M. E. Thalheimer
A Manual of Ancient History
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066231712
Table of Contents
SOURCES AND DIVISIONS OF HISTORY.
BOOK II. The Persian Empire from the Rise of Cyrus to the Fall of Darius. B. C. 558-330.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW. Book II.
GEOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE OF GREECE.
Second Period. B. C. 1100-500.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW. Book III.
Second Period. From the Death of Alexander to the Battle of Ipsus , B. C. 323-301.
Third Period. History of the Several Kingdoms into which Alexander’s Empire was divided.
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW. Book IV.
BOOK V. History of Rome, from the Earliest Times to the Fall of the Western Empire, A. D. 476.
INTRODUCTION.
SOURCES AND DIVISIONS OF HISTORY.
1. The former inhabitants of our world are known to us by three kinds of evidence: (1) Written Records; (2) Architectural Monuments; (3) Fragmentary Remains.
2. Of these the first alone can be considered as true sources of History, though the latter afford its most interesting and valuable illustrations. Several races of men have disappeared from the globe, leaving no records inscribed either upon stone or parchment. Their existence and character can only be inferred from fragments of their weapons, ornaments, and household utensils found in their tombs or among the ruins of their habitations. Such were the Lake-dwellers of Switzerland, and the unknown authors of the shell-mounds of Denmark and India, the tumuli of Britain, and the earthworks of the Mississippi Valley.
3. The magnificent temples and palaces of Egypt, Assyria, and India have only afforded materials of history since the patient diligence of oriental scholars has succeeded in deciphering the inscriptions which they bear. Within a few years they have added immeasurably to our knowledge of primeval times, and explained in a wonderful manner the brief allusions of the Bible.
4. The oldest existing books are the Hebrew Scriptures, which alone[1] of ancient writings describe the preparation of the earth for the abode of man; his creation and primeval innocence; the entrance of Sin into the world, and the promise of Redemption; the first probation, and the almost total destruction of the human race by a flood; the vain attempt of Noah’s descendants to avert similar punishment in future by building a “city and a tower whose top may reach unto heaven,” and their consequent dispersion. The Bible lays the foundation of all subsequent history by sketching the division of the human race into its three great families, and describing their earliest migrations.
5. The family of Shem, which was appointed to guard the true primeval faith, remained near the original home in south-western Asia. Of the descendants of Ham, a part settled in the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates, and built the great cities of Nineveh and Babylon; while the rest spread along the eastern and southern shores of the Mediterranean, and became the founders of the Egyptian Empire. The children of Japheth constituted the Indo-Germanic, or Aryan race, which was divided into two great branches. One, moving eastward, settled the table-lands of Iran and the fertile valleys of northern India; the other, traveling westward along the Euxine and Propontis, occupied the islands of the Ægean Sea, and the peninsulas of Greece and Italy. By successive migrations they overspread all Europe.