES; whether he wereVCHOREVS that was the eighth fromOSYMANDYAS. OfOSYMANDYAS and his Tombe. -
§. III. Of
CHERRES, ARMEVS, RAMESSES, andAMENOPHIS. OfMYRIS, and the Lake that beares his name. -
§. IIII.
Of the Kings that raigned in the Dynastie of the Larthes. -
§. V. Of Aegyptian Kings whose names are found scattering in sundrie Authors, their times being not recorded. The Kings of Aegypt, according to
CEDRENVS. OfVAPHRES andSESAC. -
§. VI.
Of CHEMMIS, CHEOPS,, and other Kings recited by HERODOTVSand DIODORVS SICVLVS,which raigned betweene the times of REHO∣BOAMand EZEKIA. -
§. VII. Of
SETHON who raigned withEZEKIA, and sided with him against.
-
§. I. That many names of Aegyptian Kings, found in Historie, are like to
-
CHAP. XXVII. Of
MANASSE and his Contemporaries.-
§. I.
The wickednesse of MANASSES. His imprisonment, Repentance, and Death. -
§. II. Of troubles in Aegypt following the death of
SETHON. The raigne ofPSAMMITICVS. -
§. III. What reference these Aegyptian matters might haue to the imprisonment and
enlargement of MANASSES. In what part of his raigneMA∣NASSES was taken prisoner. -
†. IIII. Of the first and second Messenian Warres, which were in the raignes of
EZEKIA, andMANASSES Kings of Iuda. -
§. V. Of the Kings that were in Lydia and Media,
MANASSES raigned. WhetherDEIOCES the Mede were thatAR∣PHAXAD which is mentioned in the Booke ofIVDITH. Of the historie ofIVDITH. -
§. VI.
Of other Princes and actions that were in these times.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XXVIII. Of the times from the death of
MANASSES to the destruction of Jerusalem.-
§. I.
Of AMMONand IOSIAS. -
§. II.
Of PHARAO NECOthat fought with IOSIAS:Of IEHOAHAZand IEHOIAKIMKings of Iuda. -
§. III.
Of the Kings of Babylon and Media. How it came to passe that the Kings of Babel could not giue attendance on their businesse in Syria; which caused them to loose that Prouince. -
§ IIII.
The great expedition of the Scythians, who ruled in Asia eight and twentie yeeres. -
§. V.
Of Princes liuing in diuers Countries, in these ages. -
§. VI.
The of Iudaea, and destruction of Ierusalem by the Chaldaeans.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. I.
-
THE SECOND BOOKE.
-
THE FISRT PART OF
THE HISTORIE OF THE WORLD: INTREATING OF THE TIMES FROM the destruction of Ierusalem, to the time of PHILIPof Macedon. -
THE THIRD BOOKE. -
CHAP. I.
Of the time passing betweene the destruction of , and the fall of the Assy∣rian Empire. -
§. I.
Of the connexion of Sacred and Historie. -
§. II. A briefe rehearsall of two opinions, touching the beginning of the captiuitie: with an answere to the cauills of
PORPHYRIE, inueighing againstS. MATTHEW, andDANIEL, vpon whom the later of these opinions is founded. -
§. III.
That the 70. yeeres of captiuitie are to be numbred from the of Ierusalem; not from the migration of IECHONIA. -
§. IIII.
Sundrie opinions of the Kings which raigned in Babylon during the 70.yeeres. -
§. V.
A more particular examination of one opinion touching the number, persons, and raignes of the Babylonian Kings. -
§. VI. What may be held as probable of the Persons and Times of
NABVCHO∣DONOSOR his successors. -
§. VII. Of the victories which
NABVCHODONOSOR obtained betweene the destruction of Ierusalem and conquest of Aegypt. -
§. VIII. That Aegypt was conquered, and the King therein raigning slaine by
NABVCHODO∣NOSOR, contrarie to the opinion of most Authors: who followingHERO∣DOTVS andDIODORVS, relate it otherwise. -
§. IX. How Aegypt was subdued and held by
NABVCHADNEZZAR. -
§. X. Of the sundry accompts drawne from sundry acts of
NEBVCHADNEZZAR, and of the destruction ofNiniuie, by him; the time of which action is vncertaine. -
§. XI. Of the later time of
NEBVCHADNEZZAR; his buildings, madnesse, and death. -
§. XII.
Of EVILMERODACH. -
§. XIII. Apriuate coniecture of the Author; seruing to make good those things, which are cited out of
BEROSVS, concerning the Successors ofEVILMERO∣DACH, without wrong to the truth, the qualitie, and death ofBALTHASAR.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. II.
Of the originall and first greatnesse of the Persians. -
§. I.
That the Medes were chiefe actors in the subuersion of the Babylonian Empire. -
§. II.
By what meanes the Empire was translated from the Medes to the Persians. -
§. III. XENOPHONS
relation of the Warre with the and Per∣sians, made with ioynt forces vpon the Assyrians, and others. -
§. IIII.
The estate of the Medes and Persians in times fore-going this great Warre.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. III.
Of CYRVS.-
§. I. Of
CYRVS his name and first actions. -
§ II. Of
CROESVS the King of Lydia, who made warre vponCYRVS. -
§ III.
CROESVS his Expedition againstCYRVS. -
§. IIII. The Conquest of Lydia by
CYRVS. -
§. V. How
CYRVS wonne Babylon. -
§. VI.
The end of CYRVS. -
§. VII. Of
CYRVS his decree for building the Temple of God in Ierusalem. -
§. VIII.
Of CYRVS his issue: and whether ATOSSA were his daughter, or (as some thinke) were the same with QueeneHESTER.
-
§. I. Of
-
CHAP. I III. The estate of things from the death of
CYRVS to the Raigne ofDARIVS. -
CHAP. V.
Of DARIVS the sonne ofHYSTASPES. -
§. I. Of
DARIVS his Linage. -
§. II. Of
DARIVS his Gouernment, and suppressing the rebellion of Babylon. -
§. III. Of
DARIVS his fauour to the Iewes in building the Temple. -
§. IIII. Of
DARIVS his Scythian Warre. -
§. V.
Some actions of the Persians in Europe, after the Scythian Warre. -
§. VI.
The first occasion of the Warre which DARIVSmade vpon Greece, with arehear sall of the gouernment in Athens, whence the the quarrell grew. -
§. VII.
Of the Ionian Rebellion, which was the principall cause of the warres betweene Greece and Persia. -
§. VIII.
The Warre which DARIVS made vpon Greece, with the battaile ofMARATHON, andDARIVS his death.
