History Of Europe
Edward A. (Edward Augustus) Freeman
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9 chapters
THECHIEF PERIODS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY
THECHIEF PERIODS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY
FREEMAN THE CHIEF PERIODS OF EUROPEAN HISTORY SIX LECTURES READ IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD IN TRINITY TERM, 1885 WITH AN ESSAY ON GREEK CITIES UNDER ROMAN RULE BY EDWARD A. FREEMAN, M.A., Hon. D.C.L. & LL.D. REGIUS PROFESSOR OF MODERN HISTORY FELLOW OF ORIEL COLLEGE HONORARY FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE London MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1886 [ All rights reserved ] London MACMILLAN AND CO. AND NEW YORK 1886 [ All rights reserved ] Oxford PRINTED BY HORACE HART, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSIT
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PREFACE.
PREFACE.
These are the Lectures referred to in the last paragraph of the Preface to the course on the “Methods of Historical Study,” lately published. I have added to them the second of two articles which appeared in the Contemporary Review for 1884. The former of them, “Some Neglected Periods of European History,” I have not reprinted, as its substance will be found in the present course. The second, “Greek Cities under Roman Rule,” as dealing somewhat more in detail with some points which are barely gl
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LECTURE I. EUROPE BEFORE THE ROMAN POWER.
LECTURE I. EUROPE BEFORE THE ROMAN POWER.
In my first course of public lectures I did my best to speak in a general way of the nature of historical study, of its kindred pursuits, of the difficulties by which it is beset and of the most hopeful means of overcoming them. I spoke of the nature of the evidence with which we have to deal in the search after historic truth, and of the nature of the witnesses by whom that evidence is handed down to us. In future courses I trust to apply the principles which I then strove to lay down to the st
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LECTURE II. ROME THE HEAD OF EUROPE.
LECTURE II. ROME THE HEAD OF EUROPE.
In my last lecture I strove to draw a picture of the Mediterranean lands at the moment when the Greek world, as the Greek world had been shaped by Macedonian conquest, a world of kingdoms, federations, and single cities, a busy and intricate system full of the deepest political lessons at every step, was suddenly startled by the invasion of a power from the West. That power had already slowly risen to the first place in its own Western world; it now sprang as in a moment to the first place in th
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LECTURE III. ROME AND THE NEW NATIONS.
LECTURE III. ROME AND THE NEW NATIONS.
We have seen Rome rise, step by step, to the headship of Latium, the headship of the West, the headship of the Mediterranean world. At most stages of her course her progress has been slow; at one stage only does she rise to a new position as in a moment. That is when, having been checked on her Eastern course by the Hannibalian war, the city that had overthrown the Eastern masters of the West sprang at once to the headship of the Eastern as well as of the Western world. The power which had trodd
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LECTURE IV. THE DIVIDED EMPIRE.
LECTURE IV. THE DIVIDED EMPIRE.
The most renowned of my predecessors in this chair, in planning that History of Rome which unhappily remained a fragment, but which gave to the world in its last finished volume the very perfection of historical narrative, designed to carry on his work to the coronation of Charles the Great. The reading and thought of forty years have ever more and more convinced me of the wisdom of Arnold’s choice. The year 800 was not, any more than the year 476, the end of the Roman Empire; it is not, any mor
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LECTURE V. SURVIVALS OF EMPIRE.
LECTURE V. SURVIVALS OF EMPIRE.
I drew a distinction in my last lecture between two stages in the dying out of the Roman power and its traditions. There were times when the two Empires of East and West, however changed their character from what it had been in earlier times, however far they had gone, the one to become Greek, the other to become German, might still be held to keep the essence of their old Roman being. And there were later times when the names and traditions of Rome still lingered on, but when they could not be
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LECTURE VI. THE WORLD ROMELESS.
LECTURE VI. THE WORLD ROMELESS.
I said in the opening lecture of this series that one of the most wonderful features of the age in which we live, an age which will assuredly take its place in the Universal History of times to come as one of the most memorable of ages, is that the world is Romeless. I said too that this feature of the most modern times is, by one of the great cycles of history, a feature which takes us back to the earliest days of European life. The world from which Rome has passed away has something in common
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GREEK CITIES UNDER ROMAN RULE.
GREEK CITIES UNDER ROMAN RULE.
I have in various forms tried to point out the special importance which, in the history of the world, belongs to the period which saw the establishment of the dominion of the Roman People over the civilized world of its time, especially over the Hellenic and hellenized lands round the eastern Mediterranean. It is of the first importance for the right understanding of general history to take in the real character of the state of things which was brought about by this gradual establishment of the
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