IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] graveni 1 graver 1 gravity 1 great 146 greater 30 greatest 32 greatly 11 | Frequency [« »] 150 if 150 or 148 such 146 great 144 king 143 being 139 might | Cornelius Nepos De Viris Illustribus Concordances great |
bold = Main text Chap. grey = Comment text
1 Pre | Greece it was accounted a great glory to be proclaimed a 2 Miltiad | number of the party being great, and many applying for a 3 Miltiad | these captains there was a great discussion, whether they 4 Miltiad(20) | couriers," who could run a great distance in a day. Ingens 5 Miltiad | which he had set out, to the great displeasure of his countrymen. 6 Themist | youth were compensated by great virtues, so that no one 7 Themist | ships ~VI. Themistocles was great in this war, and was not 8 Themist | While he was living there in great honour, on account of his 9 Themist | with whom he had had a great friendship. 35 Having arrived 10 Aristid | removed to Athens. ~How great was his integrity, there 11 Pausan | the Lacedaemonian was a great man, but of varied character 12 Pausan | called Helots, of whom a great number till the lands of 13 Pausan | the altar, came thither in great trepidation, and seeing 14 Pausan | betray him who deserved great good at his hands;" adding 15 Pausan | perplexities, it should be of great advantage to him ~V. The 16 Pausan | Pausanias tarnished his great glory in war by a dishonourable 17 Cimon | wealth, and who had made a great fortune from the mines, 18 Cimon | confinement, soon attained great eminence; for he had considerable 19 Cimon | the utmost generosity, and great skill, not only in civil 20 Cimon | under his control, and had great influence over the troops. 21 Cimon | Strymon, he put to flight great forces of the Thracians, 22 Cimon | this victory he obtained a great quantity of spoil; and, 23 Cimon | after he had submitted, with great fortitude, to the ill-feeling 24 Lysand | authority on that head would be great. Pharnabazus promised him 25 Alcib | but to a public matter,65 great dread was excited among 26 Alcib(65) | showing the reason why "great dread was excited" by this 27 Alcib | government, at a time when he had great hopes of managing his province 28 Alcib | influence of these leaders, so great a change in affairs took 29 Alcib | troops and achieved very great exploits, they returned 30 Alcib | elated by good fortune and great power, he should conceive 31 Alcib | that he had come with a great sum of money, formed a plot 32 Alcib | this design, he would find great favour at his hands. ~X. 33 Thrasib | the general, and fortune a great deal, and may truly say 34 Thrasib | and partly put to death, a great number of the citizens whom | 35 Thrasib | having, indeed, fought with great bravery against Thrasybulus. ~ 36 Thrasib | excited no envy, but was a great glory to him. The celebrated 37 Conon | his service in it was of great value; for he was both general 38 Conon | of the fleet, performed great exploits by sea; for these 39 Conon | by much exertion and at great hazard, he contrived to 40 Conon | as to others; for he had great influence with the king, 41 Conon | took their measures with great care, for they thought that 42 Conon | considerations they collected a great fleet, and set sail under 43 Conon | Cnidus, routed them in a great battle, took several of 44 Conon | after he had secured himself great influence by the battle 45 Conon | he wished to send him in great haste to the king; when 46 Conon(90) | history of Alexander the Great's expedition. See Plin. 47 Dion | Heraclides to death, VI. ----His great unpopularity, VII.----Is 48 Dion | recommendation;94 he had also great wealth bequeathed him by 49 Dion | for he was sensible how great an honour he was to him; 50 Dion | and brought Plato with great pomp 98 to Syracuse; whom 51 Dion | and as it was the cause of great hatred to the tyrant, Dionysius 52 Dion | standing was thought to be of great strength, and for that reason 53 Dion | come against him without a great force; a supposition which 54 Dion(100)| the portion of Italy, or Great Greece, which had been under 55 Dion | alone Dionysius 101 had great confidence, Syracuse. |355 ~ 56 Dion | daily expenses grew very great, began to fail him; nor 57 Dion | told him that "he was in great danger on account of the 58 Dion | young men of Zacynthus, of great courage and extraordinary 59 Dion | couch, and bound him. A great noise ensued, so that it 60 Iphicr | which success he obtained great glory. ~Artaxerxes, when 61 Iphicr(112)| grandfather of Alexander the Great. "This subject is more fully 62 Chabr | that engagement, when the great general Agesilaus felt sure 63 Chabr | achievement the Athenians obtained great glory. ~In the meantime 64 Chabr | this is a common fault in great and free states, that envy 65 Chabr | Athens, but almost all their great men did the same, for they 66 Timoth | character in them, that great hopes were entertained that 67 Timoth | drew near the island, a great storm arose, which the two 68 Timoth | grandson was obliged, to the great scandal of his family, to 69 Timoth | though we could produce a great many proofs, we will be 70 Timoth(131)| was, as it were, from his great power, king of the whole 71 Datam | his exertions proved of great value. Hence it happened 72 Datam | being unknown to