-
§. I. Of
-
CHAP. VI.
Of XERXES.-
§. I. The preparation of
XERXES against Greece. -
§. II.
XERXES Armie entertained byPYTHIVS: His cutting off Mount Athos from the Continent: his bridge of Boates ouer the Hellespont: and the discourse betweene him andARTABANVS vp. on the view of his Armie. -
§. III.
Of the fights at Thermopylae and Artemisium. -
§. IIII. The attempt of
XERXES vponAPOLLOE'S temple: and his taking of Athens. -
§. V. How
THEMISTOCLES the Athenian drew the Greekes to fight at Salamis. -
§. VI. How the Persians consulted about giuing battaile: and how
THEMISTO∣CLES by policie held the Greekes to their resolution; with the vi∣ctorie at Salamis thereupon ensuing. -
§. VII. Of things following after the battaile of Salamis: and of the flight of
XERXES. -
§. VIII. The negotiations betweene
MARDONIVS and the Athenians, as also be∣tweene the Athenians and Lacedaemonians; after the slight ofXERXES. -
§. IX.
The great battaile of . -
§. X.
The battaile of Mycale, with a strange accident that fell out in the be∣ginning of it: and examples of the like. -
§. XI. Of the barbarous qualitie of
XERXES: with a transition from the Persian affaires to matters of Greece, which from this time grew more worthie of regard.
-
§. I. The preparation of
-
CHAP. VII.
Of things that passed in Greece from the end of the Persian Warre, to the beginning of the Peloponnesian. -
§. I.
How Athens was rebuilt and fortified. -
§. II.
The beginning of the Athenian greatnesse, and prosperous warres made by that State vpon the Persian. -
§. III.
The death of XERXES by the treason ofARTABANVS. -
§. IIII. The banishment of
THEMISTOCLES: His flight toARTAXERXES newlyin Persia; and his death. -
§. V.
How the Athenians, breaking the peace, which to their great honour they had made with the Persian, were shamefully beaten in Aegypt. -
§. VI.
Of other Warres made by the Athenians for the most part with good successe, about the same time. -
§. VII. Of
ARTAXERXES LONGIMANVS, that he wasAHASHVEROSH the husband of QueeneHESTER. -
§. VIII.
Of the troubles in Greece, foregoing the Peloponnesian Warre.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VIII.
Of the Peloponnesian Warre. -
§. I.
Vpon what termes the two principall Cities of Greece, Athens and Sparta, stood, at the beginning of the Peloponnesian Warre. -
§. II.
How Sparta and Athens entred into Warre. -
§. III.
The beginning of the Peloponnesian Warre. -
§. IIII.
Of the great losse which the Spartans receiued at Pylus. -
§. V.
How the Lacedaemonians hardly, and to their great disaduantage, obtained a peace, that was not well kept. -
§. VI.
Of the negotiations, and practices, held betweene many States of Greece, by occasion of the peace that was concluded. -
§. VII.
How the peace betweene Athens and Sparta was ill kept, though not openly broken. -
§. VIII.
The Athenians sending two fleets to sacke Siracuse, are put to flight and vtterly discomfited. -
§. IX.
Of the troubles where-into the State of Athens fell, after the great losse of the Fleet, and Armie, in Sicilia. -
§. X.
How ALCIBIADESwanne many important victories for the Athenians; was recalled from exile; made their Generall, and againe deposed. -
§. XI.
The battaile at Arginusa, and condemnation of the victorious Athenian Captaines by the people. -
§. XII.
The battaile at Aegos-Potamos, wherein the whole State of Athens was ruined; with the end of the Peloponnesian Warre.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. IX.
Of matters concurring with the Peloponnesian Warre, or shortly following it. -
CHAP. X. Of the expedition of
CYRVS the younger.-
§. I. The grounds of
CYRVS his attempt against his brother. -
§. II. The preparations of
CYRVS, and his first entrie into the Warre. -
§. III. How
CYRVS tooke his iourney into the higher Asia, and came vp close to his Brother. -
§. IIII. The battaile betweene
CYRVS andARTAXERXES. -
§. V. The hard estate of the Greekes after the fight; and how
ARTAXERXES in vaine sought to haue made them yeeld vnto him. -
§. VI.
How the Greekes beganne to returne home-wards. -
§. VII. How
TISSAPHERNES, vnder colour of peace, betraied all the Captaines of the Greekes. -
§. VIII. How
XENOPHON heartened the Greekes, and in despight ofTISSA∣PHERNES went off safely. -
§. IX.
The difficulties which the Greeke Armie found in passing through the Land of the Carduchi. -
§. X. How
Gouernour of Armenia, seeking to entrap the Greekes with termes of fained peace, was disappointed and shamefully beaten. -
§. XI.
The passage of the Armie to Trabizonde, through the Countries bordering vpon the Riuer of Phasis, and other ob∣scure Nations. -
§. XII.
How the Armie beganne at Trabizond to prouide a Fleet, wherewith to returne home by Sea: how it came into the Territorie of Sinope, and there prosequuted the same purpose. -
§. XIII.
Of dissension which arose in the Armie; and how it was embarked. -
§. XIIII. Another great dissension and distraction of the Armie. How the muti∣ners were beaten by the Barbarians, and rescued by
XENOPHON. -
§. XV. Of diuers pieces of seruice done by
XENOPHON; and how the Armie retur∣nedinto Greece. The occasions of thebetweene the Lacedae∣monians and the Persian.
-
§. I. The grounds of
-
CHAP. XI.
Of the affaires of Greece, whilest they were managed by the Lacedaemonians. -
§. I.
How the Lacedaemonians tooke courage by example of XENOPHONS Armie, to make Warre vponARTAXERXES. -
§. II.
The prosperous beginnings of the warre in Asia. -
§. III.
How the Lacedaemonians tooke reuenge vpon the Eleans for old displeasure. The discontents of the Corinthians and Thebans, conceiued against the State of Sparta. -
§. IIII. The passage of
AGESILAVS Asia. His warre with TISSAPHERNES. HowTISSAPHERNES was put to death, and the warre diuerted into an∣other Prouince, through perswasion and gifts ofTITHRAVSTES his successor. How carlesse the Persian Lieutenants were of the Kings good. -
§. V. The Warre and Treatie betweene
AGESILAVS andPHARNABAZVS. -
§. VI.
The great commotions raised in Greece by the Thebans and others, that were with gold from the Persian. -
§. VII. How
AGESILAVS was called out of Asia to helpe his Countrie. A victorie of the Spartans.CONON the Athenian, assisted byPHARNABAZVS, ouercomes the Lacedaemonian fleet; recouers theof the Seas; and rebuilds the walls of Athens. -
§. VIII.
