CONTENTS.
| PAGE | |
| [INTRODUCTION.] | |
| Sources of History. | [9.] |
| Dispersion of Races; Periods and Divisions of History. | [10.] |
| Auxiliary Sciences: Chronology and Geography. | [11.] |
| [BOOK I.] Asiatic and African Nations, from the Dispersion at Babel to the Rise of the Persian Empire. | |
| [Part I.—The Asiatic Nations.] | |
| View of the Geography of Asia. | [13.] |
| History of the Chaldæan Monarchy. | [17.] |
| The Assyrian Monarchy. | [18.] |
| The Median Monarchy. | [22.] |
| The Babylonian Monarchy. | [24.] |
| Kingdoms of Asia Minor. | [29.] |
| Phœnicia. | [30.] |
| Syria. | [33.] |
| Judæa. | [34.] |
| (a) Theocracy. | [35.] |
| (b) United Monarchy. | [36.] |
| (c) The Kingdom of Israel. | [39.] |
| (d) The Kingdom of Judah. | [42.] |
| [Part II.—The African Nations.] | |
| Geographical Outline of Africa. | [48.] |
| History of Egypt. | [50.] |
| (a) The Old Empire. | [51.] |
| (b) The Shepherd Kings. | [53.] |
| (c) The New Empire. | [55.] |
| Religion and Ranks in Egypt. | [61.] |
| History of Carthage. | [66.] |
| [BOOK II.] The Persian Empire, from the Rise of Cyrus to the Fall of Darius. | |
| Career of Cyrus. | [73.] |
| Reign of Cambyses. | [76.] |
| Organization of the Empire by Darius I. | [79.] |
| Invasions of Europe under Darius. | [83.] |
| The Behistûn Inscription. | [87.] |
| Invasion of Greece by Xerxes. | [88.] |
| Reign of Artaxerxes I. (Longimanus) | [92.] |
| Xerxes II. | [94.] |
| Sogdianus; Darius II. | [95.] |
| Artaxerxes II. (Mnemon). | [96.] |
| Artaxerxes III.; Arses. | [98.] |
| Darius III. (Codomannus). | [99.] |
| [BOOK III.] Grecian States and Colonies, from their Earliest Period to the Accession of Alexander the Great. | |
| Geographical Outline of Greece. | [105.] |
| History of Greece. | [107.] |
| First Period. | |
| Traditional and Fabulous History, from the Earliest Times to the Dorian Migrations. | [107.] |
| Greek Religion. | [110.] |
| Second Period. | |
| Authentic History, from the Dorian Conquest of the Peloponnesus to the Persian Wars. | [116.] |
| Sparta. | [118.] |
| Athens. | [124.] |
| Grecian Colonies. | [130.] |
| Third Period. | |
| From the Beginning of the Persian Wars to the Macedonian Supremacy. | [134.] |
| Invasions by Mardonius and Datis. | [134.] |
| The Battle of Marathon. | [135.] |
| Invasion by Xerxes; Battle of Thermopylæ. | [138,] [139.] |
| Battle of Salamis, and Retreat of Xerxes. | [141.] |
| Battles of Platæa and Mycale. | [144.] |
| Hellenic League, and Greatness of Athens. | [145.] |
| The Peloponnesian War. | [161.] |
| The Sicilian Expedition. | [169.] |
| Decline of Athens. | [175.] |
| Battle of Ægos-Potami, and Fall of Athens. | [179.] |
| Spartan Supremacy. The Thirty Tyrants. | [181.] |
| The Corinthian War. | [184.] |
| Peace of Antalcidas. | [187.] |
| Theban Supremacy. | [188.] |
| Theban Invasions of the Peloponnesus. | [192-195.] |
| The Social War. | [195.] |
| The Sacred War. | [196.] |
| Battle of Chæronea. Supremacy of Philip of Macedon. | [197.] |
| [BOOK IV.] History of the Macedonian Empire, and the Kingdoms formed from it, until their Conquest by the Romans. | |
| First Period. | |
| From the Rise of the Monarchy to the Death of Alexander the Great. | [201.] |
| Second Period. | |
| From the Death of Alexander to the Battle of Ipsus. | [206.] |
| Third Period. | |
| History of the Several Kingdoms into which Alexander’s Empire was Divided. | [209.] |
| Syrian Kingdom of the Seleucidæ. | [209.] |
| Egypt under the Ptolemies. | [216.] |
| Macedonia and Greece. | [222.] |
| Thrace; Pergamus. | [230.] |
| Bithynia. | [231.] |
| Pontus. | [232.] |
| Cappadocia; Armenia. | [234.] |
| Bactria; Parthia. | [235.] |
| Judæa, under Egypt and Syria. | [237.] |
| Under the Maccabees. | [238.] |
| Under the Herods. | [240.] |
