Discoveries in Asia Minor: Including a Description of the Ruins of Several Ancient Cities, and Especially Antioch of Pisidia, Bind 2R. Bentley, 1834 |
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Side 25
... marble , and several kinds of volcanic stone , be- sides the green mineral which I found on my first journey , probably glycone , —that a geologist would have a wide field for research , and a still wider for conjecture , as to the ...
... marble , and several kinds of volcanic stone , be- sides the green mineral which I found on my first journey , probably glycone , —that a geologist would have a wide field for research , and a still wider for conjecture , as to the ...
Side 29
... marble , and found ruins of an immense fortress , with two large gates ; after which immense ruins on the slope of the mountain as descending into the plain , which descent was above an hour and a half , and the ruins all the way . This ...
... marble , and found ruins of an immense fortress , with two large gates ; after which immense ruins on the slope of the mountain as descending into the plain , which descent was above an hour and a half , and the ruins all the way . This ...
Side 35
... marbles , many of both , with inscriptions and figures in bas relief . Returning to the last ruins , a portico runs towards the mountain , or north , nearly three hundred feet long , and about twenty - seven wide . To this succeeds a ...
... marbles , many of both , with inscriptions and figures in bas relief . Returning to the last ruins , a portico runs towards the mountain , or north , nearly three hundred feet long , and about twenty - seven wide . To this succeeds a ...
Side 37
... marble ; the architecture of the richest style , the columns fluted with Corinthian capitals , and two feet in diameter . one . The building stands east and west . The total length about one hundred and sixty feet ; the breadth of the ...
... marble ; the architecture of the richest style , the columns fluted with Corinthian capitals , and two feet in diameter . one . The building stands east and west . The total length about one hundred and sixty feet ; the breadth of the ...
Side 97
... marble capitals , perhaps of the ear- liest times of the Bas empire , placed as pedestals to the columns . Mr. Balli , of Isbarta , had given us a letter for a respectable Greek merchant . We called upon him , and found the two priests ...
... marble capitals , perhaps of the ear- liest times of the Bas empire , placed as pedestals to the columns . Mr. Balli , of Isbarta , had given us a letter for a respectable Greek merchant . We called upon him , and found the two priests ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
acropolis Adalia Aglason Aiasaluk Aivali ancient Antioch arabah arrived Asia Aspendus beautiful Bourdour Brewer café cafinet called camel Cara Osman Oglou castle Cestrus church Cibyra Colonel Leake Colossæ considerable consul Cormasa Cremna crossed Debrè Denizli Derbe Dethier distance emperor Ephesus Eski-hissar evidence feet firman Germè Greek Guzel-hissar half-past head Hierapolis hill honour horses houses hundred Ibrahim Pasha immense inscription Isbarta Isionda journey khan Khonas Kirkingè Kyriacos lake Laodicea Lycus Lysinoe Lystra Magnesia marble medals Menimen Milcom minutes Mitylene MODERN SMYRNA mosque Mount mountain o'clock Pamphylia passed Perga piastres Pisidia plain priest probably quarter remains river road ruins Sagalassus says seen Selge side Smyrna stones Strabo stream sultan Temnus temple Termessus theatre Themisonium thousand tion tomb town traveller trees Turkish Turks village walls Yarislee καὶ
Populære passager
Side 176 - Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels, intruding into those things which he hath not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind...
Side 189 - I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot : I would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.
Side 61 - What hast thou here? and whom hast thou here, that thou hast hewed thee out a sepulchre here, as he that heweth him out a sepulchre on high, and that graveth an habitation for himself in a rock ? 17 Behold, the LORD will carry thee away with a mighty captivity, and will surely cover thee.
Side 86 - Now when Paul and his company loosed from Paphos, they came to Perga in Pamphylia: and John departing from them returned to Jerusalem.
Side 61 - And they shall hang upon him all the glory of his father's house, the offspring and the issue, all vessels of small quantity, from the vessels of cups, even to all the vessels of flagons.
Side 415 - The Greeks have three Churches ; the Armenians, one; the Latins, two; the Protestants, two. The Jews have several Synagogues. Mr. Jowett has given us an interesting account of the Greeks in these parts, in his " Christian Researches in the Mediterranean.
Side 188 - What painful recollections are connected with this period ! Twelve years were employed in building this place of savage exhibitions, and in the first of these years, the temple of Jerusalem, which had been forty-eight years in building, was razed to its foundations, and of the Holy City not one stone was left upon another which was not thrown down.
Side 188 - Hence it abounded in hot springs, which, after passing underground from the reservoirs, appeared on the mountain, or were found bubbling up in the plain, or in the mud of the river : and hence it was subject to frequent earthquakes ; the nitrous vapour, compressed in the cavities and sublimed by heat or fermentation, bursting its prison with loud explosions...
Side 264 - We left them with the promise that they would and ready to take advantage of any defect in their neighbour, stimulated by an ambition of being thought the best scholar, every one's lesson was the lesson of all, and happy was he that could say it the best. " To obviate any of the scholars...