Of sundrie small victories gotten on each part. The Lacedaemonians lose all in Asia; The Athenians recouer some part of their old Dominion. -
§. IX. The base conditions offered vnto the Persian by the Lacedaemonians. Of sundrie fights and other passages in the warre. The peace of
ANTALCIDAS. -
§. X.
The wrare which the Lacedaemonians made vpon Olynthus. They take Thebes by treason; and Olynthus by famine. -
§. XI.
How the Thebans recouered their libertie, driuing out the Lace∣daemonian Garrison.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. XII.
Of the flourishing estate of Thebes, from the battaile of Leuctra to the battaile of . -
§. I.
How Thebes and Athenr ioyned together against Sparta. How the Athenians made peace for themselues, and others, out of which the Thebans were exclu∣ded. The battaile of Leuctra, and beginning of the Theban greatnesse. -
§. II. How the Athenians tooke vpon them to maintaine the peace of Greece. New troubles hence arising.
EPAMINONDAS inuadeth and wasteth the Territorie of Lacedaemon. -
§. III.
The composition betweene Athens and Sparta for command in warre against the Thebans; who againe inuade and Pelopennesus. The vnfortunate presumption of the Arcadians. -
§. IIII.
The great growth of the Theban Estate. Embassages of the Greekes to the Per∣sian; with the reasons why he most fauoured the Thebans. Troubles in the Persian Empire, The fruitlesse issue of the Embassages. -
§. V.
How all Greece was diuided, betweene the Athenians and Lacedaemonians, on the one side, and Thebans on the other. Of the great tumults ri∣sing in Arcadia. -
§. VI. A terrible inuasion of Peloponnesus by
EPAMINONDAS. -
§. VII. The great battaile of Mantinaea. The honourable death of
EPAMI∣NONDAS, with his commendation. -
§. VIII.
Of the peace concluded in after the of . The voiage of AGESILAVS into Aegypt. His death, and qualities; with an exa∣mination of the comparison made betweene him andPOMPEY the Roman.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. I.
-
-
THE FIRST PART OF THE HISTORIE OF THE WORLD: INTREATING OF THE TIMES FROM the raigne of PHILIP of MACEDON, to the
establishing of that Kingdome, in the race of ANTIGONVS.-
THE FOVRTH BOOKE. -
CHAP. I. Of
PHILIP, the Father ofALEXANDER the Great, King of Macedon.-
§. I. What Kings raigned in Macedon before
PHILIP. -
§. II. The beginning of
PHILIPS raigne; and how he deliuered Macedon from the troubles wherein he found it entangled. -
§. III. The good successe which
PHILIP had in many enterprises. -
§. IIII. Of the Phocian Warre which first drew
PHILIP into Greece. -
§. V. Of the Olynthian Warre. The ambitious practices of
PHILIP. -
§. VI. How
PHILIP ended the Phocian Warre. -
§. VII. How
PHILIP with ill successe attempted vpon Perinthus, Byzantium, and the Scythians. -
§. VIII. How
PHILIP ouerthrowing the Greekes in the battaile of Chaeronaea, was chosen Captaine-Generall of Greece. The death ofPHILIP. -
§. IX. What good foundations of
ALEXANDERS greatnesse were laied byPHILIP. Of hisqualities, and .
-
§. I. What Kings raigned in Macedon before
-
CHAP. II.
Of ALEXANDERthe Great. -
§. I. A briefe rehearsall of
ALEXANDERS doings, beforeinuaded Asia. -
§. II. How
ALEXANDER passing into Asia, fought with the Persians vpon the Riuer of Granicus. -
§. III.
A digression concerning the defence of hard passages. Of things following the battaile of Granick. -
§. IIII. Of the vnwarlike Armie leuied by
DARIVS againstALEXANDER. Thecourses which DARIVS tooke in this expedition. He is vanquished at Issus; where his Mother, Wife, and Children are made prisoners. Of some things following the battaile of Issus. -
§. V. How
ALEXANDER and wanne the Citie of Tyre. -
§. VI. How
DARIVS offered conditions of peace toALEXANDER. ALEXANDER winnes Gaza; and deales graciously with the Iewes. -
§. VII.
ALEXANDER winnes Aegypt: and makes a iournie to the Temple ofHAMMON. -
§. VIII. How
ALEXANDER marchingDARIVS, was opposed veryby the Enemie. -
§. IX.
The new prouisions of DARIVS. Accidents foregoing the battaile of Arbela. -
§. X.
The battaile of Arbela: and that it could not be so strongly fought as report hath made it. -
§. XI.
Of things following the battaile of Arbela. The yeelding of Babylon and . -
§. XII. How
ALEXANDER came to Persepolis, and burnt it. -
§. XIII. The Treason of
BESSVS againstDARIVS. DARIVS his death. -
§. XIIII. How
ALEXANDER pursuedBESSVS, and tooke into his graceDARIVS his Captaines. -
§. XV. Of
THALESTRIS Queene of the Amazons; where, by way of digression it is shew∣ed, that such Amazons haue beene, and are. -
§. XVI. How
ALEXANDER fell into the Persians Luxurie: and how hee further pursuedBESSVS. -
§. XVII. A Conspiracie against
ALEXANDER. The death ofPHILOTAS andPARMENIO. -
§. XVIII. How
ALEXANDER subdued the Bactrians, Sogdians, and other people. HowBESSVS was deliuered into his hands. How hee fought with the Scythians. -
§. XIX. How
ALEXANDER slew his owne friends. -
§. XX. Of
ALEXANDERS iourney into India. The battaile betweene him and PORVS. -
§. XXI. How
ALEXANDER finished his expedition, and returnedout of India. -
§. XXII. Of
ALEXANDERS Riot, Crueltie, and death. -
§. XXIII. Of
ALEXANDERS Person and qualities.
-
§. I. A briefe rehearsall of
-
CHAP. III.
The raigne of ARIDAEVS.-
§. I. Of the question about succession to
ALEXANDER. -
§. II.
The election of ARIDAEVS, with the troubles there-about arising; the first diuision of the Empire. -
§. III.
The beginning of the Lamian Warre. -
§. IIII. How
PERDICCAS emploied his Armie. -
§. V.
The processe of the Lamian Warre. -
§. VI. Of the peace granted to Athens by
ANTIPATER. OfDEMOSTHE∣NES his death. -
§. VII. How
CRAYERVS andANTIPATER were drawne from their Aetolian Warres into Asia. The grounds of the firstbetweene the Lords. -
§. VIII.
