Philip begins his Conquests
219
|
LXXXIX. The Orator Demosthenes
|
221
|
XC. Philip masters Greece
|
224
|
XCI. Birth of Alexander
|
227
|
XCII. The Steed Bucephalus
|
229
|
XCIII. Alexander as King
|
232
|
XCIV. Alexander and Diogenes
|
234
|
XCV. Alexander's Brilliant Beginning
|
236
|
XCVI. The Gordian Knot
|
238
|
XCVII. Alexander's Royal Captives
|
241
|
XCVIII. Alexander at Jerusalem
|
242
|
XCIX. The African Desert
|
244
|
C. Death of Darius
|
247
|
CI. Defeat of Porus
|
249
|
CII. The Return to Babylon
|
251
|
CIII. Death of Alexander the Great
|
252
|
CIV. The Division of the Realm
|
255
|
CV. Death of Demosthenes
|
257
|
CVI. The Last of the Athenians
|
260
|
CVII. The Colossus of Rhodes
|
262
|
CVIII. The Battle of Ipsus
|
265
|
CIX. Demetrius and the Athenians
|
266
|
CX. The Achæan League
|
268
|
CXI. Division in Sparta
|
270
|
CXII. Death of Agis
|
274
|
CXIII. The War of the Two Leagues
|
276
|
CXIV. The Last of the Greeks
|
278
|
CXV. Greece a Roman Province
|
280
|
INDEX
|
283
|
THE STORY OF THE GREEKS.
Table of Contents
I. EARLY INHABITANTS OF GREECE.
Table of Contents
Although Greece (or Hel´las) is only half as large as the State of New York, it holds a very important place in the history of the world. It is situated in the southern part of Europe, cut off from the rest of the continent by a chain of high mountains which form a great wall on the north. It is surrounded on nearly all sides by the blue waters of the Med-it-er-ra´ne-an Sea, which stretch so far inland that it is said no part of the country is forty miles from the sea, or ten miles from the hills. Thus shut in by sea and mountains, it forms a little territory