A complete dictionary of the Greek and Roman antiquities explaining the obscure places in classic authors and ancient historians relating to the religion, mythology, history, geography and chronology of the ancient Greeks and Romans, their ... rites and customs, laws, polity, arts and engines of war : also an account of their navigations, arts and sciences and the inventors of them : with the lives and opinions of their philosophers / compiled originally in French ... by Monsieur Danet ; made English, with the addition of very useful mapps.

About this Item

Title
A complete dictionary of the Greek and Roman antiquities explaining the obscure places in classic authors and ancient historians relating to the religion, mythology, history, geography and chronology of the ancient Greeks and Romans, their ... rites and customs, laws, polity, arts and engines of war : also an account of their navigations, arts and sciences and the inventors of them : with the lives and opinions of their philosophers / compiled originally in French ... by Monsieur Danet ; made English, with the addition of very useful mapps.
Author
Danet, Pierre, ca. 1650-1709.
Publication
London :: Printed for John Nicholson ... Tho. Newborough ... and John Bulford ...,
1700.
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Subject terms
Classical dictionaries.
Rome -- Antiquities -- Dictionaries.
Greece -- Antiquities -- Dictionaries.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A36161.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A complete dictionary of the Greek and Roman antiquities explaining the obscure places in classic authors and ancient historians relating to the religion, mythology, history, geography and chronology of the ancient Greeks and Romans, their ... rites and customs, laws, polity, arts and engines of war : also an account of their navigations, arts and sciences and the inventors of them : with the lives and opinions of their philosophers / compiled originally in French ... by Monsieur Danet ; made English, with the addition of very useful mapps." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A36161.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 14, 2024.

Pages

ENTAEUS,

A prodigious Giant, the Son of the Earth, who was threescore Cubits high. He inhabited the Wilderness of Lybia, and dwelt in a Cross-way, where he commit∣ted many Robberies, and obliged Men who passed that way to wrestle with him. But at last he met with Hercules, as he was coming from the Garden of Hesperides, who took him up into the air, and strangled him with his Arm, having observed that his strength re∣newed every time he threw him on the Earth his Mother. Entaeus is the Emblem of Vo∣luptuousness, and Hercules of Reason, which overcomes Sensuality. Superata tellus Sidera donat, says Boetius; and the greatest Victory that a Man can obtain, is to overcome Vo∣luptuousness. And Scipio ordered the follow∣ing words to be engraved upon his Tomb.

Maxima cunctarum Victoria, victa Voluptas.

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