THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY 909 W» of France Pag© 264—273. CONTENTS. < i Tht Feudal System, Chivalry, and the Crusades. — I. The Feudal system -II. Chivalry. - IIL Origin of the Crusades. — IV. The First Crusade. — V. The Second Crusade. — VI. Tlu» Third Crusade. — VII. The Fourth Crusade. — VIII. The Fifth Crusade. — IX. Tartar con quests.— X. The Sixth Crusade Page 273—288 B. English History. — I. England after the death of Alfred. — IT. Norman conquest. — 111. Re- duction of Ireland. — IV. Subjugation of Wales. — V. Scottish wars Page 288 — 297. Section III. — General History during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. 1 England and France during the Fourteenth and Fifteenth centuries. — I. French and English wars, 1328 to 1453.— II. Wars of .the two Roses.— III. Reign of Henry VII. of Eng- land Page 297— 308. 3 Other Nations at the close of the Fifteenth century.— I. Denmark, Sweden, and Norway.— II. The Russian empire. — III. The Ottoman empire.— IV. Tartar empire of Tamerlane. — V. Poland. — VI. The German empire. — VII. Switzerland. — VIII. Italian History. — IX. Spain Page 308— 318. f. Discoveries. — Navigation. — Magnetic Needle. — Art of Printing. — The Canaries. — Cape de Verdand Azore Islands. — The Portuguese. — Christopher Columbus. — Vasco de Gama Page 318— 322. CHAPTER III. GENERAL HISTORY DURING THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 1. Introductory. — Unity of Ancient History.— The Middle Ages.— Modern History. — Plan of the subsequent part of the work. — Europe, Asia, Egypt, The New World, at the beginning of the sixteenth century Page 322 — 325. 2. The Age of Henry VIII. and Charles V. — I. The States-system of Europe.— If. The rivalry between Francis 1. and Charles V. — III. Henry VIII. of England. — IV. The Reformation. — V. Abdication and retirement of Charles V Page 325 — 339 3. The Age of Elizabeth. — I. Mary of Scotland. — II. Civil and religious war in France. — III. Massacre of St. Bartholomew. — IV. The Netherlands.— V. The Spanish Armada. — VI. Edict of Nantes. — VII. Character of Elizabeth Page 339— 348. 4. Cotemporary History.— 1. The Portuguese Colonial Empire. — II. Spanish Colonial Empire, III. The Mogul Empire in India.— IV. The Persian Empire Page 348 — 353. CHAPTER IV. THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 1. The Thirty Years' War. — I. The Palatine period of the war.— II. Danish period of the war.— III. Swedish period of the war. — IV. French period of the war Page 353— 361. 2. English History : The English Revolution. — I. Union of England and Scotland. — IE. James I. — HI. Charles!.— IV. Scotch Rebellion.— V. The Long Parliament.— VI. Civil war.— VII. The Scotch League. — VIII. Oliver Cromwell. — IX. Trial and execution of Charles I. — X. Aboli- tion of monarchy. — XL War with Holland. — XII. The Protectorate. — XIII. Restoration of monarchy. — XIV. James II.— XV. Revolution of 1688 Page 361 — 377. 3. French History : Wars of Louis XIV. — I. Administration of Cardinal Richelieu. — II. Mazarin’s administration. — III. Louis XIV. His war with Spain. — With the Allird Powers — England, Spain, Holland, and Sweden. — Internal affairs of France. — General war against Louis — France at the end of the century Page 377 — 385. I. Cotemporary History. — I. Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. — II. Poland. — IIL Russia. — IV. Turkey.— V. Italy.— VI. The Spanish Peninsula.— VII. Asiatic Nations.— VIII. Colonial Establishments.— American History Page 385 — 3981 CHAPTER V. THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. J. War of the Spanish succession , and clo*e of the reign of Louis XIV.— I. England, Germany, and Holland declare war against France, 1702.— II. Campaign of 1702.— III. Events of 1703.— IV Events of 1704.— V. Events of 1705-6. — VI. Campaign of 1707.— VII. Events of 1708.— VIII. 1709.— IX. Treaty of Utrecht, 1713. — X. Character of the reign of Louis XIV... Page 398—407. £ Peter the Oreat of Russia, and Charles XII. of Sweden. — I. The north and east of Europe.— II. Beginning of hostilities against Sweden.— IIL Defeat of the Russians at Narva. — IV Victories of Charles in the year 1702. — V. March of Charles into Russia.— VI. Battle of Pultowa.— VII. The Turks. — VIII. Return of Charles.--IX. Events of 1715. — X. Death of Charles. — XI. His character. — Xll. Death and character of Peter the Gieat.. Page 407 — 418. B. Spanish Wars and War of the Austrian Succession. — I. European Alliance. — II. Wat between England and Spain.— III. Causes of the war of the Austrian succession. — IV. 8 CONTENTS. Coalu.on against Austria.— V. Events of 1742-3. — VI. Events of 1744.— VII. Events of 1745, -VIII. Invasion of England by the Young Pretender. — IX. Events in America. — X. 171&7 — XI. Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, 1748 Page 418--423. I. The Seven Years ’ JVar : 1756 — 1763. — I. Eight years of peace. — II. Causes of another war. — III. Beginning of hostilities in America. — IV. European Alliances. — V. First Campaign Of Frederick, 1756— VI. 1757.— VII. 1758.— VIII. 1759.-1X. 1760.— X. 1761.— XI. Peace of 1763. — XII. Military character of Frederick Page 423 — 433, 5, State uf Europe. The American Revolution . — I. General peace in Europe. — II. France. — III. Russia.— IV. Dismemberment of Poland. — V. State of parties in England. — VI. American Taxation. — VII. Opening of the war with the Colonies. — VIII. European relations with England. — IX. Alliance between France and the American States. — X. War between France and England. — XI. War between Spain and England. — XII. Armed Neutrality against Eng- land. — XIII. Rupture between England and Holland. — XIV. War in the East Indies. — XV. Treaty of 1782.— XVI. General Treaty of 1783 Page 433— 445. # The French 'Revolution : 1789 — 1800. — I. Democratic spirit. — II. Louis XVI. — III. Financial lifliculties. — IV. The States-General. — V. Revolutionary state of Paris. — VI. Great political changes. — VII. Famine and mobs. — VIII. New Constitution. — IX. Marshalling of parties. — X. The Emigrant Nobility. — Xt. Attempted escape of the Royal Family. — XII. War de- clared against Austria. — XIII. Massacre of the 10th of August. — XIV. Massacre of Sep- tember. — XV. Trial and execution of Louis XVI. — XVI. Fall of the Girondists. — XVII. The Reign of Terror.— XVltl Triumph of Infidelity.— X!X. Fall of the Dantonists— XX. War against Europe.— XXI. Insurrection of La Vendee. — XXII. Insurrection in the south of France. — XXlli. Fall of Robespierre, and end of the reign of Terror. — XXIV. The Eng- lish victorious at sea, and the French on land. — XXV. Second partition of Poland. — XXVI. Third partition of Poland — 1795. XXVII. Dissolution of the coalition against France. — XXVIII. New Constitution. — XXIX. Insurrection in Paris. — 1796. XXX. Invasion of Ger- many.— XXXI. The Army of Italy.— XXXII. Disturbances in England.— 1797. XXXIII. Napoleon’s Austrian Campaign. — XXXIV. Treaty of Campo Fonnio. — XXXV. Establish- ment of Military Despotism in France. — 1798. XXXVI. Preparations for the invasion of England.— XXXVII. Expedition to Egypt —XXXVIII. Battle of the Pyramids -XXXIX. Battle of the Nile.— 1799. XL. Syrian Expedition.— XL1. Siege of Acre.— XLU. Battle of Mount Tabor.— XL1 II. Battle of Aboukir.—XLIV. Overthrow of the Directory.— XLV. Na- poleon First Consul Page 445^-475. CHAPTER VI. THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. Section I.— The Wars of Napoleon: 1800—1815. I. Events of the year 1800. War with Austria. — II Events of 1801. — III. Events of 1802, the year of peace. — IV. Renewal of the war, 1803. — V. Ever ts of 1804. Napoleon Emperor. — VI. 1805, Coalition against France. Battle of Austerlitz. — VII. 1806, Louis Napoleon king of Holland. Confederation of the Rhine. Battles of Jena and Auerstadt. — VIII. 1807, Treaty of Tilsit. — IX. 1808, Events in Spain. Beginning of the Peninsular War. — X. 1809. War with Austria. Battle of Wagram. Napoleon’s divorce from Josephine. — XI. 1810, Busaco and Torres Vedras. — XII. 1811, Badajoz and Albuera.— XIII. 1312, Russian Campaign. Smolensko — Borodino— Moscow. American War.— XIV. 1813, General coalition against Napoleon. Lutzen — Bautzen — Leipsic. — XV. 1814, Capitulation of Paris. Abdication of Napoleon. — XVI. 1815, Napoleon’s return from Elba. Battle of Waterloo Page 475 — 503. Section II. — From'the Fall of Napoleon to the present time. 1. The Period of Peace : 1815— 1320.— I. Treaties of 1815.— II. England.— III. France Page 50(i — 512. 2. Revolutions in Spain , Portugal. Naples, Piedmont, Greece, France, Belgium, and Po- land: 1820—1831 Page 512— 550. I. English Reforms. French Revolution of 1848. Revolution in the German States, Prussia, and Austria. Revolution in Italy. Hungarian War. Usurpation of Louis Napoleon : 1831—1852 ... Page 570—562. GENERAL GEOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL VIEWS, ILLUSTRATED BY THE FOLLOWING MAPS. 1. Ancient Greece 564 £. Athens and its Harbors 566 3. Islands of the AKgean Sea 568 4. Asia Minor 570 5. Persian Empire 572 6. Palestine 574 7. Turkey in Europe 576 8. Ancient Italy 578 9. Roman Empire 580 JO. Ancient Rome 582 1 1. Chart of the World 584 12. Battle Grounds of Napoleon, &c 586 13. France, Spain, and Portugal 588 14. Switzerland, Denmark, &c 590 15. Netherlands, (Holland and Belgium).. 592 16. Great Britain and Ireland 594 17. Central Europe 5'»6 1 i. United States of America 593 NOTE. For the “Index to the Geographical and Historical Notes” see end of the volume. CONTENTS. 9 PART III. OUTLINES OF THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY [omitted in the school edition.] CHAPTER I. the antediluvian world. i Scriptural account of the Creation.— II. Geological Histoi 7 of the Earth.— ITI. Unity of he Human Race. — IV. Institution of a Sabbath.— V. The Origin of Discord. — VI. Coincidences between Sacred and Profane History. — VU. Traditions of the Deluge. — VIII. Ancient Chronology Page 601 — 625. CHAPTER II. EARLY EGYPTIAN, ASSYRIAN, AND BABYLONIAN CIVILIZATION. Exclusive policy of the Early Egyptians. — II. Character of the testimony of Herodotus. — III. The three great Egyptian dynasties. — IV. Egyptian History from Menes to Joseph. — V. Egyptian Hieroglyphics.— VI. The Early Inhabitants of Egypt. — VII. Dwellings and Public Edifices of the Egyptians. — VIII. Egyptian Sculptures and Paintings. — IX. Astronomical Knowledge.— X. Mechanical Science. — XI. Art of Weaving.— XII. Working of Metals. — XIII. Science of Medicine. — XIV. Literary attainments. — XV. Division into Castes. — XVI. Re- ligion. — XVII. Materials of Assyrian History. — XVIII. Assyrian Civilization, Page 625—648. CHAPTER III. CHARACTER AND EXTENT OF CIVILIZATION DURING THE FABULOUS PERIOD OF GRECIAN HISTORY, Grecian Mythology.— II. Legends of the Heroic Age.— III. Early Grecian Chronology. — IV. Interpretation of the Grecian Fables. — V. Religion of the Early Greeks. — VI. Belief in a Future State. — VII. Grecian form of Government. — VIII. Geographical Knowledge. — IX. Astronomy and Commerce. — X. Dwellings and occupations of the people.— XI. Manners. XII. Domestic Relations. — XII L. The Israelites Page 648 — 666. CHAPTER IV. CHARACTER AND EXTENT OF CIVILIZATION DURING THE UNCERTAIN * PERIOD OF GRECIAN HISTORY. Changes in Grecian Politics. — II. National Councils. — III. Public Festivals. — IV. Grecian Colonization. — V Progress of Arts and Literature. — VI. The Eleusinian Mysteries Page 666— 689. CHAPTER V. THE GLORY AND THE FALL OF GREECE. Closing Period of Grecian History. — II. The Persian Wars. — III. Battle of Plattea. — IV. Im- portance of the Persian overthrow.— V. The Age of Pericles.— VI. Full development of the democratic character of Grecian Institutions. — VII. Cultivation of Rhetoric and Oratory. — Fill. Historians, poets, and orators.