An Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge which the Ancients Had of India: And the Progress of Trade with that Country Prior to the Discovery of the Passage to it by the Cape of Good Hope. With an Appendix, Containing Observations on the Civil Policy-the Laws and Judicial Proceedings-the Arts-the Sciences-and Religious Institutions of the IndiansJohn Biore and Thomas Plowman, 1812 - 384 páginas |
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Página 5
... seem to have been destined by nature to facilitate their communication with one another . We find , accordingly , that the first voyages of the Egyptians and Phenicians , the most ancient navigators men- tioned in history , were made in ...
... seem to have been destined by nature to facilitate their communication with one another . We find , accordingly , that the first voyages of the Egyptians and Phenicians , the most ancient navigators men- tioned in history , were made in ...
Página 10
... seems now to be established with the utmost certainty by a late learned traveller ; who by his knowledge of the monsoons in the Ara- bian Gulf , and his attention to the ancient mode of navigation , both in that sea and along the Afri ...
... seems now to be established with the utmost certainty by a late learned traveller ; who by his knowledge of the monsoons in the Ara- bian Gulf , and his attention to the ancient mode of navigation , both in that sea and along the Afri ...
Página 11
... Scylax performed though it should seem with much difficulty , and notwithstanding many obstacles ; for he spent no * Herodot . lib . iv . c . 44 . less than two years and six months in conducting his SECT . I. 11 CONCERNING ANCIENT INDIA .
... Scylax performed though it should seem with much difficulty , and notwithstanding many obstacles ; for he spent no * Herodot . lib . iv . c . 44 . less than two years and six months in conducting his SECT . I. 11 CONCERNING ANCIENT INDIA .
Página 12
... seem not to have extended beyond the district watered by the Indus , we are led to form an high idea of its opulence ... seems to have met with the just punishment to which persons who have a notorious propensity to what is marvel- lous ...
... seem not to have extended beyond the district watered by the Indus , we are led to form an high idea of its opulence ... seems to have met with the just punishment to which persons who have a notorious propensity to what is marvel- lous ...
Página 13
... seems , soon after his first successes in Asia , to have formed the idea of esta- blishing an universal monarchy , and aspired to the dominion of the sea , as well as of the land . From the wonderful efforts of the Tyrians in their own ...
... seems , soon after his first successes in Asia , to have formed the idea of esta- blishing an universal monarchy , and aspired to the dominion of the sea , as well as of the land . From the wonderful efforts of the Tyrians in their own ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
An Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge which the Ancients Had ... William Robertson Visualização integral - 1791 |
An Historical Disquisition Concerning The Knowledge which the Ancients Had ... William Robertson Visualização integral - 1792 |
An Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge which the Ancients Had ... William Robertson Visualização integral - 1792 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
accuracy acquired Alexander Alexandria ancient appear Arabian Gulf Arrian arts Asia astronomical attention Bactria Brahmins cape cape Comorin caravans carried Caspian Caspian sea China cities coast commerce concerning conquests considerable considered continued conveyed Coromandel coast D'Anville degree discovery Disquisition dominion earth East Egypt empire established Europe Europeans extensive formed Ganges geography Greek Herodotus Hindoos Hist hundred idea Indian commodities Indostan Indus inhabitants island jogue kingdom knowledge known labour land Mahomedans Malabar coast manner Megasthenes ment mentioned merchants mode modern monarchs nations natives nature navigation Nearchus NOTE observed ocean opinion opulence pagodas period Persian Persian empire Persian gulf places Pliny ports Portuguese possession productions progress provinces Ptolemy religion remote rendered Rennell respect river Romans sailed Sanskreet Scylax SECT ships silk Strabo Syria thousand tion trade with India various Venetians visited voyage writers
Passagens conhecidas
Página 191 - From that time, like everything else which falls into the hands of the Mussulman, it has been going to ruin, and the discovery of the passage to India by the Cape of Good Hope gave the deathblow to its commercial greatness.
Página 235 - Having beheld, O Kreeshna! my " kindred thus waiting anxious for the fight, my " members fail me, my countenance withereth, " the hair standeth an end upon my body, and " all my frame trembleth with horror; even " Gandeev, my bow escapeth from my hand, and " my skin is parched and dried...
Página 377 - Instruction, in a series of connected fables, interspersed with moral, prudential and political maxims.
Página 376 - Greek ; and those not in technical and metaphorical terms, which the mutation of refined arts and improved manners might have occasionally introduced, but in the ground-work of language, in monosyllables, in the names of numbers, and the appellations of such things as would be first discriminated on the immediate dawn of civilization.
Página 248 - Wise men who have abandoned all thought of the fruit which is produced from their actions, are freed from the chains of birth, and go to the regions of eternal happiness...
Página 248 - Let the motive be in the deed, and not in the event. Be not one whose motive for action is the hope of reward. Let not thy life be spent in inaction. Depend upon application, perform thy duty, abandon all thought of the consequence, and make the event equal, whether it terminate in good or in evil ; for such an equality is called Yog [ie attention to what is spiritual}.
Página 239 - attended with prosperity ! May propitious breezes " sprinkle, for her delight, the odoriferous dust of " rich blossoms ! May pools of clear water, green " with the leaves of the lotos, refresh her as she " walks ; and may shady branches be her defence " from the scorching sun-beams...
Página 371 - Distinctions of colour are of his ordination. It is he who gives existence. In your temples, to his name the voice is raised in prayer ; in a house of images, where the bell is shaken, still he is the object of adoration.
Página 203 - ... institutions of its country impose, but to acquiesce in them. From his entrance into life an Indian knows the station allotted to him, and the functions to which he is destined by his birth. The objects which relate to these, are the first that present, themselves to his view.
Página 268 - Fasts, mortifications, and penances, all rigid, and many of them excruciating to an extreme degree, were the means employed to appease the wrath of their gods, and the Mexicans never approached their altars without sprinkling them with blood drawn from their own bodies.