PERDICCAS his voyage into Aegypt, and his death. -
§. IX.
Victories of EVMENES in the lower Asia. -
§. VI. That the naming of
ABRAHAM first of the three brethren,Gen. 11. v. 26. dothproue that hee was the eldest: together with diuers reasons that ABRAHAM was not the eldest sonne ofTERAH. -
§. X. Quarrels betweene
the Queene, andPYTHON the Protector.PYTHON resignes his office, into whichANTIPA∣TER is chosen. -
§. XI.
ANTIGONVS Lieutenant of Asia, winnes a battaile ofEVMENES, and besiegeth him in Nora: He vanquisheth other followers of PERDICCAS. -
§. XII.
PTOLOMIE winnes Syria and Phoenicia. The death ofANTIPATER. -
§. XIII. Of
POLYSPERCHON who succeeded vntoANTIPATER in the Protector∣ship. The insurrection ofCASSANDER against him. -
§. XIIII. The vnworthie courses held by
POLYSPERCHON, for the keeping downe ofCASSANDER. -
§. XV. Of the great commotions raised in Athens by
POLYSPERCHONS decree. The death ofPHOCION. -
§. XVI. Of
POLYSPERCHON his vaine expedition againstCASSANDER. -
§. XVII.
ANTIGONVS seekes to make himselfe an absolute Lord: and thereupon treates withEVMENES, aho disappointeth him. Phrygia and Lydia wonne byANTIGONVS. -
§. XVIII.
ANTIGONVS pursuesEVMENES. EVMENES hauing authoritie from the Court, raiseth great Warre againstANTIGONVS in defence of the Royall house. -
§. XIX.
How the Princes of Macedon stood affected mutually. OLYMPIAS takesARIDEVS andEVRYDICE, whom shee cruelly puts to death. -
§. XX. How
CASSANDER was reuenged vponOLYMPIAS. -
† I. The great expedition of
CASSANDER. OLYMPIAS shuts her selfe in∣to Pydna, whereCASSANDER besiegeth her.AEACIDES King of Epirus, comming to succourOLYMPIAS, is for∣saken, and banished by his owne Subiects. -
†. II. A continuation of
OLYMPIAS her. defeated. Extreme famine in Pydna.OLYMPIAS yeeldes toCASSANDER. -
†. III. The death of
OLYMPIAS, and her condition. -
†. IIII.
CASSANDER celebrates the funerall ofARIDEVS and and seekes to make himselfe King of Macedon.;
-
† I. The great expedition of
-
§. I. Of the question about succession to
-
CHAP. IIII. Of the great Lordship which
ANTIGONVS got in Asia.-
§. I.
The iourney of EVMENES into Persia. His wise dealing with those that ioyned with him. -
§. II. How
ANTIGONVS, comming to set vponEVMENES, was driuen off with losse. -
§. III.
Of EVMENES his cunning. A battaile betweene him andANTIGONVS. -
§. IIII. Of diuers stratagems practised by
ANTIGONVS, andEVMENES, one against the other. -
§. V. The conspiracie of
PEVCESTES and others, againstEV∣MENES his life. -
§. VI. The last battaile betweene
ANTIGONVS andEVMENES. -
§. VII. How
EVMENES was betrayed toANTIGONVS, and slaine. -
§. VIII.
How slewPITHON, and occupiedMEDIA. How he remoued Gouernours of Prouinces, and made himselfe Lord of Persia, carrying awayPEVCESTES. -
§. IX. How
SELEVCVS was chased out of Babylon, byANTIGONVS. The great riches ofANTIGONVS.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. V. Of the great ciuill Warre betweene
ALEXANDERS Captaines: and how they assumed the name and state of Kings.-
§. I. The combination of
PTOLOMIE, CASSANDER, and others, againstANTI∣GONVS. Their demands, and his. -
§. II.
The preparations and beginnings of the Warres. -
§. III. How each partie sought to winne the assistance of Greece.
ANTIGONVS his declarationagainst CASSANDER. ALEXANDER the sonne ofPOLISPERCHON re∣uolteth fromANTIGONVS, who had set him vp. -
§. IIII.
The Aetolians rise against CASSANDER in fauour ofANTIGONVS, and are beaten. A fleet and land-armie ofANTIGONVS, vtterly defeated byPTOLOMIES Lieutenant. In what termes the warre stood at this time.ANTIGONVS drawes neerer to. -
§. V. How
LYSIMACHVS andCASSANDER vanquished some enemies, raised against them byANTIGONVS. The good successe ofANTIGONVS in Asia and Greece: with the rebellion of many Cities againstCASSANDER. -
§. VI. Victories of
PTOLOMIE by Sea. A great battaile at Gaza, whichPTOLOMIE andSELEVCVS wanne, againstDEME∣TRIVS the Sonne ofANTICONVS. -
§. VII. How
SELEVCVS recouered Babylon, and made himselfe Lord of many Countries in the highest Asia. TheAERA ofthe Kingdome of the Greekes, which beganne with the Dominion ofSELEVCVS. -
§. VIII. How
PTOLOMIE lost all that he had wonne in Syria. What the causes were of the quiet obedience, performed vnto the Macedonians, by those that had beene subiect vnto the Persian Empire. Of diuers pettie enterprizes, taken in hand byANTIGONVS andDEMETRIVS, with ill successe. -
§. IX. A generall peace made and broken. How all the house of
ALEXANDER was destroyed. -
§. X. How
DEMETRIVS, the sonne ofANTIGONVS, gaue libertie to Athens,the Garrisons of CASSANDER out of those parts. The im∣moderate honors decrced by theto andDEMETRIVS. -
§. XI. The great victorie of
DEMETRIVS againstPTOLOMIE in Cyprus. HowAN∣TIGONVS andDEMETRIVS tooke vpon them the stile of Kings; wherein others followed their example.
-
§. I. The combination of
-
CHAP. VI. Of the warres betweene the Kings of Aegypt, Asia, Ma∣cedon, I
, and others: vntill all ALEXAN∣DERS Princes were consumed.-
§. I.