— IX. The Drama.— X. Causes of the downfall of Athens Page 689— 710 CHAPTER YI. THE FIRST PERIOD IF ROMAN HISTORY t FROM THE FOUNDING OF ROME TO THE CONQUESTS OF GREECE AND CARTHAGE. » Authenticity of Early Roman History —II. History of Regal Rome.— III. Results of Criticism. —IV. Constitutional History of Early Rome— V. Plebeian and Patrician contests.— VI. Re- ligious Noti ns of the Romans. — VII. Mode of Living, Social Condition, &. c., under the KJogs .- Page 710—727. CONTENTS. iO CHAPTER VII. THE SECOND PERIOD OF ROMAN HISTORY: EXTENDING FROM THE CONQUESTS OS GREECE AND CARTHAGE TO THE CHRISTIAN ERA. L. Political character of the closing period of the Republic— II. Moral and Social Condition ol the people.— III. Roman Literature— IV. The Arts.— V. The Historical Prophecies Page 727— 740 CHAPTER VIII. THE ROMAN EMPIRE. I Power and Majesty of Rome and her Caesars— II. Foreign Policy.— III. Internal condition of the Roman' World in the Age of the Antonines. — IV. The slaves of the Romans. — V. Ro- man citizens. — VI. Taxation. — VII. The Roman Army. — VIII. Religion of the Rom tns during the Empire. — IX. Social Morality of the Romans. — X. Outward appearances of general prosperity in the Age of the Antonines. — XI. The Silver Age of Roman Literature. — XII. Greek Literature during the Silver Age. — XIII. Roman History after the Age of the Antonines. — XIV. Increasing causes of decline Page 740 — 764. CHAPTER IX. THE MIDDLE AGES. K. Unity of character in ancient civilization. — Great diversity of the elements of modern civilization.- — I. Elementary principles derived from the Roman Empire. — II. The Chris- tian Church. — III. The Barbarian World. — IV. Unsettled condition of individuals. — V. Of Governments and States. — Social developments arising jut of the elements enumer- ated. — 1. Impulses towards an escape from barbarism. — II. Influences of the Church. — III. The two-fold influences of Feudalism. — IV. General insurrection of the cities. — V. Effects of their enfranchisement. — VI. Effects of the Crusades. — Attempts at Centralization of Power. — 1. Attempt at Theocratic organization. — II. Attempts at Democratic organiza- tion. — 111. Attempts at a union of the various elements of society. — IV. Successful attempts et Monarchical organization. — V Moral and intellectual changes in the fifteenth century. — VL Revival of Literature. — VII. Inventions. — VIII. Discoveries Page 764— 786 CHAPTER X. THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. The Reformation. — I. The causes that led to the Reformation. — II. Progress and extent ol the Reformation. — III. Character of the Reformation. — IV. Effects of the Reformation Page 786—8 U2. CHAPTER XL THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. Tie English Revolution.—!. The contest that natural’y followed the Reformation. — II. Partial suppression of the Reformation in England, one :ause of the English Revolution. — III. The existence of free institutions in England, a sect nd cause. — IV. Resistance to mon- archy, and its overthrow, in England. - V. Restoration of monarchy, and renewal of the coi test. — VI. Concluding event of the Revolution Page 802 — 816. CHAPTER XII. THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. The French Revolution. — I. The French Revolution— what is necessary to a correct under- standing of it. — II. Growth and character of the French Monarchy and Nobility. — III. Origin of the Third Estate, or Commons. — IV. Character and position of the Gallican Church. — V. Peculiarities of early French Legislation. — VI. Relations between the ruling orders and the people during the century preceding the Revolution. — VII. Causes of the development and spread of Free Principles. — VIII. Louis XVI. — The First Act in the Drama of the Revo- lution. — Progress of the Revolution— IX. Change in its character.— X. Termination, and Results Pago 81G — 845 PART I. ANCIENT HISTORY CHAPTER I. TEE EARLY AGES OF THE WORLD, PRIOR TO THE COMMENCE MENT OF GRECIAN HISTORY. ANALYSIS. 1. Th«c Creation. The earth a chaotic mass. Creation of light. Separation of land and water. — 2. Vegetable life. The heavenly bodies. Animal life. — it. God’s blessing on his works. Creation of man. Dominion given to him. Institution of the sabbath. — 4. An- tediluvian History. The subjects treated of. — 5. The earth immediately after the deluge. The inheritance given to Noah and his children. — 6. The building of Babel. [Euphrates. Geo- graphical and historical account of the surrounding country.] Confusion of tongues, and dis- persion of the human family. — 7. Supposed directions taken by Noah and his sons. — 8. Egypt- ian History. Mis'raim, the founder of the Egyptian nation. [Egypt.] , The government established by him. Subverted by Menes, 2400 B. C. — 9. Accounts given by Herod’ otus, Jose- phus, and others. [Memphis and Thebes. Description of.] Traditions relating to Menes His great celebrity. [The Nile.] — 10. Egyptian history from M tines to Abraham. The erection of the Egyptian pyramids. [Description of them.] Evidences of Egyptian civilization during the time of Abraham. — 11. The Shepherd Kings in Lower Egyp,t. Their final expulsion, 1900 B. C. Joseph, governor of Egypt. [Goshen.] Commencement of Grecian history. — 12. Asia- tic History. [Assyria. Nineveh.] Ashur and Nimrod. [Babylon.] The worship of Nim- rod. — 13. Conflicting accounts of Ninus. Assyria and Babylon during his reign, and that of his juccessor. — 14. Account of Semi r' amis. Her conquests, &c. [Indus R.] The history of Assy- ria subsequent to the reign of Semir'amis. 1. The history of the world which we inhabit commences with the first act of creation, when, in the language of Moses, the earliest sacred historian, “ God created the heavens L T “^ REA and the earth.” We are told that the earth was “with- out form, and void” — a shapeless, chaotic mass, shrouded in a man tie of darkness. But “ God said, let there he light; and there was light.” At the command of the same infinite power the waters rolled together into their appointed places, forming seas and oceans ; and the dry land appeared. 2. Then the mysteries of vegetable life began to start into being ; beautiful shrubs and flowers adorned the fields, lofty trees waved in the forests, and herbs and grasses covered the ground with verdure. /*“ 12 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L The stars, those gems of evening, shone forth in the sky ; and two greater lights were set in the firmament, to divide the day from the night, and to be “ for signs, and for seasons, and for days and for years.” Then the finny-tribes sported in “ the waters of the seas,” the birds of heaven filled the air with their melody, and the earth brought forth abundantly “cattle and creeping things,” and ‘ cve.y living creature after its kind.’’ 3. And when the Almighty architect looked upon the objects of creation, he saw that “ all were good,” and he blessed the works of his hands. Then he “ created man a in his own image ;” in the like ness of God, “male and female created he them;” and he gave them “ dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.” This was the last great act of creation, and thus God ended the work which he had made ; and having rested from his labors, he sanctified a sabbath or day of rest, ever to be kept holy, in grateful remem- brance of Him who made all things, and who bestows upon man all the blessings which he enjoys. 4. The only history of the human family from the creation of il antedi- Adam to ^ ie time °f deluge, b a period of more than luvian his- two thousand years, is contained in the first six chap- TORY ' ters of the book of Genesis, supposed to have been written by Moses more than fourteen hundred years after the flood. The fall of our first parents from a state of innocence and purity, the transgression of Cain and the death of Abel, together with a gen- ealogy of the patriarchs, and an account of the exceeding wicked- ness of mankind, are the principal subjects treated of in the brief history of the antediluvian world. 5. When Noah and his family came forth from the ark, after the deluge had subsided, the earth was again a barren waste ; for the waters had prevailed exceedingly, so that the hill tops and the moun- tains were covered ; and every fowl, and beast, and creeping thing and every man that had been left exposed to the raging flood, had been destroyed from the earth. Noah only remained alive, and they that had been saved with him in the ark ; and to him, and his three sons, whose names were Shem, Ham, and Japheth, the whole earth was now given for an inheritance. 6. About two hundred years after the flood, we find the sons of Noah and their descendants, or many of them, assembled on the a. 5411 b. c. b. 3156 B. C. Chap. I J EARLY AGES. IB banks of tlie Euphrates, 1 in a region called the “ Land of Sliinar,” and there beginning to build a city, — together with a tower, whose top, tnoy boasted, should reach unto heaven. But the Lord came down to see the .city and the tower which the children of men in their pride and impiety were building ; and he there confounded the language of the workmen, that they might not understand one an- other ; and thus the building of the tower, which was called Babel, wac abandoned, and the people were scattered abroad over the whole earth. 7. It is generally supposed that Noah himself, after this event, journeyed eastward, and founded the empire of China ; that Shem was the father of the nations of Southern Asia ; that Ham peopled Egypt ; and that the descendants of J apheth migrated westward and settled in the countries of Europe, or, as they are called in Scripture, the “ Isles of the Gentiles.” 8. Soon after the dispersion of mankind from Babel, it is supposed that Mis' raim, one of the sons of Ham, journeyed into Egypt, 2 where he became the founder of the most ancient nT ' EGYPTIAN and renowned nation of antiquity. The government es- tablished by him is believed to have been that of an aristocratic 1. The Euphrates , the most considerable river of Western Asia, has its sources in the table lands of Armenia, about ninety miles from the south-eastern borders of the Black Sea. The sources of the Tigris are in the same region, but farther south. The general direction of both rivers is south-east, to their entrance into the head of the Persian Gulf. ( See Map , p. 15.) So late as the age of Alexander the Great, each of these rivers preserved a separate course to the sea, but not long after they became united about eighty miles from their mouth, from which point they have ever since continued to flow in a single stream. Both rivers are navigable a considerable distance, — both have their regular inundations ; rising twice a year — first in De- cember, in consequence of the autumnal rains; and next from March till June, owing to the melting of the mountain snows. The Scriptures place the Garden of Eden on the banks of the Euphrates, but the exact site is unknown. We learn that soon after the deluge, the country in the vicinity of the two rivers Tigris and Euphrates, where stood the tower of Babel, was known as the Land of Shinar : afterwards the empire of Assyria or Babylon flourished here; and still later, the country between the two fivers was called by the ancient Greeks, Mesopotamia , — a compound of two Greek words, {mesos and potamos,) signifying “between the rivers.” In ancient times the banks of both rivers were studded with cities of the first rank. On the eastern bank of the Tigris stood Nineveh ; and on both sides of the Euphrates stood the mighty Babylon, “ the "lory oi king- doms,” and “the beauty of the Chaldee’s, excellency.” Lower Mesopotamia, both above and below Babylon, was anciently intersected by canals in every direction, many of which can still be traced; and some of them could easily be restored to their original condition. (See Map , p. 15.) 