The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Volym 16Council of the Society, 1896 Vols. 1-8, 1880-87, plates published separately and numbered I-LXXXIII. |
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Abae Achaeans Acropolis ALINDA ancient Apollo Assarlik Athenian Athens block bronze building Bull century B.C. chambered tumuli cist cliff College Dagh described early east evidence excavations feet figures fortress fragments Ghiuk Chalar graves Greece Greek ground Halikarnassos Hellenic Herakles Herodotus hill Homer Hyampolis inches inscription island Kalé Karian Keramos Koryphasion lagoon harbour lekythos Leleges Lelegian letters marble masonry metres Mitth monument mould Museum Mycenae Mycenean Mykenaean Mylasa Myndos Navarino necropolis neighbourhood Olbia Orchomenos Oxford Palaeo-Kastro passage Pausanias Pelasgians Pelasgic Peloponnesus Pentheus pottery probably Proetus Prof Pylos remains road rock roof seems shore side Sikia Channel slabs Spartans Sphagia Sphakteria stoa stone Strabo summit Telmessos temple Thalassocracy Thucydides Tiryns tomb town traces tripod tumuli vases wall δὲ ἐν ἐπὶ καὶ μὲν τὰ τε τῇ τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῖς τὸν τοῦ τῷ τῶν
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Sida xvi - signed by the Secretary. 9. Three Members of the Council, provided not more than one of the three present be a permanent officer of the Society, shall be a quorum. 10. All questions before the Council shall be determined by a majority of votes. The Chairman to have a casting vote.
Sida xvii - The elections of the Officers, Council, and Auditors, at the Annual Meeting, shall be by a majority of the votes of those present. The Chairman of the Meeting shall have a casting vote. The mode in which the vote shall be taken shall be determined by the President and Council.
Sida xv - i. THE objects of this Society shall be as follows:— 1. To advance the study of Greek language, literature, and art, and to illustrate the history of the Greek race in the ancient, Byzantine, and NeoHellenic periods, by the publication of memoirs and
Sida 97 - at this point a few words on this subject will not be out of place. In Homer Argos regularly means (1) the whole region which we commonly term Argolis. This is evident from various passages such as
Sida 103 - saw this very monument in the second century AD 'The grave of Aepytus I looked at with special interest, because Homer in his verses referring to the Arcadians made mention of the tomb of Aepytus : it is a mound of earth of no great size enclosed by a circular kerbing of stone.'
Sida 100 - in the southern districts of Thessaly. Pausanias accomplishes the same object by a different means, representing Achaeus, the son of Xuthus, as having gone back to Thessaly and occupied the portion of it to which his father was entitled. Then, by way of explaining how it was that there were Achaeans at Sparta and
Sida 102 - or Dorian origin, unless we are prepared to give the lie direct to all Greek history. ' Arcadia,' says E. Curtius, ' the ancients regarded as a preeminently Pelasgian country; here, as they thought, the autochthonic condition of the primitive inhabitants had preserved itself longest, and had been least disturbed by the intrusion of foreign elements.'
Sida xvii - The names of all candidates wishing to become Members of the Society shall be submitted to a Meeting of the Council, and at their next Meeting the Council shall proceed to the election of candidates so proposed : no such election to be valid unless the candidate receives the votes of the majority of those present.
Sida 101 - Who can tell whether the Danes who settled in Ireland first got their footing at Dublin or Waterford ? The fact is that when the tide of colonizing and conquest begins to flow, different bodies of invaders make their appearance, almost simultaneously in some cases, at different points ; sometimes small bodies of men seeking new homes
Sida xl - Daremberg (Ch.) and E. Saglio. Dictionnaire des Antiquités Grecques et Romaines d'après les Textes et les Monuments.