The Expedition of ANTIGONVS against Aegypt, with ill successe. -
§. II. How the Citie of Rhodes was besieged by
DEMETRIVS. -
§. III. How
DEMETRIVS preuailed in Greece.CASSANDER desires peace ofANTIGONVS, and cannot obtaine it. Great preparations of warre against. -
§. IIII. How
ANTIGONVS was slaine in a great battaile at Ipsus, neere vnto Ephesus; wherein his whole estate was lost. -
§. V. How
DEMETRIVS forsaken by the Athenians after his ouerthrow, was reconciled toSELEVCVS andPTOLOMIE, beginning a new fortune, and shortly entring into new quarrells. -
§. VI. How
DEMETRIVS wanne the Citie of Athens, and preuailed in Greece, but lost in Asia. Of troubles in Macedon following the death ofCASSANDER. -
§. VII.
PYRRHVS and his doings in Macedon. The death ofCASSANDERS children.DEMETRIVS gets the Kingdome of Macedon; preuailes inagainst the Greeks; Looseth reputation in his warre against PYRRHVS, and in hisGouerne∣ment, and prepares to win Asia. How all conspire against DEMETRIVS. PYRRHVS andLYSIMACHVS inuade him, his Armie yeelds toPYRRHVS, who shares the Kingdome of Macedon withLYSIMACHVS. -
§. VIII. How
DEMETRIVS gathering, enterprised many things with ill successe, in Greece and Asia. How he was driuen vpon SELEVCVS, and compelled to yeeld himselfe. His imprisonment and death. -
§. IX.
The death of PTOLOMIE, ofLYSIMACHVS, and ofSELEVCVS, that was last ofALEXANDERS Captaines: with other occurrences.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VII.
The growth of Rome: and setling of the Easterne Kingdomes. -
§. I. How the Romans enlarged their Dominion in Italie, from the death of
TVLLVS HOSTILIVS, vnto such time as they wereby PYRRHVS. -
§. II. How
PYRRHVS warred vpon the Romans, and vanquished them in two battailes. -
§. III. The great troubles in Macedon and Sicill. How PYRRHVS, being inuited into Sicill, for sooke Italie; wanne the most of the Isle; and lost it in short space.
PYRRHVS returnes into Italy; where he is beaten by the Romans, and so goes backe to his owne Kingdome. -
§. IIII.
How ANTIGONVS, the sonne ofDEMETRIVS, deliuered Macedon from the Gaules. HowPYRRHVS wonne the Kingdome of Macedon fromANTIGONVS. -
§. V. How
PYRRHVS assailed Sparta without successe. His enterprise vpon Argos, and his death.
-
§. I. How the Romans enlarged their Dominion in Italie, from the death of
-
CHAP. I. Of
-
-
THE FIRST PART OF
THE HISTORIE OF THE WORLD: INTREATING OF THE TIMES FROM the setled rule of ALEXANDERS Successors in the East, vntill the ROMANS,preuailing ouer all, made Conquest of ASIAand MACEDON.-
THE FIFT BOOKE.
-
CHAP. I.
Of the first Punicke Warre. -
§. I.
A discussion of that probleme of LIVIE; Whether the Romans could haue resisted the great ALEXANDER.That neither the Macedonian nor the Roman Souldier, was of equall valour to the English. -
§. II.
The estate of Carthage, before it entred into warre with Rome. -
§. III.
The beginning of the fist Punick warre. That it was vndertaken by the Romans. -
§. IIII.
Of the Iland of Sicil. -
§. V. Arecontinuation of the Roman warre in Sicil. How
HIERON, King ofSyracuse, for sooke the Carthaginians; and made his peace with Rome. -
§. VI.
How the Romans besiege and winne Agrigentum. Their beginning to maintaine a fleet. Their first losse, and first victorie by Sea. Of Sea∣fight in generall. -
§. VII.
Diuers enterfeats of warre, betweene the Romans and Carthaginians, with va∣riable successe. The Romans prepare to inuade Africk: and obtaine a great victorie at Sea. -
§. VIII. The Romans preuaile in Africk.
ATILIVS the Consullpropoundeth into∣lerable conditions of peace to the Carthaginians. He is vtterly beaten, and made prisoner. -
§. IX. How the affaires of Carthage prospered after the victorie against
ATILIVS: How the Romans hauing lost their fleet by tempest, resolue to forsake the Seas: The great aduantages of a good fleet in warre, betweene Nations diuided by the Sea. -
§. X. How the Romans attempt againe to get the mastrie of the Seas. The victorie of
CEA∣CILIVS the Roman Consull at Panormus: The siege of Lilybaeum. How aRhodian Gallie entred Lilybaeum at pleasure, in despight of the Roman fleet. That it is a matter of great difficultie to stop the passage of good ships. The Romans, by reason of grieuous losses receiued, vnder CLAVDIVS andIVNIVS their Consulls, abandon the Seas againe. -
§. XI. The Citie of Eryx is surprized by the Romans, and recouered by
AMILCAR; Who stoutly holds warre with them fiue yeeres. The Romans hauing emptied their common treasurie, build a new fleet, at the charges of priuate men. The great victorie at Sea ofLVCTATIVS the Consull; whereby the Carthaginians are forced to craue peace. The conditions of the peace betweene Rome and Carthage.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. II.
Of diuers actions passing betweene the first and second Punick Warres. -
§. I.
Of the cruell warre begunne betweene the Carthaginians and their owne . -
§. II.
Diuers obseruations vpon this warre with the mercinaries. -
†. I.
Of Tyrannie, and how tyrants are driuen to vse helpe of mercinaries. -
†. II.
That the tyrannie of a Citie ouer her Subiects is worse, than the tyrannie of one man: and that a tyrannicall Citie must likewise vse mercinary Souldiers. -
†. III.
The dangers growing from the vse of mercinarie Souldiers, and forraigne Auxiliaries. -
†. IIII.
That the moderate gouernment of the Romans gaue them assurance to vse the seruice of their owne subiects in their warres. That in mans nature there is an affection breeding tyrannie, which hindreth the vse and benefit of the like moderation.
-
†. I.
-
§. III.
How the warre against the Mercinarie was diuerslie mannaged by HANNO andAMILCAR, with variable successe. The bloudy counsailes of the Mercinaries; and their finall destruction. -
§. IIII.
How the Mercenaries of the Carthaginians, that were in Sardinia, rebelled: and were afterwards driuen by the Ilanders. The faithlesse dealing of the Romans with the Carthaginians, in taking from them Sardinia, contrarie to the peace. -
§. V.
How the affaires of Carthage went betweene the African Rebellion, and the second Punicke Warre. -
§. VI. The estate of Greece from the death of
to the raigne of, PHILIP the sonne of in Macedon. -
§. VII.
How the Illyrians infested the coast of Grecce; and how they were sub∣dued by the Romans. -
§. VIII. Of the warre betweene the Romans and Gaules, somewhat before the comming
of HANNIBAL into Italie.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. III.