2. Ancient Egypt, called by the Hebrews Mis’ raim, may be divided into two principal por- tions ; Upper or Southern Egypt, of which Thebes was the capital, and Lower Egypt, whose capital was Memphis. That portion of Lower Egypt embraced within the mouths or outlets of the Nile, the Greeks afterwards called the Delta , from its resemblance to the form of the Greek letter of that name. (A) Ancient Egypt probably embraced all of the present Nubia, and perhaps a part of Abyssinia. Modern Egypt is bounded on the North by the Mediterra- ANCIENT HISTORY. rvboi * r r 14 [Part • priesthood, wliese members were the patrons of the arts and sciences and it is supposed that the nation was divided into three distinct classes, — the priests, the military, and the people ; — the two former holding the latter and most numerous body in subjection. After this government had existed nearly two centuries, under rulers whose names have perished, Menes, a military chieftain, is supposed to have subverted the ancient sacerdotal despotism, and to have estab- lished tlm first civil monarchy, about 2400 years before the Christian era. Menes was the first Pharaoh , a name common to all the king? of Egypt. 9. Upon the authority of Herod' otus 1 and - Josephus, 11 to the first king, Menes, is attributed the founding of Memphis, 3 probably the most ancient city in Egypt. Other writers ascribe to him the build- ing of Thebes 4 also ; but some suppose that Thebes was built many lean, on the east by the Isthmus of Suez and the Red Sea, on the south by Nubia, and on the west by the Great Desert and the province of Barca. The cultivated portion of Egypt, embraced mostly within a narrow valley of from, five to twenty miles in width, is indebted wholly to the annual inundations of the Nile for its fertility; and without them, would soon become a barren waste. The river begins to swell, in its higher parts, in April ; but at the Delta no increase occurs until the beginning of June. Its greatest height there is in September, when the Delta is almost entirely under wajer. By the end of November the waters leave the land altogether, having deposited a rich^alluvium. Then the Egyptian spring commences, at a season corresponding to our winter, when the whole country, covered with a vivid green, bears the aspect of a fruitful garden. (Map, p. 15.) 1. Herod' otus — the earliest of the Greek historians: born 484 B. C. 2. Josephus — a celebrated Jewish historian : born at Jerusalem, A. D. 37. 3. Memphis , a famous city of Egypt, whose origin dates beyond the period of authentic his- tory, is supposed to have stood on the western bank of the Nile, about fifteen miles south from the apex of the Delta — the point whence the waters of the river diverge to enter the sea by different channels. But few relics of its magnificence now occupy the ground where the city once stoed, the materials having been mostly removed for the building of modern edifices. At the time of our Saviour, Memphis was the second city in Egypt, and next in importance to Alexandria, the capital ; but its decay had already begun. Even in the twelfth century of the Christian era, after the lapse of four thousand years from its origin, it is described by an Orien- tal writer as containing “works so wonderful that they confound even a reflecting mind, and such as the most eloquent would not be able to describe.” (Map, p. 15.) 4. The ruins of Thebes, “the capital of a by-gone world,” are situated in the narrow valley of the Nile, in Upper Egypt, extending about seven miles along both banks of the river. Here arc still to be seen magnificent ruins of temples, palaces, colossal statues, obelisks, and tombs, which attest the exceeding wealth and power of the early Egyptians. The city is supposed to have attained its greatest splendor about fifteen hundred years before the Christian era. On the east side of the river the principal ruins are those of Carnac and Luxor, about a mile and a half apart. Among the former are the remains of a temple dedicated to Ammon, the Jupiter of the Egyptians, covering more than nine acres of ground. A large portion of this stupendous structure is still standing. The principal front to this building is 368 feet in length, and 148 feet in height, with a door-way in the middle '64 feet high. One of the halls in this vast building covers an area of more than an acre and a quarter ; and its roof, consisting of enormous slabs of stone, has been supported by 134 huge columns. The roof of what is supposed to have been the sanctuary, or place from which the oracles were delivered, is composed of three blocks of granite, painted with clusters of gil stars on a blue ground. The entrance to this room was marked by four noble obelisks, each 70 feet high, thr°“ nr "mum am combiner At f.nmt Cit- farCtsd. -h~4 / **",»_* f /tv 3 A 4 & / * \ 'A Chap. L] EARLY AGES. 15 centuries later. Menes appears to have been occupied, during most of his reign, in wars with foreign nations to us unknown. According to numerous traditions, recorded in later ages, he also cultivated the arts of peace ; he protected religion and the priesthood, and erected temples ; he built walls of defence on the frontier of his kingdom — • and he dug numerous canals, and constructed dikes, both to draw off vs to be seen the remains of a magnificent palace, about 800 feet in length by 200 in width. On es*;h side of the doorway is a colossal statue, measuring 44 feet from the ground. Fronting these statues were two obelisks, each formed of a single block of red granite, 80 feet in height, and beautifully sculptured. A few years ago one of these obelisks was taken down, and con- veyed, at great expense, to the city of Paris, where it has been erected in the Place de la Con- corde. Among the ruins on the west side of the river, at Medinet Abou, are two sitting colossal figures, each about 50 feet in height, supported by pedestals of corresponding dimensions. On the same side of the river, in the mountain-range that skirts the valley, and westward of the ruins, are the famous catacombs, or buria’-places of the ancient inhabitarts, excavated in the •olid rock. {Map, p. 150 16 . ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L the waters of the Nile 1 for enriching the cultivated lands, and to prevent inundations. His name is common in ancient records, while many subsequent monarchs of Egypt have been forgotten. Monu- ments still exist which attest the veneration in which he was held by his posterity. 10. From the time of Menes until about the 21st century before Christ, the period when Abraham is supposed to have visited Egypt, 1 little is known of Egyptian history. It appears, however, from hieroglyphic' inscriptions, first interpreted in the present century, and sorroborated by traditions and some vague historic records, that the greatest Egyptian pyramids 2 were erected three or four hundred years before the time of Abraham, and eight or nine hundred year? before the era of Moses, — showing a truly astonishing degree of power and grandeur attained by the Egyptian monarchy more than four thousand years ago. When Abraham visited Egypt he was re- 1. The Nile , a large river of eastern Africa, is formed by the junction of the White River and the Blue River in the country of Sennaar, whence the united stream flows northward, in a very winding course, through Nubia and Egypt, and enters the Mediterranean through two mouths, those of Rosetta and Damietta, the former or most westerly of which has a width of about 1800 feet; and the latter of about 900. The Rosetta channel has a depth of about five feet in the dry season, and the Damietta channel of seven or eight feet when the river is lowest. Formerly the Nile entered the sea by seven different channels, several of which still occasionally serve for canals, and purposes of irrigation. During the last thirteen hundred miles of its course, the Nile receives no tributary on either side. The White river, generally regarded as the true Nile, about whose source no satisfactory knowledge has yet been obtained, is supposed to have its rise in the highlands of Central Africa, north of the Equator. (JWap, p. 15.) 2. The pyramids of Egypt are vast artificial structures, most of them of stone, scattered a* irregular intervals along the western valley of the Nile from Meroe, (Mer-o-we) in modern Nubia, to the site of ancient Memphis near Cairo. (Ki-ro.) The largest, best known, and most celebrated, are the three pyramids of Ghizeh, situated on a platform of rock about 150 feet above the level of the surrounding desert, near the ruins of Memphis, seven or eight miles south-west from Cairo. The largest of these, the famous pyramid of Cheops, is a gigantic struc- ture, the base of which covers a surface of about eleven acres. The sides of the base corre- spond in direction with the four cardinal points, and each measures, at the foundation, 746 feet. The perpendicular height is about 480 feet, which is 43 feet 9 inches higher than St. Peters at Rome, the loftiest edifice of modern times. This huge fabric consists of two hundred and si> layers of vast blocks of stone, rising above each other in the form of steps, the thickness of which diminishes as the height of the pyramid increases, the lower layers being nearly five fee! In thickness, and the upper ones about eighteen inches. The summit of the pyramid appear? to have been, originally, a level platform, sixteen or eighteen feet square. Within this pyramid several chambers have been discovered, lined with immense slabs of granite, which must have been conveyed thither from a great distance up the Nile. The second pyramid at Ghizeh is coated over with polished stone 140 feet downwards from the summit, thereby removing the inequalities occasioned by the steps, and rendering the surface smooth and uniform. Herod' o- tus states, from information derived from the Egyptian priests, that one himdred thousand mer were employed twenty years in constructing the great pyramid of Ghizeh, and that ten yeart. nad been spent, previously, in quarrying the stones and conveying them to the place. The re- maining pyramids of Egypt correspond, in their general character, with the one described, with the exoeption that several of them are constructed of sun-burnt brick. No reasonable douo bow exists that the pyramids were designed as the burial places of kings. a. 2077 b. C. Chap. I] EARLY AGES. 17 ceived with the hospitality and kindness becoming a civilized nation ; and when he left Egypt, to return to his own country, the ruling monarch dismissed him and all his people, “ rich in cattle, in silver, and in gold.” 11. Nearly a hundred years before the time of Abraham’s visit to Egypt, Lower Egypt had been invaded and subdued -1 by the Hyc'sos, or Shepherd Kings, a roving people from the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, —probably the same that were known, at a later period, in sacred history, as the Philistines, and still later as the Phoenicians Kings of this race continued to rule over Lower Egypt during a period of 260 years, but they were finally expelled, b and driven back to their original seats in Asia. During their dominion, Upper Egypt, with Thebes its capital, appears to have remained under the government of the native Egyptians. A few years after the expulsion of the Shepherd Kings, Joseph was appointed 0 governor or regent of Egypt under one of the Pharaohs ; and the family of Jacob was settled d in the land of Goshen. 