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Searched all Perseus collections for "chaeronea" 202 results in 4 collections
Results summary (items)
Greek and Roman Materials (193)
Renaissance Materials (7)
The Tragedie of Anthonie, and Cleopatra (1)
The Bolles Collection on the History of London (1)

193 from Greek and Roman Materials

  1. Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon alphabetic letter *a, entry au)sautou=
    Chaeronea); cf. (21.18)

  2. Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon alphabetic letter *m, entry ma/mmh
    later, grandmother, (i B. C.), , , , (Chaeronea, iii A. D.), etc. (17.21)

  3. William Watson Goodwin, Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb chapter appendix, section 4
    Here the unreal supposition of not having secured the Thebans as allies, or (its probable consequence) the battle of Chaeronea having been fought in Attica, suits either form of apodosis, (15.92)

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7 from Renaissance Materials

  1. M. W. MacCallum, Shakespeare's Roman Plays and their Background part 1, chapter 3
    Plutarch, born at Chaeronea in Boeotia, about 45 or 50 A.D., flourished in the last quarter of the first and the earliest quarter of the second century. (5.94)

  2. M. W. MacCallum, Shakespeare's Roman Plays and their Background part 1, chapter 3
    And indeed it is perhaps no fable that Plutarch had something to do with the better régime that was commencing; for his nephew Sextus of Chaeronea, who may have inherited something of his uncle's spirit, was an honoured teacher of Marcus Aurelius, and influenced his pupil by his example no less than by his teaching. (4.46)

  3. M. W. MacCallum, Shakespeare's Roman Plays and their Background part 1, chapter 3
    It was knowledge of antiquity for which the age clamoured and of which it stood in need; and who else could give such a summary and encyclopaedia of Classical Lifeas the polyhistor of Chaeronea, who interested himself in everything, from details of household management to the government of states, from ancestral superstitions to the speculations of philosophers, from after-dinner conversation to the direction of campaigns; but brought them all into vital relation with human nature and human conduct? (3.63)

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1 from The Tragedie of Anthonie, and Cleopatra

  1. Appendices section SOURCE OF THE PLOT, subsection Plutarch
    The Lives | of the noble gre- | cians and romanes, compared | together by that grave learned | philosopher and historiographer, | Plutarke of Chæronea: | Tran$lated out of Greeke into French by Iames Amiot, Abbot of Bello- | zane, Bi$hop of Auxerre, one of the Kings priuie coun$ell, and great | Amner of France, and out of French into Engli$h, by | Thomas North. (3.72)

1 from The Bolles Collection on the History of London

  1. Sidney Lee, Dictionary of National Biography: Index and Epitome alphabetic letter T, entry 30090
    architect; travelled abroad and discovered the famous Theban lion at Chaeronea, 1818; surveyor of buildings to the naval department, 1824; laid out Westbourne Terrace, London, and neighbouring squares, 1843-8; wrote ‘The Stones of Etruria and Marbles of Antient Rome,’ 1859, and other works. [lv. (4.02)

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