them, and a great crowd |369 was in consequence 73 Datam | him, though with ever so great an army. Sailing in this 74 Datam | by this celerity, gained great favour from the king, he 75 Datam | him that "he would be in great peril if any ill-success 76 Datam | followers, concealing how great a loss he had sustained, 77 Datam | them as they fled, killed a great number of them, and captured 78 Datam | fortresses, and carried off a great quantity of spoil, part 79 Epamin | notice; and lastly on his great actions, which are more 80 Epamin | former times, they were a great subject for praise. After 81 Epamin | remarkable courage; he was so great a lover of truth, that he 82 Epamin | whom Epaminondas had then a great affection, to further his 83 Epamin | We might indeed produce a great number; but brevity must 84 Epamin | before us have related at great length.151 ~V. He was also 85 Epamin | whose mismanagement that great multitude of soldiers was 86 Pelop | of Grecian literature how great a man he was, I will therefore, 87 Pelop | meet at a banquet together. Great exploits have been often 88 Pelop | assuredly never before was so great a power overthrown from 89 Pelop | willing to encounter so great a danger,) agreed to attempt 90 Pelop | subject before us,171 how great mischief excessive confidence 91 Pelop | indeed, the second of the two great personages at Thebes, but 92 Agesil | character, and at that time of great influence. ~II. Agesilaus, 93 Agesil | and said that "he was a great gainer by doing so, for 94 Agesil | preparations for war with great industry. That his soldiers 95 Agesil | of whom he defeated in a great battle. It was an eminent 96 Agesil | admiration, that, though great presents were given him 97 Agesil | private person. ~VIII. As this great man had found nature favourable 98 Eumen | greater man (for we estimate great men by merit, not by fortune), 99 Eumen | Macedonians flourished, it was a great disadvantage to him residing 100 Eumen | young, there appeared to be great natural talent in him. He 101 Eumen | Perdiccas had sought with great eagerness to attach Eumenes 102 Eumen | to him, for he saw in him great honour and ability,192 and 103 Eumen | his side, he would be of great assistance to him in the 104 Eumen | he purposed (what all in great power generally covet) to 105 Eumen | Macedonians, of whom there was a great number there, he erected 106 Eumen | phalanx of Alexander the Great, which had over-run Asia, 107 Eumen | separated into parties at a great distance from one another. 108 Eumen | almost all the officers, in great excitement, expressed their 109 Eumen | life in this manner.206 How great awe was entertained of him 110 Eumen | the death of Alexander the Great, may be easily judged from 111 Phocion | of the other the fame is great; and hence he was surnamed 112 Phocion | close of his life, into great unpopularity with his countrymen. 113 Phocion(210)| successor of Alexander the Great. ~ 114 Phocion | the city in a carriage, great crowds of people gathered 115 Timoleo | Corinth was doubtless a great man in the opinion of everybody, 116 Timoleo | Italian general, a man of great valour and influence, who 117 Kings | kings of Macedonia; the only great sovereign of Sicily, II.---- 118 Kings | the death of Alexander the Great, III. ~I. THESE were almost 119 Kings | Amyntas, and Alexander the Great. One of these was cut off 120 Kings | games. Of Epirus, the only great king was Pyrrhus, who made 121 Kings | Peloponnesus. There was also one great sovereign of Sicily, Dionysius 122 Kings | III. There arose also some great kings from among the followers 123 Kings | followers of Alexander the Great, who assumed regal authority 124 Hamilc | person of high birth and great beauty, who, as some said, 125 Hamilc | than was becoming; for so great a man could not fail to 126 Hamilc | of the army, and achieved great exploits; and he was also 127 Hamilc | in Spain, executed some great undertakings with excellent 128 Hannib(232)| Gallia Cispadana, at no great distance from the Po), is 129 Hannib | it will be understood how great a general he was), will 130 Hannib(237)| follows, to have been in a great degree financial; but judicial 131 Hannib | precautions, he should be in great danger from the covetousness 132 Hannib | killed him, it should be of great advantage to them. ~XI. 133 Hannib | Baebius Tamphilus. ~This great man, though occupied in 134 Cato(244)| Cato the censor, the great grandfather of the Cato 135 Cato | his service was thought of great value in the battle near 136 Attic | of disposition, there was great sweetness of voice, so that 137 Attic | he transported thither a great portion of his fortune. 138 Attic | his interest, which was great for so young a man, he relieved 139 Attic | bond of union between such great men. ~VI. He conducted himself 140 Attic | remained at home to his great disgust. But to Caesar the 141 Attic | lawsuits, and troubled with great alarms, he gave his services 142 Attic | that Atticus would be in great peril, on account of his 143 Attic | engineers, on account of his great possessions in Africa; an 144 Frag | it a sin to do things of great importance against my advice, 145 Frag | eloquence handed down from the great men of the past, and strengthened 146 Frag | teaching it. For I see that a great part of those who lecture