The Histories of Polybius, Vol. 1 (of 2)
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TRANSLATED FROM THE TEXT OF F. HULTSCH BY EVELYN S. SHUCKBURGH, M.A. LATE FELLOW OF EMMANUEL COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE
IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. I
London MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1889
All rights reserved
F. M. S.
IN GRATITUDE FOR MUCH PATIENT HELP
This is the first English translation of the complete works of Polybius as far as they are now known. In attempting such a task I feel that I ought to state distinctly the limits which I have proposed to myself in carrying it out. I have desired to present to English readers a faithful copy of what Polybius wrote, which should at the same time be a readable English book. I have not been careful to follow the Greek idiom; and have not hesitated to break up and curtail or enlarge his sentences, when I thought that, by doing so, I could present his meaning in more idiomatic English. Polybius is not an author likely to be studied for the sake of his Greek, except by a few technical scholars; and the modern complexion of much of his thought makes such a plan of translation both possible and desirable. How far I have succeeded I must leave my readers to decide. Again, I have not undertaken to write a commentary on Polybius, nor to discuss at length the many questions of interest which arise from his text. Such an undertaking would have required much more space than I was able to give: and happily, while my translation was passing through the press, two books have appeared, which will supply English students with much that I might have felt bound to endeavour to give—the Achaean league by Mr. Capes, and the sumptuous Oxford edition of extracts by Mr. Strachan-Davidson.
The translation is made from the text of Hultsch and follows his arrangement of the fragments. If this causes some inconvenience to those who use the older texts, I hope that such inconvenience will be minimised by the full index which I have placed at the end of the second volume.
Polybius
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PREFACE
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
I. POLYBIUS
§ 2.—THE SOURCES OF POLYBIUS’S HISTORY
ROMAN CAMP FOR TWO LEGIONS
THE HISTORIES OF POLYBIUS
BOOK II
BOOK III
BOOK IV
BOOK V
BOOK VI
PREFACE
ON THE ROMAN ARMY
THE ROMAN REPUBLIC COMPARED WITH OTHERS
RECAPITULATION AND CONCLUSION
BOOK VII
CAPUA AND PETELIA
HIERONYMUS OF SYRACUSE
TREATY BETWEEN HANNIBAL AND KING PHILIP V. OF MACEDON
MESSENE AND PHILIP V. IN B.C. 215
THE WAR OF ANTIOCHUS WITH ACHAEUS
BOOK VIII
THE NECESSITY OF CAUTION IN DEALING WITH AN ENEMY
THE SIEGE OF SYRACUSE
PHILIP TAKES LISSUS IN ILLYRIA, B.C. 213
THE CAPTURE OF ACHAEUS AT SARDIS
THE GALLIC KING, CAUARUS
ANTIOCHUS THE GREAT AT ARMOSATA
THE HANNIBALIAN WAR—TARENTUM
FALL OF SYRACUSE, B.C. 212
BOOK IX
EXTRACT FROM THE PREFACE
THE HANNIBALIAN WAR
TARENTUM
THE SPOILS OF SYRACUSE
SPAIN
ON THE ART OF COMMANDING ARMIES
THE COMPUTATION OF THE SIZE OF CITIES
THE HANNIBALIAN WAR, B.C. 211
THE CHARACTER OF HANNIBAL
AGRIGENTUM
GREECE
INVESTMENT OF ECHINUS BY PHILIP
ASIA
EMBASSY FROM ROME TO PTOLEMY
FOOTNOTES: