
I was sent to Athens http://www.hri.org/docs/Morgenthau/
Source: National Identity (1991), p. 29: About Ethnic Change, Dissolution and Survival
I was sent to Athens http://www.hri.org/docs/Morgenthau/
"Philip of Macedon" Duckworth Publishing, February 1998
“It was the Delphi of the Greek East and as a Hellene, not as Pharaoh, Alexander would be curious…”
Source: Alexander the Great, 1973, p.204
Source: National Identity (1991), p. 30: About Ethnic Change, Dissolution and Survival
[Roderick Beaton, Mikuláš Teich & Roy Porter, Romanticism in national context, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1988, 99, 0-521-33913-8]
Preface p. v
A History of Greek Mathematics (1921) Vol. 1. From Thales to Euclid
"Schools and Universities on the Continent" (1868)
Source: That Greece Might Still be Free (1972), p. 15-16.
Context: A society in whose culture the Ancient Greeks played such an important part was bound to have a view about the Modern Greeks. The inhabitants of that famous land, whose language was still recognizably the same as that of Demosthenes, could not be regarded as just another remote tribe of natives or savages. Western Europe could not escape being concerned with the nature of the relationship between the Ancient and the Modem Greeks. The question has teased, perplexed, and confused generations of Greeks and Europeans and it still stirs passions to an extent difficult for the rational to condone.