1 It was during the resi- dence of the Israelites in Egypt that we date the commencement of Grecian history, with the supposed founding of Argos by In' achus, 1856 years before the Christian era. 12. During the early period of Egyptian history which we have described, kingdoms arose and mighty cities were found- ed in those regions of Asia first peopled by the imme- diate descendants of Noah. After the dispersion of mankind from Babel, Ashur, one of the sons of Shem, remained in the vicinity of that place; and by many he is regarded as the founder of the Assyrian empire, 2 and the builder of Nineveh. 3 But 1. “The land of Goshen lay along the most easterly branch of the Nile, and on the east side of it ; for it is evident that at the time of the Exode the Israelites did not cross the Nile. (Hale’s Analysis of Chronology, i. 374.) “The ‘land of Goshen’ was between Egypt and Canaan, not far from the Isthmus of Suez, on the eastern side of the Nile.” (See Map, p. 15.) ( Cockayne's Hist, of the Jews , p. 7.) 2. The early province or kingdom of Assyria is usually considered as having been on th* eastern bank of the river Tigris, having Nineveh for its capital. But it is probable that both Nineveh and Babylon belonged to the early Assyrian empire, and that these two cities were at times the capitals of separate monarchies, and at times united under one government, whose territories were ever changing by conquest, and by alliances with surrounding tribes or nations. 3. The city of Nineveh is supposed to have stood on the edit bank of the Tigris, opposite the modem city of Mosul. (See Mop, p. 15.) Its site was probably identical with that of the pre- sent small village of Nunia, and what is called the “ tomb of Jonah which are surrounded by vast heaps of ruins, and vestiges of mounds, from which bricks and pieces of gypsum are dug nut, v ith inscriptions closely resembling those found among the ruins of Babylon. Of '.he early history of Ninaveh little is known. Some early writers describe it as larger than Babylon; but little dependence can be placed on their statements. It is believed, however, a 2159 B. C. b. 1900 B C. c. 1872 B. C. d. 1863 B. C. ■8 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 others 1 ascribe this honor to Nimrod, a grandson of Ham, who, as they suppose, having obtained possession of the provinces of Ashur, built Nineveh, and encompassing Babel with walls, and rebuilding the desert ed city, made it the capital of his empire, under the name of Babylon, that the walls Included, besides the buildings of the city, a large extent of well-cultivated gar- dens and pasture grounds. In the ninth century before Christ, it was described by the prophet lonaL as “an exceeding great city of three days’ journey,” and as containing “more than six' Wore thousand persons that could not distinguish between their right hand and their left.” It is generally believed that the expression here used denoted children , and that the entire popu- lation of the city numbered seven or eight hundred thousand souls. Nineveh was a city of great commercial importance. The prophet Nahum thus addresses her: “Thou brut multiplied thy merchants above the stars of heaven.” (iii. 16.) Nineveh was besieged and taken by Arbaces the Mede, in the eighth century before Christ; and in the year 812 it fell into the hands of Ahasuerus, or Cyaxares, king of Media, who took great “spoil of silver and gold, and none end of the store and glory, out of all her pleasant furniture,” making her “empty, and void, and waste.” (Map, p. 15.) 1. According to our EngUsh Bible (Genesis, x. 11), “ Ashur went forth out of the land of Shi- nar (Babylon) and builded Nineveh.” But by many this reading is supposed to be a wrong translation, and that the passage should read, “ From that land he (Nimrod) went forth into Ashur, (the name of a province,) and built Nineveh.” (“ De terra ilia egressus est Assur et aedificavit Nineveh.” (See Anthon’s Classical Dictionary, article Assyria. See, also, the subject examined in Hale’s Analysis of Chronology, i. 450-1.) 2. Ancient Babylon, once the greatest, mosfcmagmflcent, and most powerful city of the world, stood on both sides of the river Euphrates, about 350 miles from the entrance of that stream into the Persian Gulf. The building of Babel was probably the commencement of the city, but it is supposed to have attained its greatest glory during the reign of the Assyrian queen, Serair’- amis. Different writers give different acccounts of the extent of this city. The Greek historian Herod’ otus, who visited it in the fourth century before Christ, while its walls were still standing and much of its early magnificence remaining, described it as a perfect square, the walls of each side being 120 furlongs, or fifteen miles in length. According to this computation the citj embraced an area of 225 square miles. But Diodorus reduces the supposed area to 72 squar* miles ; — equal, however, to three and a half times the area of London, with all its suburbs Some writers have supposed that the city contained a population of at least five millions of people. Others have reduced this estimate to one million. It is highly improbable that the whole of the immense area inclosed by the walls was filled with the buildings of a compact city. The walls of Babylon, which were built of large bricks cemented with bitumen, are said to nave been 350 feet high, and 87 feet in thickness, flanked with lofty towers, and pierced by 100 gates of brass. The two portions of the city, on each side of the Euphrates, were connected by a bridge of stone, which rested on arches of the same material. The temple of Jupiter Belus, supposed to have been the tower of Babel, is described by Herod’ otus as an immense structure, square at the base, and rising, in eight distinct stories, to the height of nearly 600 feet. Herod- otus says that when he visited Babylon the brazen gates of this temple were still to be seen, nd that hi the upper story there was a couch magnificently adorned, and near it a table of solid gold. Herod’ otus also mentions a statue of gold twelve cubits high, — supposed to have been the “golden image” set up by Nebuchadnezzar. The site of this temple has been identified as that of the ruins now called by the Arabs the “Birs Nimroud,” or Tow ci of Nimrod. Later writers than Herod’ otus speak of a tunnel under the Euphrates — subterranean banquet ing rooms of brass — and hanging gardens elevated three hundred feet above the city; but ait Herod’ otus is silent on these points, serious doubts have been entertained of the existence of these structures. Nothing now remains of the buildings of ancient Babylon but immense and shapeless masses of ruins ; their sites being partly occupied by the modem and meanly built town of Hillah, on the western bank of the Euphrates. This town, surrounded by mud walls, contains a mixed Arabian and Jewish population of six or seven thousand souls. (Map, p. 15.) Chap. I.J EARLY AGES. 19 about GOO years after the deluge, and 2555 years before the Chris- tian era. After his death, Nimrod was deified for his great actions, and called Belus : and it is supposed that the tower of Babel, rising high above the walls of Babylon, but still in an unfinished state, was consecrated to his worship. 13. While some believe that the monarch Ninus was the son of Nimrod, and that Assyria and Babylon formed one united empire under the immediate successors of the first founder ; others regaru Ninus as an Assyrian prince, who, by conquering Babylon, united the hitherto separate empires, more than four hundred years after the reign of Nimrod; while others still regard Ninus as only a pei> Bonification of Nineveh- a During the reign of Ninus, and also during that of his supposed queen and successor, Semir' amis, the boundaries of the united Assyrian and Babylonian empires are said to have been greatly enlarged by conquest ; but the accounts that are given of these events are evidently so exaggerated, that little re- liance can be placed upon them. 14. Semir' amis, who was raised from an humble station to be- come the queen of Ninus, is described as a woman of uncommon courage and masculine character, the main object of whose ambition was to immortalize her name by the greatness of her exploits. Her conquests are said to have embraced nearly all the then known world, extending as far as Central Africa on the one hand, and as far as the Indus, 1 in Asia, on the other. She is said to have raised, at one time, an army of more than three millions of men, and to have em- ployed two millions of workmen in adorning Babylon — statements wholly inconsistent with the current opinion of the sparse population of the world at this early period. After the reign of Semir' amir, which is supposed to have been during the time of the sojourn of the Israelites in Egypt, little is known of the history of Assyria for more than thirty generations. 1. Th8 river Indus , or Sinde, rises in the Hiramaleh mountains, and running in a soutl wo>4 kIj direction enters the Arabian Sea near the western extremity of Hindostan. a. Niebuhr’s Ancient Hist, i. 55. 20 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L CHAPTER II. THE FABULOUS AND LEGENDARY PERIOD OF GRECIAN HISTORY : ENDING WITH THE CLOSE OF THE TROJAN WAR, 1183 B C. ANALYSIS. 1. Extent of Ancient Greece. Of Modem Greece. The most ancient name of Bie country. — 2. The two general divisions of Modem Greece. Extent of Northern Greece. Of the Mor6a. Whole area of the country so renowned in history. — 3. The general surface o’. the country. Its fertility.— 4. Mountains of Greece. Rivers. Climate. The seasons. Scenery Classical associations. 5. Grecian Mythology, the proper introduction to Grecian history.— 6. Chaos, Earth, and Heaven. The offspring of Earth and U' ranus. [U' ranus ; the Titans : the Cyclopes.]— 7. U' ranus Is dethroned, and is succeeded by Sat' urn. [The Furies: the Giants: and the Melian Nymphs. Venus. Sat' urn. Jupiter. Nep'tune. Pluto.]— 8. War of the Titans against Sat' urn. War of the Giants with Jupiter. The result. New dynasty of the gods. — 9. The wives of Jupiter. [Juno.] His offspring. [Mer'cury. Mars. Apol'lo. Vul'can. Di&na. Miner' va.] Other celestial divinities. [C6res. Ves'ta.] — 10. Other deities not included among the celestials. [Bac’ chus. Iris. Hebe. The Muses. The Fates. The Graces.] Monsters. [Harpies. Gor'- gons.] Rebellions against Jupiter. [Olym' pus.} —11. Numbers, and character, of the legends of the gods. Vulgar belief, and philosophical explanations of them. 12. Earliest Inhabitants or Greece. The Pelas gians. Tribes included under this name. — 13. Character and civilization of the Pelas’gians. [Cyclopean structures. Asia Minor.]— 14. Foreign Settlers in Greece. Reputed founding of Ar’gos. [Ar'gos. Ar'- golis. Oc6anus. In’ achus.] The accounts of the early Grecian settlements not reliable. — 15. The founding of Athens. [At' tica. Ogy' ges.] The elements of Grecian civilization attributed to C6crops. The story of C6crops doubtless fabulous.— 16. Legend of the contest between Min- er'va and Nep'tune. — 17. Cran’aus and Amphic'tyon. Dan’aus and Cad’ mus. [Bceotia. Thebes.]— 18. General character of the accounts of foreign settlers in Greece. Value of these tra- ditions. The probable truth in relation to them, which accounts for the intermixture of foreign with Grecian mythology. [Aegean Sea.] 19. The Hellenes appear in Thessaly, about 1384 B. C., and become the ruling class among the Grecians. — 20. Hellen the son of Deucalion. The several Grecian tribes. The A361ian tribe. — 21. The Heroic Age. Our knowledge of Grecian history during this period. Character and value of the Heroic legends. The most important of them. [1st. Hercules. 2d. Th6seus. 3d* Argonautic expedition. 4th. Theban and Ar’golic war.] — 22. The Argonautic expedition thought the most important. Probably a poetic fiction. [Samothrace. Euxine Sea.] Proba- bility of naval expeditions at this early period, and their results. [Minos. Crete.]