Of the second Punick Warre. -
§ I. The warres of
HANNIBAL in Spaine. Quarrels between the Romans and Carthaginians.HANNIBAL besiegeth and taketh Saguntum, whilest the Romans are busied with the Illyrians. Warre proclaimed betweene Rome and Carthage. -
§. II.
HANNIBAL takes order for the defence of Spaine and Africke. His iournie into Italie. -
§. III.
How the Romans in vaine sollicited the Spaniards and Gaules to take their part. The rebellion of the Cisalpine Gaules against the Romans. -
§. IIII.
SCIPIO the Roman Consul ouer-come byHANNIBAL at Ticinum. Both of the Roman Consuls beaten byHANNIBAL, in a great battaile at Trebia. -
§. V. The departure of
HANNIBAL from the Cisalpine Gaules into Hetruria.FLAMINIVS the Roman Consul slaine; and his Armie destroyed by the Carthaginians, at the Lake of Thrasymen. -
§ VI. How QFABIVS the Roman Dictator, sought to consume the force of
HANNIBAL, by lingring warre.MINVTIVS, the Master of the Horse, honoured and aduanced by the People, for bold and successefull attempting, aduentures rashly vp∣onHANNIBAL; and is like to perish with his Armie, but rescued byFABIVS. -
§. VII. The Roman people, desirous to finish the warre quickly, choose a rash and vnworthie Consul. Great forces leuied against
HANNIBAL. HANNIBAL ta∣keth the Romans prouisions in the Castle of Cannae. The new Consuls set forth against HANNIBAL. -
§. VIII. Dissension betweene the two Roman Consuls. Whether it be likely, that
HANNIBAL was vpon point of flying out of Italie, when the Romans pressed himto fight. The great battaile of Cannae. -
§ IX.
Of things following the battaile at Cannae. -
§. X. Of the great supply that was decreed at Carthage to be sent to
HANNIBAL in Italie.How by the malice of HANNO, and sloth or parsimonie of the Carthaginians, the supply was too long deferred. That the riches of the Carthaginians grew faster, than of the Romans. OfFABIVS and other old Roman Historians, how partiall they were in their writings. -
§ XI. Strange reports of the Roman victories in Spaine, before
ASDRVBAL the sonne ofAMILCAR followed thence his brotherHANNIBAL into Italie. -
§. XII. The great troubles that
HANNIBAL raised in all quarters, to the Cittie of Rome.POSTHVMIVS the Roman Generall, with his whole Armie, is slaine by the Gaules.PHILIP King of Macedon, enters into a League withHANNIBAL, against the Romans. The Romans ioyning with the Aetolians, make warre vponPHILIP in Greece: and afterwards conclude a peace with him; the better to intend their businesse against the Carthaginians. -
§. XIII.
How the Romans beganne to recouer their strength by degrees. The noble affe∣ction of the Romans, in relecuing the publike necessities of their Common-weale. -
§. XIIII. The Romans win some Townes back from
HANNIBAL. HANNIBAL winnes Tarentum. The siege of Capua. Two victories ofHANNIBAL. The tournie ofHANNIBAL to the gates of Rome. Capua taken by the Romans. -
§ XV.
How the Carthaginians, making a partie in Sardinia and Sicil, held against the Romans in those Ilands; and were ouer- . -
§. XVI. How the warre passed betweene the Romans and
HANNIBAL in Italie, from the taking of Capua to the great victorie at Metaur us. -
§. XVII. How
P. CORNELIVS SCIPIO the Roman, made entire conquest of Spaine. -
§. XVIII.
SCIPIO obtaines leaue to make warre in Africk. His preparations. OfMA∣SANISSA who ioyned withSCIPIO. The victories againstASDRVBAL andSYPHAX. -
§. XIX.
The Carthaginians desire Truce: and breake it. -
§. XX. In what sort
HANNIBAL spent the time after the battaile of Metaurus. The doings ofMAGO in Italie.HANNIBAL andMAGO called out of Italie. How the Romans were diuersly affected byHANNI∣BALS departure. -
§. XXI.
HANNIBAL in Africk prepares to fight withSCIPIO; treates with him about peace in vaine; looseth a battaile at Nadagara, and perswades the Car∣thaginians to sue for peace. Of the peace gran∣ted from Rome to Carthage.
-
§ I. The warres of
-
CHAP. IIII. Of
PHILIP the father ofPERSEVS, King of Ma∣cedon; His first Acts and warre with the Romans, by whom he was subdued.-
§. I. How the Romans grew acquainted in the East Countries, and desirous of warre there. The beginning of many Princes, with great warres, at one time. The Aetolians ouerrun Pelopon∣nesus.
PHILIP and his Associates make war against the Aetolians. Alteration of the State in Sparta. The Aetolians inuade Greece and Macedon, and are inuaded at home byPHILIP. -
§. II. How
PHILIP was misseaduised by ill Counsailors: Who afterwards wroughttreason against him, and were iustly punished. Hee inuadeth the Aeto∣lians a second time: And forceth them to sue for peace: Which is granted vn∣to them. -
§. III.
PHILIP, at the perswasion ofDEMETRIVS PHARIVS, enters into League withHANNIBAL, against the Romans. The Tenour of theLeague betweene HANNIBAL andPHILIP. -
§. IIII.
How PHILIP yeelded to his naturall vices being therein soothed byDEMETRIVS PHARIVS. His desire to tyr annize vpon the free States his Associates: With the troubles, into which hee thereby fell,he bore a part in the second warre. He poisoneth ARATVS: and growes hatefull to the. -
§. V. Of
PHILOPOEMEN Generall of the Achaeans: andMACHANIDAS, Tyrant of Lacedaemon. A battaile betweene them, where∣inMACHANIDAS is slaine. -
§. VI.
PHILIP hauing peace with Rome, and with all Greece, prepares against Asia. Of the Kings of Pergamus, Cappadocia, Pontus, Paphlagona, Bithynia; and their Linages. Of the Galatians. -
§. VII. The Towne of Cios taken by
PHILIP, at the instance ofPRVSIAS King of Bi∣thynia, and cruelly destroyed. By this and like actions,PHILIP growes hatefull to many of the Greekes: and is warred vpon byATTALVS King of Pergamus, and by the Rhodians. -
§. VIII. The Romans, after their Carthaginian warre, seeke matter of quarrell against
PHILIP. The Athenians, vpon slight cause, proclaime warre againstPHILIP; mouedthere∣to byATTALVS; whom they flatter.PHILIP winnes diuers Townes: and makes peremptorie answere to the Roman Embassa∣dour. Theresolution of the Abydeni. -
§. IX. The Romans decree warre against
PHILIP, and send one of their Consuls into, as it were in defence of the Athenians their Confederats. How poore the Athenians were at this time, both in qualitie and estate. -
§. X. The Towne of Chalcis in Euboea, taken and sackt by the Romans and their Associates, that lay in Garison at Athens.
