INDEX.
A.
- Abyssinia, Christianity of, [67].
- Achaia, dealings of Rome with, [218].
- Ælfred, his view of early Greek history, [18].
- Africa, Saracen conquest of, [133].
- Agamemnôn, his imperial position, [18], [19].
- Agathoklês, two sides of, [33].
- Akarnania, its position in Homeric times, [19];
- becomes Greek, [24].
- Akragas, its time of greatness, [25].
- Ἀλαμανῶν ῥήξ, title of, [107].
- Alans, their history and settlement, [87], [88]; [122].
- Alaric, his career, [78].
- Albanians, their origin, [119].
- Ἀλβανοί, opposed to Ῥωμαῖοι, [141].
- Alexander, founder of the modern Greek nation, [16];
- Alexander of Epeiros, [17];
- his designs, [34].
- Alexandria, its relation to older Greek cities, [23].
- Alexios Komnênos, compared with Henry the Fourth, [162].
- Allies, Roman, their relations to Rome, [82], [83]; [218]-[220];
- Ambrakia, its beginnings, [24].
- Amisos, dealings of Trajan and Pliny with, [237], [238].
- Amphiktyonic Council, nullity of, [178], [179];
- its reform by Augustus, [225].
- Andorra, relations of, [217].
- Angles, first mentioned, [64].
- Antalkidas, Peace of, [28].
- Antioch, its relation to older Greek cities, [23].
- Antoninus Caracalla, effects of his edict, [42].
- Apameia, dealings of Trajan and Pliny with, [236], [237].
- Aquæ Sextiæ, battle of, [44]; [60].
- Aquitaine, position of cities in, [192];
- Arles, capital of Southern Gaul, [85].
- Arminius, his historic position, [64].
- Arnold, Thomas, point chosen by for the ending of his History, [104].
- Asia Minor, its historic position, [19].
- Athens, her history mistaken for that of Greece, [21];
- Aurelian, his dealings with the Goths, [77].
- Austria, the Frankish, effect of the rise of its Mayors, [91].
- Austrian Emperors, their relations to the Popes, [183].
- Austrian Empire, [151]-[152].
- Avignon, Popes at, [157].
B.
- Bajazet, Keiser of Roum, [145].
- Barbarians, conversion of, [67].
- Basil the Macedonian, his controversy with Lewis the Second, [108].
- Basil the Second, Emperor, [132], [133].
- Βασιλεύς, title of, [108].
- Basques, Iberian elements preserved by, [93].
- Belisarius, Roman consul, [125].
- Beneventum, battle of, [45].
- Bithynia, different position of its cities under Trajan, [233]-[238].
- Britain, Roman influence in, [94];
- Buonaparte, Napoleon, his position and objects, [149]-[151].
- Burgundians, their settlement in Gaul, [89]; [123].
- Burgundy, position of cities in, [191], [192];
- Byzantine, use of the name, [129].
C.
- Cæsar, his work in Gaul, [61], [65].
- Capitular elections, their analogy with Greek cities, [228].
- Carthage, her beginnings, [24];
- Catalaunian Fields, battle of, [44].
- Catalogue, the Homeric, its historic value, [18]-[20].
- Charles Martel, his defeat of the Saracens, [134].
- Charles the Great, effect of his coronation, [104];
- Charles the Fourth, Emperor, his coronations, [147].
- Charles the Fifth, last Imperator, [138];
- Charles the Sixth, Emperor, [152].
- Cherson, its beginnings, [24];
- Chlodowig, unites the Frankish kingdoms, [189].
- Christianity, its relation to the Roman power, [67]-[69];
- its special rivalry with Mahometanism, [133].
- Cities, answer to nations, [177], [178]; [183];
- contrasted with nations, [186]-[188];
- their chief developement among Southern nations, [186];
- difficulty of uniting, [187];
- their position in Northern and Southern Gaul, [191], [192];
- their history and position in modern Europe, [199]-[205];
- their history in Germany, [200]-[205];
- suppression of, [201]-[202].
- Civilis, compared with Buonaparte, [151].
- Clermont, Council of, [162].
- Colonies, Greek, [14];
- Condominium, survival of, [211].
- Conquest, Roman and Teutonic compared, [85].
- Constance, Peace of, compared with that of Westfalia, [139].
- Constantine the Great, his changes at Rome, [74];
- his foundation of Constantinople, [ib.]
- Constantine Palaiologos, his death, [170];
- compared with Leopold the First, [171].
- Constantinople, its various names, [74];
- Convocation, English, its analogy with Greek cities, [227], [228].
- Crete, mention of in Homer, [19].
- Crusade, First, [161], [162].
- Crusade, Fourth, [164], [165].
- Cyprus, rivalry of Greek and Phœnician in, [24];
D.
- Dacia, its conquest and cession, [77].
- Dante, his doctrine of the Empire, [68];
- his theory carried out in the East, [159].
- Departments, French, their position, [210].
- Diocletian, his changes, [73], [74]; [86].
- Diôn Chrysostom, his account of contemporary Greek commonwealths, [225]-[234];
- Dionysios, two sides of, [33].
- Diplomacy, in the third century B.C., [37].
E.