| [BOOK V.] History of Rome, from the Earliest Times to the Fall of the Western Empire. | |
| Geographical Sketch of Italy. | [245.] |
| I. History of the Roman Kingdom. | [248.] |
| Religion of Rome. | [255.] |
| II. History of the Roman Republic. | [260.] |
| First Period. Growth of the Constitution. | [260.] |
| Laws of the Twelve Tables. | [265.] |
| Capture of Rome by the Gauls. | [269.] |
| Second Period. Wars for the Possession of Italy. | [274.] |
| First Samnite War. | [274.] |
| Latin War, and Battle of Vesuvius. | [275.] |
| Second Samnite War. | [276.] |
| Third War with Samnites and the Italian League. | [278.] |
| War with Pyrrhus, King of Epirus. | [279.] |
| Colonies and Roads. | [282.] |
| Third Period. Foreign Wars. | [283.] |
| First Punic War. | [284.] |
| War with the Gauls. | [286.] |
| Second Punic War, and Invasion of Italy by Hannibal. | [287.] |
| Battles of the Trebia, Lake Thrasymene, Cannæ. | [288,] [289.] |
| Wars with Antiochus the Great; with Spain, Liguria, Corsica, Sardinia, and Macedon. | [293.] |
| Third Punic War. | [294.] |
| Subjugation of the Spanish Peninsula. | [295.] |
| Fourth Period. Internal Commotions and Civil Wars. | [296.] |
| Reforms Proposed by the Gracchi. | [297.] |
| Jugurthine Wars, and Rise of Marius. | [299.] |
| Defeat of the Teutones and Cimbri. | [302.] |
| Servile Wars in Sicily. | [303.] |
| The Social War. | [304.] |
| Exile and Seventh Consulship of Marius. | [305.] |
| Dictatorship of Sulla. | [306.] |
| Sertorius in Spain. | [307.] |
| War of the Gladiators. | [308.] |
| Extraordinary Power of Pompey. | [311.] |
| Conspiracy of Catiline. | [312.] |
| Triumvirate of Pompey, Cæsar, and Crassus. | [314.] |
| Conquests of Cæsar in Gaul, Britain, and Germany. | [315.] |
| Civil War; Pompey defeated at Pharsalia. | [319.] |
| Cæsar Victor at Thapsus, and Master of Rome. | [321.] |
| Murder of Cæsar in the Senate-house. | [323.] |
| Triumvirate of Antony, Cæsar Octavianus, and Lepidus. | [324.] |
| Antony defeated at Actium; Octavianus becomes Augustus. | [325.] |
| III. History of the Roman Empire. | [326.] |
| First Period. | |
| Reigns of Augustus, [326]; Tiberius, [328]; Caligula, Claudius, [330]; Nero, [331]; Galba, Otho, Vitellius, [333]; Vespasian, Titus, Domitian, [334]; Nerva, Trajan, [335]; Hadrian, T. Antoninus Pius, M. Aurelius Antoninus, [336]; Commodus, [337]. | |
| Second Period. | |
| Reigns of Pertinax, Didius Julianus, [338]; Severus, Caracalla, Macrinus, Elagabalus, [339]; Alexander Severus, [340]; Maximin, the Gordians, Pupienus and Balbinus, Gordian the Younger, Philip, Decius, [341]; Gallus, Æmilian, Valerian, Gallienus and the “Thirty Tyrants,” [342]; Aurelian, Tacitus, Florian, [343]; Probus, Carus, Numerian, Carinus, [344]. | |
| Third Period. | |
| Reigns of Diocletian and Maximian with two Cæsars, [345]; of Constantine, Maximian, and Maxentius in the West—Galerius, Maximin, and Licinius in the East, [348]; of Constantine alone, and the Reörganization of the Empire, [349]; of Constantine II., Constans, and Constantius II., [350]; of Julian, Jovian, and Valentinian I., [352]; of Valens, [353]; of Gratian, Valentinian II., and Theodosius I., [354]. | |
| Fourth Period. | |
| Final Separation of the Eastern and Western Empires. | [356.] |
| Reigns, in the West, of Honorius, [356]; of Valentinian III., [358]; of Maximus, [359]; of Avitus, Marjorian, Libius Severus, Anthemius, Olybrius, Glycerius, and Julius Nepos, [360]; of Romulus Augustulus, [361]. | |
| MAPS. | |
| I. The World as known to the Assyrians. | facing [17.] |
| II. Empire of the Persians. | ” [97.] |
| III. Ancient Greece and the Ægean Sea. | ” [113.] |
| IV. Empire of the Macedonians. | ” [209.] |
| V. Italy, with the Eleven Regions of Augustus. | ” [257.] |
| VI. The Roman Empire. | ” [305.] |