— 23. Open- ing of the Trojan war. Its alleged causes. [Troy. Lacedaemon.] — 24. Paris, — the flight of Helen, — the war which followed. — 25. Remarks on the supposed reality of the war. [The fable of Helen.] — 26. What kind m truth is to be extracted from Homer’s account. Cotemporary History. — 1. Our limited knowledge of cotemporary history during this period. Rome. Europe. . Central Western Asia. Egyptian History. — 2. The conquests of Sesos’ tris. [Libya. Ethiopia. The Ganges. Thracians and Scythians.] The columns erect- ed by Sesos' tris. — 3. Statues of Sesostris at Ipsam' boul. Historical sculptures. — 4. Remarks on the evidences of the existence of this conqueror. The close of his reign. Subsequent Egyptim history. — 5. The Israelites at the period of the commencement of Grecian history. Their situation after the death of Jsseph. Their exodus from Egypt, 1648 B. C. — 6. Wander- Inge in the wilderness Passage of the Jordan. [Arabia. Jordan Palestine.] Death ol Chap. II J GRECIAN HISTORY. 21 Moses. Israel during the time of Joshua and x the elders— 7. Israel ruleo by judges until the time of Saul. The Israelites frequently apostatize to idolatry. [Moabites. Canaanites.] — 8. Their deliverance from the Mid'ianites and Am’alekites. [Localities of these tribes.] — 9. De- liverance from the Philistines and Am' mantes. [Localities of these tribes.] Samson, Eli, and Samuel. Saul anointed king over Israel, 1110 B. C. — 10. Closing remarks. 1. Greece, which is the Roman name of the country whose his- l geographi- tory we nex * P rooee( ^ t 10 narrate, but which was called cal descrip by the natives He! las, denoting the country of the ti°n. Hellenes, comprised, in its most flourishing period, aearly the whole of the great eastern peninsula of southern Europe — extending north to the northern extremity of the waters of the Grecian Archipelago. Modern Greece, however, has a less extent on the north, as Thes' saly, Epirus, and Macedonia have been taken from it, and annexed to the Turkish empire. The area of Modern Greece is less than that of Portugal ; but owing to the irregularities of its shores, its range of seacoast is greater than that of the whole of Spain. The most ancient name by which Greece was known to other nations was Ionia, — a term which Josephus derives from Ja- van, the son of Japhet, and grandson of Noah : although the Greeks themselves applied the term Iones only to the descendants of the fabulous I' on, son of Xuthus. 2. Modern Greece is divided into two principal portions : — North- ern Greece or Hel' las, and Southern Greece, or Morea — anciently called Peloponnesus. The former includes the country of the an- cient Grecian States, Acarnania, iEtolia, Locris, Phocis, Doris, Bceotia, Eubce' a, and At' tica ; and the latter, the Peloponnesian States of E' lis, Achaia, Cor'inth, Ar'golis, Laconia, and Messenia; whose localities may be learned from the accompanying map. The greatest length of the northern portion, which is from north-west to south east, is about two hundred miles, with an average width of fifty miles. The greatest length of the Morea, which is from north to south, is about one hundred and forty miles. The whole area of the country so renowned in history under the name of Greece or Hel' las, is only about twenty thousand square miles, which is less than half the area of the State of Pennsylvania. 3. The general surface of Greece is mountainous ; and almost the only fertile splits are the numerous and usually narrow plains along the sea shore and the banks of rivers,, or, as in several places, large basins, which apparently once formed the beds of mountain lakes. The largest tracts of level country are in western Hel' las, and along the northern and north-western shores of the Morea. 22 ANCIENT HISTOKY. [Part I 4. Tlie mountains of Greece are of the Alpine character, and are remarkable for their numerous grottos and caverns. Their abrupt summits never rise to the regions of perpetual snow. There are no navigable rivers in Greece, but this want is obviated by the numerous gulfs and inlets of the sea, which indent the coast on every side, and thus furnish unusual facilities to commerce, while they add to the variety and beauty of the scenery. The climate of Greece is for the most part healthy, except in the low and marshy tracts around the shores and lakes. The winters are short. Spring and autumn are rainy seasons, when many parts of the country are inundated ; tut during the whole summer, which comprises half the year, a cloud in the sky is Tare in several parts of the country. Grecian scenery is unsurpassed in romantic wildness and beauty ; but our deepest inter- est in the country arises from its classical associations, and rhe ruins of ancient art and splendor scattered over it. 5. As the Greeks, in common with the Egyptians and other East era nations, placed the reign of the gods anterior to the race of mortals, therefore Grecian mythology 1 forms the mythology most appropriate introduction to Grecian history. 6. According to Grecian philosophy, first in the order of time came Chaos, a heterogeneous mass containing all the seeds of nature ; then “ broad-breasted Earth,” the mother of the gods, who produced U' ranus, or Heaven, the mountains, and the barren and billowy sea. Then Earth married U' ranus 2 or Heaven, and from this union came a numerous and powerful brood, the Titans 3 and the Cyclopes, 4 and the gods of the wintry season, — Kot' tos, Briareus, and Gy' ges, who had each a hundred hands, — supposed to be personifications of the hail, the rain, and the snow. 1. Mythology, from two Greek words signifying a “ fable ” and a “ discourse ,” is a system of myths, or fabulous opinions and doctrines respecting the deities which heathen nations have supposed to preside over the world, or to influence its affairs. 2. U ranus, from a Greek word signifying “heaven,” or “sky,” wa3 the most ancient of all tbe gods. 3. The Titans were six males — Oceanus, Coios, Crios, Hyperion, Japetus, and Kronos, oi Sat' urn, and six females, — Th6ia, Rh6a, Th6mis, Mnemos’ yne, Phoe' be, and T6thys. Oceanus or the Ocean, espoused his sister T6thys, and their children were the rivers of the earth, and the three thousand Oceanides or Ocean-nymphs. Hyp6rion married his sister Th6ia, by whom he had Aurora, or the morning, and also the sun and moon. 4. The Cyclopes were a race of gigantic size, having but one eye, and that%)laced in the centre oJ the forehead. According to some accounts there were many of this race, but according to the poet Hesiod, the principal authority in Grecian mythology, they were only three in num- ber, Bron' tes, Ster' opes, and dr' ges, words which signify in the Greek, Thunder, Lightning, and the rapid Flame. The poets converted them into smiths — the assistants of the fire-god Vulcan. The Cyclopes were prol ably personifications of the energies of the “powers of tha air.” HEATHEN DEITIES- MERCURY. VULCAN ANDERSON SC* 24 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L 7. The Titans made war upon their father, who was wounded by Sat' urn, 1 the youngest and bravest ot his sons. From the drops of blood which flowed from the wound and^fell upon the earth, sprung the Furies, 2 the Giants, 3 and the Melian nymphs; 4 and from those which fell into the sea, sprung Y enus, 5 the goddess of love and beauty. U'ranus or Heaven being dethroned, Sat' urn, by the consent of his brethren, was permitted to reign in his stead, on condition that he would destroy all his male children : but Rhea his wife concealed from him- the birth of Jupiter, 6 Nep' tune, 7 and Pluto.® 1. Sat' urn , the youngest but most powerful of the Titans, called by the Greeks, Kronos, word signifying: “Time,” is generally represented as an old man, bent by age and infirmity, holding a scythe in his right hand, together with a serpent that bites its own tail, which is an emblem of time, and of the revolution of the year. In his left hand he has a child which he raises up as if to devour it — as time devours all things. When Sat' urn was banished by his son Jupiter, he is said to have fled to Italy, where he employed himself in civilizing the barbarous manners of the people. His reign there was so beneficent and virtuous that mankind have called it the golden age. According to Hesiod, Sat' urn ruled over the Isles of the Blessed, at the end of the earth, by the “ deep eddying ocean.” 2. The Furies were three goddesses, whose names signified the “ Unceasing,” the “ Envier,” and the “ Blood-avenger.” They are usualy represented with looks full of terror, each brand- ishing a torch in one hand and a scourge of snakes in the other. They torment guilty con- sciences, and punish the crimes of bad men. 3. ’Tie Giants are represented as of uncommon stature, with strength proportioned to their gigantic size. The war of the Titans against Sat' urn, and that of the Giants against Jupiter, are very celebrated in mythology. It is believed that the Giants were nothing more than the ener- gies of nature personified, and that the war with Jupiter is an allegorical representation of some tremendous convulsion of nature in early times. 4. In Grecian mythology, all the regions of earth and water were peopled with beautiful fe- male forms called nymphs, divided into various orders according to the place of their abode. The Melian nymphs were those which watched over gardens and flocks. 5. Venus , the most beautiful of all the goddesses, is sometimes represented as rising out o( the sea, and wringing her locks, — sometimes drawn in a sea-shell by Tritons — sea-deities that were half fish and half human — and sometimes in a chariot drawn by swans. Swans, doves, and sparrows, were sacred to her. Her favorite plants were the rose and the myrtle. G. Jupiter , called the “father of men and gods,” is placed at the head of the entire system of the universe. He is supreme over all : earthly monarchs derive their authority from him, and his will is fate. He is generally represented as majestic in appearance, seated on a throne, with a sceptre in one hand, and thunderbolts in the other. The eagle, which is sacred to him, is standing by his side. Regarding Jupiter as the surrounding ether, or atmosphere, the numer- ous fables of this monarch of the gods may be considered allegories which typify the great gen- erative power of the universe, displaying itself in a variety of ways, and under the greatest Ji versity of forms. 7. Nep' tune, the “Earth-shaker,” and ruler of the sea, is second only to Jupiter in powe. He is represented, like Jupiter, of a serene and majestic aspect, seated in a chariot made of a shell, bearing a trident in his right hand, and drawn by dolphins and sea-horses ; while the tritons, nymphs, and other sea-monsters, gambol around him. 8. Pluto, called also II tides and Or’ cus, the god of the lower world, is represented as a man of a stem aspect, seated on a throne of sulphur, from beneath which flow the rivers Lethe or Oblivion, Phleg' ethon, Cocy' tus, and Ach' eron. In one hand he holds a bident, or sceptre with two forks, and in the other the keys of hell. His queen, Pros' erpine, is sometimes seated by him He is described by the poets as a being inexorable and deaf to supplication, and an Chap. II. | GRECIAN HISTORY 25 8. Tl )3 Titans, informed that Sat' urn had saved his children, made war upon him and dethroned him ; but he was restored by his son Jupiter. Yet the latter afterwards conspired against his father, and after a long war with him and his giant progeny, which lasted ten full years, and in which all the gods took part, he drove Sat' urn from the kingdom, and then divided, between himself and his brothers Nep'tune and Pluto, the dominion of the universe, taking heaven as his own portion, and assigning the sea to Nep'tune, and to Pluto the lower regions, the abodes of the dead. With Jupiter and his brethren begins a new dynasty of the gods, being those, for She most part, whom the Greeks recognised and worshipped. 