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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Polybius, Histories. Search the whole document.
Found 16 total hits in 5 results.
Messene (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 11
Philip Dissuaded from Taking Messene
Philip, king of the Macedonians, being desirous of
Philip V. of Macedon at Messene, B. C. 215. See Plutarch, Arat. 49-50.
seizing the acropolis of Messene, told the
leaders of the city that he wished to see it and
to sacrifice to Zeus, and accordingly walked up
thither with his attendants and joined in the
sacrifice. When, according to custom, the
entrails of the slaughtered victims were brought
to him, he took them in his hands, and, turning round a littleMessene, told the
leaders of the city that he wished to see it and
to sacrifice to Zeus, and accordingly walked up
thither with his attendants and joined in the
sacrifice. When, according to custom, the
entrails of the slaughtered victims were brought
to him, he took them in his hands, and, turning round a little
to one side, held them out to Aratus and asked him "what he
thought the sacrifices indicated? To quit the citadel or hold
it?" Thereupon Demetrius struck in on the spur of the
moment by saying, "If you have the heart of an augur,—to
quit it as quick as you can: but if of a gallant and wise king,
to keep it, lest if you quit it now you may never have so good
an opportunity again: for it is by thus holding the two horns
that you can alone keep the ox under your control." By the
"two horns" he me
Peloponnesus (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 11
Macedon (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 11
Philip Dissuaded from Taking Messene
Philip, king of the Macedonians, being desirous of
Philip V. of Macedon at Messene, B. C. 215. See Plutarch, Arat. 49-50.
seizing the acropolis of Messene, told the
leaders of the city that he wished to see it and
to sacrifice to Zeus, and accordingly walked up
thither with his attendants and joined in the
sacrifice. When, according to custom, the
entrails of the slaughtered victims were brought
to him, he took them in his hands, and, turning round a little
to one side, held them out to Aratus and asked him "what he
thought the sacrifices indicated? To quit the citadel or hold
it?" Thereupon Demetrius struck in on the spur of the
moment by saying, "If you have the heart of an augur,—to
quit it as quick as you can: but if of a gallant and wise king,
to keep it, lest if you quit it now you may never have so good
an opportunity again: for it is by thus holding the two horns
that you can alone keep the ox under your control." By the
"two horns" he mea
Ithome (Greece) (search for this): book 7, chapter 11
215 BC (search for this): book 7, chapter 11
Philip Dissuaded from Taking Messene
Philip, king of the Macedonians, being desirous of
Philip V. of Macedon at Messene, B. C. 215. See Plutarch, Arat. 49-50.
seizing the acropolis of Messene, told the
leaders of the city that he wished to see it and
to sacrifice to Zeus, and accordingly walked up
thither with his attendants and joined in the
sacrifice. When, according to custom, the
entrails of the slaughtered victims were brought
to him, he took them in his hands, and, turning round a little
to one side, held them out to Aratus and asked him "what he
thought the sacrifices indicated? To quit the citadel or hold
it?" Thereupon Demetrius struck in on the spur of the
moment by saying, "If you have the heart of an augur,—to
quit it as quick as you can: but if of a gallant and wise king,
to keep it, lest if you quit it now you may never have so good
an opportunity again: for it is by thus holding the two horns
that you can alone keep the ox under your control." By the
"two horns" he mea