Goodreads helps you follow your favorite authors. Be the first to learn about new releases!
Start by following Roderick Beaton.
Showing 1-30 of 275
“It also meant that no state could legislate”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“But in 1500 BCE, they are not ruled directly from Hattusa.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“the temples on the Acropolis and the recently completed Theatre of Dionysus.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“The campaign that cost Julian his life was part of a series of wars on the empire’s eastern frontier”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“the Greek-speaking Roman Empire after the death of Heraclius in 641 had turned into the Byzantine.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“The city is known to the Hittites as Millawanda and will later enter Greek history under the name Miletus.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“This can only have been the initiative of a single individual, because it happened only once,”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“the way to truth was through the exercise of reason and rational judgement.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Having left not one of them alive, they stripped the temple of its treasures and burnt everything on the Acropolis.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Hagia Sophia successfully marries the old Greek science of theoretical geometry to Roman skills of practical engineering”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“the Greek city-states of Sicily had been fighting off their rivals, the Carthaginians,”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“not only for those who had lost their lives but also for the ‘liberty of Hellas”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“By the time Justinian died in 565, aged over eighty,”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“in the full Assembly.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“The people of the coastal lowlands have their own languages, related to Hittite.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“And in this way was born the concept, central to all mathematics and science, of proof.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“More Greeks actually fought on the Persian side against him than under his banner.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Order was not restored until the emperor and four of his five sons had been apprehended and their severed heads displayed to the crowd in the Hippodrome”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“it has been estimated that the Iliad would have taken three full days to perform before an audience”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“To make an example of them, Alexander had them sent back to Macedonia in chains”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Carthage, in modern Tunisia, had grown from its origins as a Phoenician settlement”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“The situation facing Byzantium in the mid-1090s was not so much desperate as catastrophic.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“This radical new policy provoked the first serious disagreement between the churches of Constantinople and Rome”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Caligula, probably did not, in reality, appoint his horse as consul but would still be murdered by his own guards”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“their owners were Mycenaeans heading for home when their ship foundered off the headland in southern Turkey known as Uluburun,”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“The Greek word barbaros at first just meant a foreigner who spoke a different language.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“The conceptual shift that made it possible was even simpler than the application of binary mathematics to electrical circuits.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“a ship that sank in about 1300 BCE while on its way from the Levant via Cyprus towards the Mycenaean Aegean”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Constantinople was now the largest and richest city in Europe,”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History
“Sparta, by contrast, concentrated its power on land.”
― The Greeks: A Global History
― The Greeks: A Global History