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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Aristotle, Politics. Search the whole document.
Found 25 total hits in 9 results.
Pontus (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
Dion (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
Athens (Greece) (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
Syracuse (Italy) (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
as somebody killed SardanapallusLast king of the Assyrian empire at Nineveh. when he saw him combing
his hair with his women (if this story told by the narrators of legends
is true—and if it did not happen with Sardanapallus, it might quite
well be true of somebody else), and Dion attacked the younger DionysiusTyrant of Syracuse 367-356 and 346-343 B.C., cf. 1312a 34 ff. because he despised
him, when he saw the citizens despising him and the king himself always drunk.
And contempt has led some even
of the friends of monarchs to attack them, for they despise them for trusting
them and think they will not be found out. And contempt is in a manner the
motive of those who attack monarchs thinking that they are able to seize the
government; for they make the attempt with a light heart, feeling that they have
the power and because of their power despising the danger, as generals
commanding the armies attack their monarchs; for instance <
Nineveh (Iraq) (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
as somebody killed SardanapallusLast king of the Assyrian empire at Nineveh. when he saw him combing
his hair with his women (if this story told by the narrators of legends
is true—and if it did not happen with Sardanapallus, it might quite
well be true of somebody else), and Dion attacked the younger DionysiusTyrant of Syracuse 367-356 and 346-343 B.C., cf. 1312a 34 ff. because he despised
him, when he saw the citizens despising him and the king himself always drunk.
And contempt has led some even
of the friends of monarchs to attack them, for they despise them for trusting
them and think they will not be found out. And contempt is in a manner the
motive of those who attack monarchs thinking that they are able to seize the
government; for they make the attempt with a light heart, feeling that they have
the power and because of their power despising the danger, as generals
commanding the armies attack their monarchs; for instance<
390 BC (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
336 BC (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
594 BC - 559 BC (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
346 BC - 343 BC (search for this): book 5, section 1312a
as somebody killed SardanapallusLast king of the Assyrian empire at Nineveh. when he saw him combing
his hair with his women (if this story told by the narrators of legends
is true—and if it did not happen with Sardanapallus, it might quite
well be true of somebody else), and Dion attacked the younger DionysiusTyrant of Syracuse 367-356 and 346-343 B.C., cf. 1312a 34 ff. because he despised
him, when he saw the citizens despising him and the king himself always drunk.
And contempt has led some even
of the friends of monarchs to attack them, for they despise them for trusting
them and think they will not be found out. And contempt is in a manner the
motive of those who attack monarchs thinking that they are able to seize the
government; for they make the attempt with a light heart, feeling that they have
the power and because of their power despising the danger, as generals
commanding the armies attack their monarchs; for instance<