PHILIP attempteth to take Athens by Surprise: wasteth the Countrey about: and makes a iourney into Peloponnesus. OfNABIS the Tyrant of Lacedaemon, and his wife.PHILIP offers to make Warre against for the Achaeans. He returneth home through Attica, which he spoyleth againe: and prouides against his Enemies. Some exploitsof the Romans. Diuers Princes ioyne with them. Great labouring to draw the Aeto∣lians into the warre. -
§. XI. The meeting of
PHILIP with the Romans, and skirmishing with them on his bor∣ders. The Aetolians inuadedominions, and are beaten home. Some doings of ATTALVS and the Roman Fleet. -
§. XII.
VILLIVS the Roman Consul wastes a yeere to no effect. Warre of the Gaules in Italie. An Embassie of the Romans to Carthage,MASANISSA, andVER∣MINA. The Macedonian prepares for defence of his: and T. QVINTIVS FLAMINIVS is sent against him. -
§. XIII.
The Romans beginne to make warre by negotiation. T. QVINTIVS winnes a passage againstPHILIP. Thessalie wasted byPHILIP, the Romans, and Aetolians. The Achaeans forsaking the Macedonian, take part with the Romans. A treatie of peace, that was vaine.PHILIP deliuers Argos to the Tyrant, who presently enters into League with the Romans. -
§. XIIII. The battcile at Cynoscephalae, wherein
PHILIP was vanqui∣shed byT. QVINTIVS. -
§. XV.
T. QVINTIVS falleth out with the Aetolians; and grantesvnto PHILIP, with conditions, vpon which the peace is rati∣fied. Libertie proclaimed vnto the Greeks. Thequarrell with ANTIOCHVS.
-
§. I. How the Romans grew acquainted in the East Countries, and desirous of warre there. The beginning of many Princes, with great warres, at one time. The Aetolians ouerrun Pelopon∣nesus.
-
CHAP. V. The Warres of the Romans with
ANTIOCHVS the great, and his adherents.-
§. I.
What Kings, of the races of SELEVCVS andPTOLEMIE, raigned in Asia and Aegypt before Antiochus the great. -
§. II.
The beginning of the Great ANTIOCHVS his reigne. OfPTOLEMIE EVER∣GETES, andPHILOPATOR, Kings of Aegypt. Warre betweeneANTIOCHVS andPHILOPATOR. The rebellion ofMOLO: an Expedition ofANTIOCHVS a∣gainst him. The recontinuance ofANTIOCHVS his Aegyptian warre: with the passages betweene the two Kings: the victory ofPTOLEMIE, and Peace concluded. OfACHAEVS, and his rebellion; his greatnesse, and his fall.ANTIOCHVS his Ex∣pedition against the Parthians, Bactrians, and Indians. Somewhat of the Kings reigning in India, after the death of the GreatALEXANDER. -
§. III. The lewd Reigne of
PTOLEMIE PHILOPATOR in Aegypt: with the tragicall ende of his fauourites, when hee was dead.ANTIOCHVS prepares to warre on the youngchild PTOLEMIE EPIPHANES, the sonne ofPHILOPATOR. His irresolution in preparing for diuers warres at once. His Voyage toward the Hellespont. Hee seekes to hold amitie with the Romans, who make friendly shew to him; intending neuerthelesse to haue warre with him. His doings about the Hellespont; which the Romans make the first ground of their quarrell to him. -
§. IIII. The Romans hold friendly correspondence with
ANTIOCHVS, during their warre withPHILIP: after which they quarrell with him. The doings ofHANNIBAL at Car∣thage: whence hee is chased by his enemies, and by the Romans: His flight vnto the KingANTIOCHVS. The Aetolians murmure against the Romans in Greece. The warre of the Romans and Achaeans, withNABIS the Tyrant of Lacedaemon. The departure of the Romans out of Greece.T. QVINTIVS his Triumph. Peace denied toANTIO∣CHVS by the Romans. -
§. V. Of the long Warres which the Romans had with the Gaules, Ligurians, and Spa∣niards. Of
M. PORCIVS CATO. Iniuries done byMASA∣NISSA to the Carthaginians, that sue to the Romans for iustice in vaine. -
§. VI. The Aetolians labour to prouoke
ANTIOCHVS, PHILIP, andNABIS, to warre vpon the Romans; by whom they hold themselues wronged and disgraced.NABIS besiegeth Gyttheum, and wasteth some part of Achaea. The exact skill ofPHILOPOE∣MEN, in aduantage of ground: whereby he vtterly vanquisheth NABIS. ANTI∣OCHVS being denied Peace by the Romans, ioynes with the Aetolians. The Aetolians surprizeDEMETRIAS; and by killingNABIS, their Confederate seize vpon Sparta. But they are driuen out by the Citizens: who atPHILOPOEMEN his perswasions annex themselues to the Achaeans. -
§. VII.
ANTIOCHVS, perswaded byTHOAS the Aetolian, comes ouer into Greece, ill at∣tended. Sundrie passages betweene him, the Aetolians, Chalcidians and others. Hee winnes Chalcis, and thereby the whole Ile of Euboea. The vanitie of the Kings Embassadors and the Aetolians, with the Ciuil answere ofTITVS to their discourse, before the Achaeans. That it concerned the Greekes to haue desired peace, betweene the Romans andANTIOCHVS; as the best assurance of their owne libertie. Of many pettie Estates that fell to the King. OfAMINANDER; and an idle vanitie, by whichKing PHILIP was lost.HANNIBAL giues good counsaile in vaine. Some Townes wonne in Thessalie. The King retires to Chalcis; Where hee marrieth a young Wife, and reuels away the rest of Winter. Vpon the comming of the Roman Con∣sul all forsakeANTIOCHVS. Hee with two thousand Aetolians keepes the Streights of Thermopylae. Hee is beaten, and flies into Asia: leauing all in Greece vnto the Victors. -
§. VIII.
