| Plato - 1861 - 492 pages
...entirely surrounds it may truly and most correctly be called a continent. In this Atlantic island, then, was formed a powerful league of kings, who subdued...far as Egypt, and Europe also, as far as Tyrrhenia. The whole of this force, then, being collected in a powerful league, undertook at one blow to enslave... | |
| Plato - 1854 - 482 pages
...entirely surrounds it may truly and most correctly be called a continent. In this Atlantic island, then, was formed a powerful league of kings, who subdued...far as Egypt, and Europe also, as far as Tyrrhenia. The whole of this force, then, being collected ia a powerful league, undertook at one blow to enslave... | |
| Literary and Historical Society of Quebec - Canada - 1864 - 622 pages
...entirely surrounds it may truly and most correctly be called a continent. In this Atlantic island, then, was formed a powerful league of kings, who subdued...which they subjected to their rule the inland parts of Lybia, as far as Egypt, and Europe also, as far as Tyrrhe. nia. The whole of this force, then, being... | |
| Creation - 1869 - 606 pages
...entirely surrounds it may truly and most correctly be called a continent. In this Atlantic island there was formed a powerful league of kings, who subdued...with many others, and parts also of the continent. Subsequently, however, through violent earthquakes and deluges, which brought desolation in a single... | |
| Science - 1875 - 418 pages
...entirely surrounds it may truly and most correctly be termed a continent. In this Atlantic island there was formed a powerful league of kings, who subdued...which, they subjected to their rule the inland parts of Lybia as far as Egypt, and Europe as far as Tyrrhcenia (Italy). The whole of this force then being... | |
| Joseph Cook - Christianity - 1884 - 420 pages
...island, together with many others, and parts also of the Continent, besides which they subjected also to their rule the inland parts of Libya as far as Egypt, and Europe, also, as far as Tyrrhenia. . . . Subsequently, however, through violent earthquakes and deluges, which brought desolation in a... | |
| Rev. Joseph Cook - Christianity - 1885 - 424 pages
...islands, as well as from those islands to the whole opposite Continent. ... In this Atlantic island was formed a powerful league of kings, who subdued the entire island, together with many others, :md parts also of the Continent, besides which they subjected also to their rule the inland part.;... | |
| Donald Alexander Mackenzie - Art, Cretan - 1917 - 494 pages
...Rameses III to drive back the "late comers".1 As Plato says of the conquerors from Atlantis, they had " subjected to their rule the inland parts of Libya, as far as Egypt ". It will thus be seen that Schliemann was not far astray when he identified Plato's Atlantis as the... | |
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