9. Jupiter had several wives, both goddesses and mortals, but Last of all he married his sister Juno, 1 who maintained, permanently, the dignity of queen of the gods. The offspring of Jupiter were numerous, comprising both celestial and terrestrial divinities. The most noted of the former were Mer' cury, 2 Mars, 3 Apol' lo, 4 Vul' can,® object of aversion and hatred to both gods and men. From his realms there is no return, and all mankind, sooner or later, are sure to be gathered into his kingdom. As none of the goddesses would marry the stern and gloomy god, he seized Pros’ erpine, the •laughter of Ceres, while she was gathering flowers, and opening a passage through the earth carried her to his abode, and made her queen of his dominions. 1. Jiino , a goddess of a dignified and matronly air, but haughty, jealous, and inexorable, ia represented sometimes as seated on a throne, holding in one hand a pomegranate, and in the other a golden sceptre, with a cuckoo on its top ; and at others, as drawn in a chariot by pea- cocks, and attended by I' ris, the goddess of the rainbow. The many quarrels attributed to Jupiter and Juno, are supposed to be physical allegories— Jupiter representing the ether, or upper regions of the air, and Juno the lower strata — hence their quarrels are the storms that pass over the earth : and the capricious and quick-changing temper of the spouse of Jove, is typical of the ever-varying changes that disturb our atmos- phere. 2. J\l:r' cury , the confident, messenger, interpreter, and ambassador of the gods, was himself the god of eloquence, and the patron of orators, merchants, thieves and robbers, travellers and shepherds. He is said to have invented the lyre, letters, commerce, and gymnastic exercises. His thieving exploits are celebrated. He is usually represented with a cloak neatly arranged on his person, having a winged cap on his head, and winged sandals on his feet. In his haul he bears his wand or staff, with wings at its extremity, and two serpents twined about it. 3. Jilars, the god of war, was of huge size and prodigious strength, and his voice was lender than that of ten thousand mortals. He is represented as a warrior of a severe and menacing air, dressed in the style of the Heroic Age, with a cuirass on, and a round Grecian shield on hi* arm. He is sometimes seen standing in a chariot, with Bellona his sister for a charioteer. Terror and Fear accompany him ; Discord, in tattered garments, goes before him, and Anger and Clamor follow. 4. rfpol'lo, the god of archery, prophecy, and music, is represented in the perfection of manly strength and beauty, with hair long and curling, and bound behind his head ; his brows are wreathed with bay: sometimes he bears a lyre in his hand, and sometimes a bow, with a gold- en quiver of arrows at his back. 5. Vul' can was the fire-god . of the Greeks, and the artificer of heaven. He was born lame, and his mother Juno was so shocked at the sight that she flung him from Olym'pus. tse forged the thunderbolts of J upiter, also the arms of gods and demi-gods. He is usually repre- sented as of ripe age, with a serious countenance and muscular form. His hair hangs in cur lb 26 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Past I Diana, 1 and Miner' va. a There were two other celestial divinities, Ceres 3 and Yes'ta, 4 making, with Juno, Nep'tune; and Pluto, twelve in all. 10. The number of other deities, not included among the celestials, was indefinite, the most noted of whom were Bac'chus, 5 1'ris,® Hebe,’ the Muses, 8 the Fates, 9 and the Graces ; 10 also Sleep, Dreams, and Death. There were also monsters, the offspring of the gods, pos- essed of free will and intelligence, and having the mixed forms of en his shoulders. He generally appears at his anvil, in a short tunic, with his right arm bar* and sometimes with a pointed cap on his head. 1. Didna , the exact counterpart of her brother Apol' lo, was queen of the woods, and the goddess of hunting. She devoted herself to perpetual celibacy, and her chief joy was to speed like a Dorian maid over the hills, followed by a train of nymphs, in pursuit of the flvinar game. She is represented as a strong, active maiden, lightly clad, with a bow or hunting spear in her hand, a quiver of arrows on her shoulders, wearing the Cretan hunting-shoes, and attended by a hound. 2. Miner' va, the goddess of wisdom and skill, and, as opposed to Mars, the patroness and teacher of just and scientific warfare, is said to have sprung, full armed, from the brain of Ju piter. She is represented with a serious and thoughtful countenance ; her hair hangs in ring' lets over her shoulders, and a helmet covers her head : she wears a long tunic or mantle, and bears a spear in one hand, and an aegis or shield, on which is a figure of the Gorgon’s head, in the other. 3. Ceres was the goddess of grain and harvests. The most celebrated event in her history is the carrying off of her daughter Pros' erpine by Pluto, and the search of the goddess after her throughout the whole world. The form of Ceres is like that of Juno. She is represented bear- ing poppies and ears of com in one hand, a lighted torch in the other, and wearing on her head a garland of poppies. She is also represented riding in a chariot drawn by dragons, and dis- tributing corn to the different regions of the earth. 4. Ves' ta, the virgin goddess who presided over the domestic hearth, is represented a long flowing robe, with a veil on her head, a lamp in one hand, and a spear or javelin in the other. In every Grecian city an altar was dedicated to her, on which a sacred fire was kept constantly burning. In her temple at Rome the sacred fire was guarded by six priestesses, called the Vestal Virgins. 5. Bac’ chus , the god of wine, and the patron of drunkenness and debauchery, is representec as an effeminate young man, with long flowing hair, crowned with a garland of vine leaves, and generally covered with a cloak thrown loosely over his shoulders. In one hand is holds a goblet, and in the other clusters of grapes and a short dagger. 6. r ris , the “ golden winged,” was the goddess of the rainbow, and special messenger of the king and queen of Olympus. 7. The blooming Hebe , the goddess of Youth, was a kind of maid-servant who handed around the nectar at the banquets of the gods. 8. The Muses, nine in number, were goddesses who presided over poetry, music, and all the liberal arts and sciences. They are thought to be personifications of the inventive powers cl the mind, as displayed in the several arts. 9. The Fates were three goddesses who presided over the destinies of mortals : — 1st, C16th o, Who held the distaff ; 2d, Lach’ esis, who spun each one’s portion of the thread of&fe ; and M, At' ropos, who cut off the tltread with her scissors. “Clotho and Lach' esis, whose boundless sway, With At' ropos, both men and gods obey !” — Hksiod. 10. The Graces were three young and beautiful sisters, whose names signified, respectively, (Splendor, Joy, and Pleasure. They are supposed to have been a symbolical representation of all that is beautiful and attractive. They are represented as dancing together, or standing witk their arms entwined. Chap. II J GRECIAN HISTORY. 27 animals and men. Such were the Har'pies; 1 the Gorgons;* the winged horse Peg' asus ; the fifty, or, as some say, the hundred head- ed dog Cer'berus; the Cen'taurs, half men and half horses; the Ler'nean Ily'dra, a famous water serpent ; and Scyl'la and Charyb'- dis, fearful sea monsters, the one changed into a rock, and the other into a whirlpool on the coast of Sicily, — the dread of mariners. Many rebellious attempts were made by the gods and demi gods to dethrone Jupiter; but by his unparalleled strength he overcame all his enemies, and holding his court on mount 0 lyin' pus, 3 reigned su- preme god over heaven and earth. 1 1. Such is the brief outline of Grecian mythology. The legends of the gods and goddesses are numerous, and some of them are of exceeding interest and beauty, while others shock and disgust us by the gross impossibilities and hideous deformities which they reveal. The great mass of the Grecian people appear to have believed that their divinities were real persons ; but their philosophers explained the legends concerning them as allegorical representations of general physical and moral truths. The Greek, therefore, instead of wor- shipping nature, worshipped the powers of nature personified. 12. The earliest reliable information that we possess of the country denominated Greece, represents it in the possession of m EARLIEST a number of rude tribes, of which the Pelas' gians were inhabitants the most numerous and powerful, and probably the most OF GREECE - indent. The name Pelas' gians was also a general one, under which were included many kindred tribes, such as the Pol' opes, Cha- ones, and Grse' ci ; but still the origin and extent of the race are in volved in much obscurity. 13. Of the early character of the Pelas' gians, and of the degree of civilization to which they had attained before the reputed found- ing of Ar' gos, we have unsatisfactory and conflicting accounts. On the one hand they are represented as no better than the rudest bar- barians, dwelling in caves, subsisting on reptiles, herbs, and wild fruits, and strangers to the simplest arts of civilized life. Other and more reliable traditions, however, attribute to them a knowledge of 1. Tho Har' pies were three-winged monsters who had female faces, and the bodies, wings, and claws of birds. They are supposed to be personifications of the terrors of the storm — de- mons riding upon the wind, and directing its blasts. 2. The Our' gons were three hideous female forms, who turned to stone all whom they fixed their eyes upon. They are supposed to be personifications of the terrors of the sea. 3. Olympus is a celebrated mountain of Greece, near the north-eastern coast of Thessaly. To the highest summit in ihe range the name Olympus was specially applied by the poets. It was the tabled residence of the gods; and hence the name “Olym'pus” was frequently used lor Heaven,” 28 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I agriculture, and some little acquaintance with navigation ; while there is a strong probability that they were the authors* 1 of those huge structures commonly called Cyclopean, 1 remains of which are still visible in many parts of Greece and Italy, and on the western coast cf Asia Minor. 2 14. Ar'gos, 3 the capital of Ar'golis, 4 is generally considered the iv. foreign most anc i ent city of Greece ; and its reputed founding settlers in by In' achus, a son of the god Oceanus, 5 1856 years be- geeeoe. fore the Christian era, is usually assigned as the period of the commencement of Grecian history. But the massive Cyclo- pean walls of Ar' gos evidently show the Pelas' gic origin of the place, in opposition to the traditionary Phoenician origin of In' achus, whose very existence is quite problematical. And indeed the ac- counts usually given of early foreign settlers in Greece, who planted colonies there, founded dynasties, built cities, and introduced a 1. The Cyclopean structures were works of extraordinary magnitude, consisting of walls and circular buildings, constructed of immense blocks of stone placed upon each other without cement, but so nicely fitted as to form the most solid masonry. The most remarkable are cer- tain walls at Tir'yns, or Tiryn'thus, and the circular tower of At' reus at Mycena, both cities of Ar’golis in Greece. The structure at Mycena is a hollow cone fifty feet in diameter, and at many in height, formerly terminating in a point ; but the central stone and a few others have been removed. The Greek poets ascribed these structures to the three Cyclopes Brontes , Star'- opes, and Ar' ges, fabulous one-eyed giants, whose employment was to fabricate the thunder- bolts of Jupiter. (See Cyclopes , p. 22.) 