LVCIVS SCIPIO, hauing with himPVBLIVS the African his elder Brother, for hisLieutenant, is sent into Greece, He grants long Truce to the Aetolians, that so he might at leisure passe into Asia. Much trouble some businesse by Sea; and diuers fights. An inuasion vpon EVMENES his Kingdome; with the siege of Pergamus, raysed by an handfull of the Achaeans.L. SCIPIO the Consul comes into Asia: whereANTIOCHVS most earnestly desireth peace, and is denied it. The battaile ofMAG∣NESIA: whereinANTIOCHVS being vanquished, yeeldeth to the Romans good plea∣sure. The Conditions of the peace. In what sort the Romans vsed their Victorie.L. CORNELIVS SCIPIO, after a most sumptuous triumph ouerANTIOCHVS, is surnamed The Asiatique, as his brother was stiled The African. -
§. IX. The Aetolians, and the Gallogreekes, vanquished by the Roman Consuls
FVLVIVS andMANLIVS. MANLIVS hardly obtaines a Triumph: being charged (among other obiections) with attempting to haue passed the bounds appointed as fatall to the Romans bySIBYL. OfSIBYLS Prophectes; the Bookes ofHER∣MES; and that Inscription,SIMONI DEO SANCTO. The ingratitude of Rome to the twoSCIPIOES: and that beginning and faction among the Roman Nobilitie.
-
§. I.
-
CHAP. VI.
The second Macedonian Warre. -
§. I. The Condition wherein those Princes and Estates remained, which were associates of the Romans, when the warre with
ANTIOCHVS was finished. The Romans quarrell withPHILIP. They deale insolently with the Achaeans. The Macedonian, being vnrea∣die for warre, obtaines peace at Rome, by his sonneDEMETRIVS; of whom thence∣foorth hee becomes iealous. -
§. II.
The death of PHILOPOEMEN, HANNIBAL, andSCIPIO. That the militarie profession is of all other the most vnhappie: notwithstanding some examples, which may seeme to prooue the contrarie. -
§. III.
PHILIP making prouision for warre against the Romans, deales hardly with many of his owne subiects. His negotiation with the Bastarnae. His crueltie. He suspecteth his sonneDEMETRIVS. DEMETRIVS accused by his brotherPER∣SEVS; and shortly after slaine, by his fathers appointment.PHI∣LIP repenteth him of his sonnes death; whom he findeth to haue beene innocent: and intending to reuenge it onPERSEVS, he dieth. -
§. IIII. How the Bastarnae fell vpon Dardania. The behauiour of
PERSEVS in the beginning of his Reigne. Some warres of the Romans: and how they sufferedMASANISSA, cruelly to oppresse the Carthaginians. They quarrell with PERSEVS. They allow not their Confederates to make warre without their leaue obtained. The Treason ofCAL∣LICRATES; whereby all Greece became more obnoxious to Rome, than in former times. Further quarrels toPERSEVS. Hee seekes friendship of the Achaeans, and is withstood byCALLICRATES. The Romanstheir intent of warring vpon him. -
§. V. How
EVMENES King of Pergamus was busied withPHARNACES, the Rhodians and others. His hatred to the Macedonian: whom hee accuseth to the Roman. The Senate honours him greatly, and contemnes his enemies the Rhodians; with the causes thereof. The vnusuall stoutnesse of the Embassadours. PER∣SEVS his attempt vponEVMENES. The brotherlybetweene EVMENES andATTALVS. PERSEVS his deuice to poyson some of the Roman Senators: where∣vpon they decree warre against him, and send him defiance. Other things, concerningthe iustice of this warre. -
§. VI. The Romans sollicit the Greekes, to ioyne with them in the Warre against
PERSEVS. How the Greekes stood affected in that Warre. The timorousnesse ofPERSEVS. MAR∣TIVS a Roman Embassadour deludes him with hope of Peace. His forces. Hee takes the field, and winnes part of Thessalie. The forces ofLICINIVS the Roman Consul: and what assistants the Romanes had in this Warre. Of Tempe in Thessalie; and what aduantages the Macedonian had, or might haue had; but lost by his feare.PERSEVS braues the Romanes; fights with them; knowes not how to vse his victorie; sues forPeace; and is it by the vanquished. PERSEVS hauing the worse in a skirmish, for sakes all the Countrey lying without Tempe. The Boeotians rebell against the Romans, and are rigorously punished. The Roman Commanders vnfortunate in the warre againstPERSEVS. They vexe the Greekes their friends; for whose ease the Senate makes prouision, hauing heard their complaints. The flattering Alabanders. -
§. VII.
Q. MARTIVS the Roman Consul, with extreame difficultie and danger, enters into Tempe. The cowardize ofPERSEVS in abandoning Tempe. The towne ofquitted by MARTIVS; repaired and fortified by the King. The Romans attempt ma∣ny places, with ill successe. Their affaires inestate. MARTIVS a cunning and a bad man.POLYBIVS sent Embassador toMARTIVS from the Achaeans.POLY∣BIVS his honest wisdome beneficiall to the Achaeans. KingEVMENES growesfrom the Romans. PERSEVS negotiates withANTIOCHVS andEVMENES, His false dealing withGENTIVS King of Illyria;hee drawes into the Roman warre. He sends Embassadors to the Rhodians; who vainely take vpon them to be arbi∣trators betweene him and the Romans. PERSEVS loseth a mightie succour of the Ba∣starnae, by his wretched parsimonie. -
§. VIII. Of
L. AEMYLIVS PAVLVS the Consul. His iourney. He forcethPERSEVS to discampe. He will not hazard battaile with anie disaduantage. Of an Eclypse of the Moone.AEMYLIVS his superstition. Theof Pydna. PERSEVS his flight. He for sakes his Kingdome: which hastily yeelds toAEMYLIVS. PERSEVS at Samothrace. He yeelds himselfe to the Roman Admirall; and is sent prisoner toAEMYLIVS. -
§. IX.
GENTIVS, King of the Illyrians, taken by the Romans. -
§. X. How the Romans behaued themselues in Greece and Macedon after their victory ouer
PERSEVS. -
§. XI. The Warre of
ANTIOCHVS vpon Aegypt, brought to end by the Roman Embassadours. -
§. XII. How the Romans were dreadfull to all Kings. Their demeanour towards
EVMENES, PRVSIAS, MASANISSA, andCOTYS. The end ofPERSEVS and his children. The instabilitie of Kingly Estates. The Triumphs ofPAVLVS, ANICIVS, andOCTAVIVS. With the Conclusion of the Worke.
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§. I. The Condition wherein those Princes and Estates remained, which were associates of the Romans, when the warre with
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CHAP. I.
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THE FIFT BOOKE.
- ¶ To the Reader.
- A CHRONOLOGICALL TABLE.
- index
- colophon