History of Greece, Bindi 1

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John Murray, 1851 - 12 síður
 

Efni

Victory of the Epigonicapture of Thêbes
43
Asiatic frenzy grafted on the joviality of the Grecian Dionysia
48
Dêmêtêr prescribes the mystic ritual of Eleusis
55
Legends of Apollo 61 COR
63
Multifarious local legends respecting Apollo
69
Pandora in the Theogony 104
72
Artemis
75
Hermês
81
Gods Heroes and men appear together in the mythes
87
Intersected by the mythical
93
Probable age of the poem
99
General feeling of the poet
105
To connect the Grecian community with their common god
111
117
Akrisios Danaê and Zeus
123
The Herakleids expelled
129
General deluge Salvation of Deukaliôn and Pyrrha
134
Large extent of Dôris implied in this genealogy
140
Eolus
147
Nestor and his exploits
153
Mêdea at Corinth
161
Bellerophôn
167
Traces of ancient human sacrifices
174
Overthrown by Hêraklês and the Thêbans
176
Old Amphiktyony at Kalauria
183
Augeas
189
Legend of Meleager in Homer
197
Atalanta vanquished in the race by stratagem
203
CHAPTER VII
210
Niobê
216
Agamemnon and Menelaus
221
Legendary importance of Mykênæ
227
Legend of the Attic Dekeleia
233
Legend of Lykaônferocity punished by the Gods
239
Echemus kills HyllusHerakleids repelled from Peloponnêsus
245
Æakusson of Zeus and Ægina
252
Neoptolemus
258
Attic legendsoriginally from different rootseach dême had
264
Daughters of PandiônProknê Philomêla Legend of Têreus
271
Voluntary selfsacrifice of the three daughters of Erechtheus
278
Plutarchhis way of handling the matter of legend
284
Their ubiquity
291
Minôs and Rhadamanthus sons of Zeus
299
LaiusEdipusLegendary celebrity of Edipus and his family
361
Novelties introduced by Sophoklês
368
Kreôn king of Thêbes forbids the burial of Polynikês and
375
Worship of Adrastus at Sikyônhow abrogated by Kleisthenês
383
Capture of Ilium by Hêraklês
389
Heroes from all parts of Greece combined under Agamemnôn
395
Memnonkilled by Achilles
406
Egyptian tale about Helentendency to historicise
418
Memorials of them throughout the Grecian world
424
Antenôr
431
Generally received and visited as the town of Priam
438
Mythical legitimacy of Iliumfirst called in question by Dêmê
444
Historical Trôas and the Teukrians
451
Sibylline prophecies
457
Absence of positive knowledgesupplied by personifying faith
465
Marked and manifold types of the Homeric gods
471
Stimulus which they afforded to the mythopoeic faculty
473
Poetsreceive their matter from the divine inspiration of
479
Gradual development of the scientific point of viewits opposition
485
Influence of the opening of Egypt to Grecian commerce в c 660
492
Opposition between scientific method and the religious feeling
499
Scission between the superior men and the multitudeimportant
506
Tendencies of Eschylus in regard to the old legends
514
Euripidêsaccused of vulgarising the mythical heroesand of
520
Hekatæusthe mythes rationalised
525
His general faith in the mythical heroes and eponymsyet com
532
Upon the legend of Troy
539
Allegorical interpretation of the mythesmore and more esteemed
557
Divine legends allegorised Heroic legends historicised
568
Semihistorical interpretation
574
Matter of tradition uncertified from the beginning
580
Supposed ancient meaning is really a modern interpretation
588
He deals with the mythes as expressions of feeling and imagina
595
Grecian and Egyptian genealogies
600
General public of Greecefamiliar with their local mythes care
608
The mythes in their bearing on Grecian art
614
Differences between themGrecian poetry matchlessGrecian
620
Grecian paganismwhat would have been the case if it had been
626
Chivalrous idealRomances of Charlemagne and Arthur
635
Heroic character and selfexpanding subject common to both
643
History of Englandhow conceived down to the seventeenth cen
644
Miltons way of dealing with the British fabulous history objec
650

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