2. Asia Minor , (or Lesser Asia,) now embraced mostly in the Asiatic portion of Turkey, comprised that western peninsula of Asia which lies between the waters of the Mediterranean and the black Sea. (See Map , No. IV.) 3. Ar' fro s, a city of southern Greece, and anciently the capital of the kingdom of Ar'golis, is situated on the western bank of the river In’ achus, two miles from the bottom of the Gulf of Ar’ gos, and on the western side of a plain ten or twelve miles in length, and four or five in width. The eastern side of the plain is dry and barren, and here were situated Tir' yns, from which Her'cules departed at the commencement of his “labors,” and Myc6na, the royal city of Agamem' non. The immediate vicinity of Ar’ gos was injured by excess of moisture. Here, near the Gulf, was the marsh of Ler' na, celebrated for the Ler’ nean Hy' dra, which Her’cules slew. But few vestiges of the ancient city of Ar’ gos are now to be seen. The elevated rock on which stood % the ancient citadel, is now surmounted by a modern castle. The town suffered much during the revolutionary struggle between the Greeks and Turks. The present popula- tion is about 3,000. (See Map, No. I.) 4. Ar'golis, a country of Southern Greece, is properly a neck of land, deriving its name from Its japital city, Ar' gos, and extending in a south-easterly direction from Arcadia fifty-four mile* into the sea, where it terminates in the promontory of Scil’ laeum. Among the noted places in Ar' gvlis have been mentioned Ar' gos, Mycenae, Tir' yns, and the Ler’ nean marsh. Ntmea, in the north of Ar' golis, was celebrated for the JCernean linn , and for the games instituted there in honor of Nep’ tune. Naiiplia, or Napoli di Romani, which was the post and arsenal of ancient Ar'gos during the best period of Grecian history, is now a flourishing, enterprising, and beautiful town of about 16,000 inhabitants. (See Map, No. I.) 5 Oceanus. (See “The Titans ,” p. 22) In' achus was probably only a river, personified into Ine founder of a Grecian state. a. Thirwall’s Greece i. p. 52; Anthon’s Classical Diet., articles Pelasgi and Ar' gos ; al*e ttieren’s Manual of Ancient History, p. 119. Chap I 1] GRECIAN HISTORY. 29 knowledge of the arts unknown to the ruder natives, must be taken with a great degree of abatement. 15. Cecrops, an Egyptian, is said to have led a colony from the Delta to Greece about the year 1556 B. C. Two years later proceeding to At' tica, 1 which had been desolated by a deluge a cen tury before, during the reign of Og' yges, 2 he is said to have founded, on the Cecropian rock, a new city, which he called Athens, 3 in honoi of the Grecian goddess Athe' na, whom the Romans called Miner' To Cecrops has been ascribed the institution of marriage, and the introduction of the first elements of Grecian civilization ; yet, not only has the Egyptian origin of Cecrops been doubted, but his very existence has been denied, a and the whole story of his Egyptian col- ony, and of the arts which he is said to have established, has been attributed, with much show of reason, to a homesprung Attic fable. 16. Asa part of the history of Cecrops, it is represented that in his days the gods began to choose favorite spots among the dwellings of men for their residences ; or, in other words, that particular deities began to be worshipped with especial homage in particular cities; and that w r hen Miner' va and Nep'tune claimed the homage of At' tica, Cecrops was chosen umpire of the dispute. Nep' tune asserted that he had appropriated the country to himself before it had been claimed by Miner' va, by planting his trident on the rock of the Acrop' olis of Athens ; and, as proof of his claim, he pointed 1. At' tica, the most celebrated of the Grecian States, and the least proportioned, in extent, of any on the face of the earth, to its fame and importance in the history of mankind, is situ- ated at the south-eastern extremity of Northern Greece, having an extent of about forty-five miles from east to west, and an average breadth of about thirty-five. As the soil of At' tica was mostly rugged, and the surface consisted of barren hills, or plains of little extent, its produce was never sufficient to supply the wants of its inhabitants, who were therefore compelled to ook abroad for subsistence. Thus the barrenness of the Attic soil rendered the people indus trious, and filled them with that spirit of enterprise and activity for which they were so dis- tinguished. Secure in her sterility, the soil of At' tica never templed the cupidity of her neigh- bors, and she boasted that the race of her inhabitants had ever been the same. Among the advantages of At' tica may be reckoned the purity of its air, the fragrance of its shrubs, and the excellence of its fruits, together with its form and position, which marked it out, in an emi- nent degree, for commercial pursuits. Its most remarkable plains are those of Athens and Mar'athon, and its principal rivers the Cephis'sus and llys'sus. ( See Map, No. I.) 2. Og' yges is fabled to have been the first king of Athens and of Thebes also. It is also said that in the time of Og’ yges happened a deluge, which preceded that of Deucalion ; and Og' ygea is said to have been the only person saved when Greece was covered with water. 3. Athens. (See Map No. II. and description.') a. “Notwithstanding the confidence with which this story (that of C6 crops) has been repeated in modem times, the Egyptian origin of C6 crops is extremely doubtful.” — Thirwall i. p. 53 * The story of his leading a colony from Egypt to Athens is entitled to no credit.” — “ The whol# series of Attic kings who are said to have preceded Th6seus, including perhaps Th6seus himself are probably mere fictions .” — AntkorCs Clas. Diet., article “ Cecrops .” 30 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Past I to tlie trident standing there erect, and to the salt spring which had issued from the fissure in the cliff, and which still continued to flow. On the other hand, Miner' va pointed to the olive which shei had planted long ago, and which still grew in native luxuriance by the side of the fountain wnich, she asserted, had been produced at a later period by the hand of Nep' tune. Cecrops himself attested tho truth of her assertion, when the gods, according to one account, but according to another, Cecrops himself, decided in favor of Miner' va who then became the tutelary deity of Athens. 17. Cran'aus, the successor of Cecrops on the list of Attic kings, was probably a no less fabulous personage than his predecessor; and of Amphic' tyon, the third on the list, who is said to have been tho founder of the celebrated Amphictyonic council, our knowledge is as limited and as doubtful as of the former two. a About half a century after the time of Cecrops, another Egyptian, by name Dan' aus, is said to have fled to Greece with a family of fifty daughters, and to have established a second Egyptian colony in the vicinity of Ar' gos ; and about the same time, Cad' mus, 1 a Phoenician, is reported to have led a colony into Boeotia, 2 bringing with him the Phoenician alphabet, the basis of the Grecian, and to have founded Cad' mea, which after- wards became the citadel of Thebes. 3 1. There is no good reason for believing that Cad' mus was the founder of Thebes, as his his- tory is evidently fabulous, although there can be little doubt that the alphabet attributed to him was originally brought from Phoenicia. (See Thirwall,i. p. 107.) We may therefore ven- ture to dismiss the early theory of Cad' mus, and seek a Grecian origin for the name of the sup- posed founder of Thebes. 2. BiBotia, lying north-west of At' tica, is a high and well-watered region, mostly surrounded by mountain ranges, of which the most noted summits are those of Hel’ icon and Cithje' ron •h the south-west. Boeotia is divided into two principal basins or plains, that of Cephis' sus in tho north-west, watered by the river of the same name, and containing the lake of Copais ; and that of Thebes in the south-east, watered by the river Asopus. As many of the streams and lakes of Boeotia find their outlet to the sea by subterranean channels, marshes abound, and the atmosphere is damp, foggy, oppressive, and in many places unhealthy. The fertility of Boeotia, however, is such, that it has always an abundant crop, though elsewhere famine should pre- vail. Boeotia was the most populous of all the Grecian states ; but the very productiveness of the country seems to have depressed the intellectual and moral character of the Boeotians, and to have justified the ridicule which their more enterprising neighbors of barren At' tica heaped upon them. (See JHap , No. I.) 3. Thebes , the ancient capital of Boeotia, was situated near the small river (or brook) Is- o^niis, about five miles south of the lake Hyl'ica. The city was surrounded by high walls, which had seven gates, and it contained many magnificent temples, theatres, gymnasiums, and other public edifices, adorned with statues, paintings, and other works of art. In the most flourishing period of its history, the population of the city amounted to perhaps 50,000. The modern town of Thebes, (called Thiva,) contains a population of about 5,000 souls, and is confined mostly to the eminence occupied by the Acropolis, or citadel, of the ancient city. Prodigious ramparts and artificial mounds appear outside of the town: it is surrounded by a deep fosse a. “ There can be scarcely any reasonable doubt that this Amphic' tyon is a merely fictitious person.” — Thirteall,i. p. 149 Chap. II ] GRECIAN HISTORY. 3) 1 8. These and many other accounts of foreign settlers in Greece during this early period of Grecian history, are so interwoven with the absurdest fables, or, rather, deduced from them, that no reliance can be placed upon their authenticity. Still, these traditions are not without their value, for although the particular persons men- tioned may have had no existence, yet the events related can hardly have been without some historical foundation. It is probable that after the general diffusion of the Pelas' gic tribes over Greece, and while the western regions of Asia and northern Africa were in an unsettled state, various bands of flying or conquering tribes foun their way to the more peaceful shores of Greece through the islands of the JE' gean, 1 bringing with them the arts and knowledge of the countries which they had abandoned. It is thus that we can satis- factorily account for that portion of Grecian mythology which bears evident marks of Phoenician origin, and for that still greater por- tion of the religious notions and practices, objects and forms of Gre- cian worship, which, according to Herod' otus, were derived from the Egyptians. 19. At the time that colonies from the East are supposed to have been settling in Greece, a people called the Hel- v . THE lenes, but whether a Pelas' gic tribe or otherwise is un- Hellenes. certain, first appeared in the south of Thes' saly, 2 about 1384 years before the Christian era, according to the received chronology, and and remains of the old walls are still to be seen ; but the sacred and public edifices of the an- cient city have wholly disappeared. Previous to the late Greek Revolution the city had some handsome mosques, a bazaar shaded by gigantic palm-trees, and extensive gardens, but these were almost wholly destroyed by the casualities of war. ( See Map , No. I.) 1. The JEl gean Sea is that part of the Mediterranean lying between Greece and Asia Minor «ow called the Grecian Archipelago. (See Map , No. III.) 2. Thes’ saly , now included in Turkey in Europe, was bounded on the north by the Cambu- nian mountains, terminating, on the east, in the loftier heights of Olympus, and separating Thes' saijr from Macedonia ; on the east by the JE' gean Sea, which is skirted by ranges of Ossa and Pelion ; on the south by the Malian gulf and the mountain chain of CEta ; and on the west by the chain of Pindus, which separated it from Epirus. In the southern part of this ter- ritory l>3 ween the mountain chains of CEta and Othrys, is the long and narrow valley of the river Snorchius, whicli, though considered as a part of Thes’ saly, forms a separate region, widely distinguished from the rest by its physical features. Between the Othrys and the Cam- bunian mountains lies the great basin of Thes' saly, the largest and richest plain in Greece, en- compassed on all sides by a mountain barrier, broken only at the north-east corner by a deep and narrow cleft, which parts Ossa from Olympus— the defile so renowned in history’as the pass, ar.a in poetry as the Vale of Tem' pe. Through this narrow glen, of about five miles in length, the Peneus, the principal river of Thes' saly, finds its way to the sea ; and an ancient legend asserts that the waters of the Peneus and its tributaries covered the whole basin of Thes' saly, until the arm of Her' cules, or, as some assert, the trident of Nep’ tune, rent asunder the gorge of Tem pe, and thus afforded a passage to the pent-up streams. Herod' otus says. Vo me the separation of these mountains appears to have been the effect of an earthquake.” I Aw Map, No. L) 32 ANCIENT HISTORY . | Past I gradually diffusing themselves over the whole country, became, by their martial spirit, and active, enterprising genius, the ruling class, and impressed new features upon the Grecian character. The Hel lenes gave their name to the population of the whole peninsula, al though the term Grecians was the name applied to them by tlu Romans. 20. In accordance with the Greek custom of attributing the origin of their tribes or nations to some remote mythical ancestor, Hel' len. a son of the fabulous Deucalion, is represented as the father of the Hel' lenic nation. His three sons were JEi' olus, Dorus, and Xv thus, from the two former of whom are represented to have descended the JEolians and Dorians ; and from Achae' us and I' on, sons of Xu- thus, the Achat! ans and lonians , — the four tribes into which tbs Hel' lenic or Grecian nation was for many centuries divided, and which were distinguished from each other by many peculiarities of language and institutions. 1 Hel' len is said to have left his kingdom to A E' olus, his eldest son ; and the AEolian tribe was the one that spread the most widely, and that long exerted the greatest influence in the affairs of the nation, although at a later period it was surpassed by the fame and power of the Dorians and lonians. 21. The period from the time of the first appearance of the Hel- vi. the lenes in Thes' saly, to the return of the Greeks from the heroic age. expedition against Troy, is usually called the Heroic Age. Our only knowledge of Grecian history during this period is derived from numerous marvellous legends of wars, expeditions, and heroic achievements, which possess scarcely the slightest evidence of historical authenticity ; and which, even if they can be supposed to rest on a basis of fact, would be scarcely deserving of notice, as being unattended with any important or lasting consequences, were it not for the light which they throw upon the subject of Grecian mythol- ogy, and the gradual fading away, which they exhibit, of fiction, in the dawn of historic truth. The most important of these legends arc hose which recount the Labors of Her' cules 1 and the exploits of the l. Her' cules , a celebrated hero, is reported to have been a son of the god Jupiter and Alo meua.- While yet an infant, Juno, moved by jealousy, sent two serpents to devour him; but the child boldly seized them in both his hands, and squeezed them to death. 'By an oatli of Jupiter, imposed upon him by the artifice of Juno, Her' cules was made subservient, for twelve years, to the will of Eurys’ theus, his enemy, and bound to obey all his commands. Eurys' theus commanded him to achieve a number of enterprises, the most difficult and arduous ever known, generally called the “twelve labors of Hercules.” But the favor of the gods had com a. “.We believe Hel' len, JE ' olus, Dorus, Achie’us,and l'on,to be merely fictitious persons, -epresentatives of the races which bore their names.” — Thh mil, i. ] . 6G. Chap. II.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 33 Athenian Theseus the events of the Argonautic expedition ;* of the Theban and Ar' golic war of the Seven Captains ; 8 and of the succeeding war of the Epig' onoi, or descendants of the survivors, ifl pletely armed him for the undertaking. Ife had received a sword from Mer'cury, a bou from Apol' lo, a golden breastplate from Vul' can, horses from Nep' tune, a robe from Miner’ va ; and 1 3 himself cut his club from the N 6 mean wood. We have merely room to enumerate hie twelve labors, without describing them.* 1st. He strangled the Nernean lion, which ravaged the country near Myc6nae, and ever aftei l-k thed himself with its skin. ad. He destroyed the Lernean hydra, a water-serpent, which «ad uine heads, eight of them mortal, and one immortal. 3d. He brought into the presence of Eurys' theus a stag, famous for its incredible swiftness and golden horns. 4th. He brought to Mycemfi the wild boar of Eryraan' thus, and during this expedition slew two of the Centaurs, monsters who were half men ar d half horses. 5th. He cleansed the Augean stables in ons day, by changing the courses of the rivers Al' pheus and PAneus. (“To cleanse the Augean stables” has become a common proverb, and is applied to any undertaking where the object is to remove a mass of moral corruption, the accumulation of which renders the task almost Impossible.”) 6th. He destroyed the carnivorous birds which ravaged the country near the Lake Stymphalus in Arc Adi a. 7. He brought alive into Peloponnesus a prodigious wild bull which ravaged the island of Crete. 8th. He brought from Thrace the mares of Diomede, which fed on human flesh. 9th. He obtained the famous girdle of Hippol' yta, queen of the Amazons. 10th. He killed, in an island of the Atlantic, the monster G6ryon, who had the bodies of three men united, and brought away his purple oxen. 11th. He obtained from the garden of the Hesper' ides the golden apples, and slew the dragon which guarded them. 12th. He went down to the lower regions, and brought upon earth the three-headed dog Cer'berus. 1. To Theseus , who is stated to have become king of Athens, are attributed many exploits similar to those performed by fler'cules, and he even shared in some of the enterprises of the latter. By his wise laws ThAscus is said to have laid the principal foundation of Athenian greatness ; but his name, which signifies the Orderer , or Regulator , seems to indicate & period in Grecian history, rather than an Individual. 2. The Argonautic Expedition is said, in the popular legend, to have been undertaken by Jason and fifty-four of the most renowned heroes of Greece, among whom were Theseus and Her' cules, for the recovery of a golden fleece which had been deposited in the capital of Coi'- chis, a province of Asia Minor, bordering on the eastern extremity of the Euxine. The ad vein turers sailed from IoP cos in the ship Ar’ go, and during the voyage met with many adventures. Having arrived at Col’ chis, they would have been unsuccessful in the object of their expedi tion had not the king’s daughter, Medea, who was an enchantress, fallen in love with Jason, and defeated the plans of her father for his destruction. After a long return voyage, filled with marvellous adventures, most of the Argonauts reached Greece in safety, where Her cules, in honor of the expedition, instituted the Olym'pic games. Some have supposed this to have been a piratical expedition ; others, that it was undertakes for the purpose of discovery, or to secure some commercial establishment on the shores of the Euxine, while others have regarded the’legend as wholly fabulous. Says Grote, “ I repeat the opinion long ago expressed, that the process of dissecting the story, in search of a basis of fact, 0 one altogether fruitless.”— Grate’s Hist, of Greece , i. 243. 3. The following are said to have been the circumstances of the Theban and Ar' golic icar After tbe death of CE' dipus, king of Thebes, it was agreed between his two sons, Eteocles am? Polynices, that they should reign alternately, each a year. Eteocles, however, the elder, after his first year had expired, refused to give up the crown to his brother, when the latter, fleeing to Ar'gos, induced Adras'tus, king of that place, to espouse his cause. Adras’ tus marched an anny against Thebes, led by himself and seven captaiiis ; but all the leaders iv sre slain before the city, and the war ended by a single combat between EtAocles and Polynices, * n which both hr ithers fell. This is said to have happened twenty-seven years before the TrojaD war. Ten ears later the war was renewed by the Epig' onoi , descendants of those who were killed in the first ThAban war. Some of the Grecian states espoused the cause of tba Ar’ gives, and others aided the ThAbaus; but in the end Thebes was abandoned by its inhabit ants, and plundered by the Ar’ gives. 3 ANCIENT HTSTORY. 34 [ Part L which Thebes is said to have been plundered by the confederate Greeks. 22. Of these events, the Argonautic expedition has usually been thought of more importance than the rest, as having been conducted against a distant country, and as presenting some valid claims to our belief in its historical reality. But w 3 incline to the opinion, that both the hero and the heroine of tho legend are purely ideal personages connected with Grecian mythology, — that Jason was per haps no other than the Samothracian 1 god or hero Jasion, a the pro- tector of mariners, and that the fable of the expedition itself is a poetic fiction which represented the commercial and piratical voy- ages that began to be made, about this period, to the eastern shores of the Euxine. 2 It is not improbable that voyages similar to that rep- resented to have been made by the Argonauts, or, perhaps, naval expeditions like those attributed to Minos, 3 the Cretan 4 prince and lawgiver, may first have led to hostile rivalries between the inhabitants of the Asiatic and Grecian coasts, and thus have been the occasion of the first conflict between the Greeks and the Tro- jans. 11 23. The Trojan war, rendered so celebrated in early Grecian hi«- 1. Samothr&ce (the Thracian Samos, now Samothraki,) is an island in the northern part ol the JE' gean Sea, about thirty miles south of the Thracian coast. It was celebrated for the mys- teries of the goddess Cyb'ele, whose priests ran about with dreadful cries and howlings, beat- ing on timbrels, clashing cymbals, and cutting their flesh with knives. ( See Map No. III.) ■ 2 . The Euxine (Pon' tus Euxinus) is now called the Black Sea. It lies between the south- western provinces of Russia in Europe, and Asia Minor. Its greatest length, from east to west, Is upwards of 700 miles, and its greatest breadth about 400 miles. Its waters are only about one-seventh part less salt than the Atlantic — a fact attributable to the saline nature of the bot- tom, and of the northern coast. The Euxine is deep, and singularly free from rocks and shoals. (See Mnp No. V.) 3. Minus is said, in the Grecian legends, to have been a son of Jupiter, from whom he learned those laws which he delivered unto men. It is said that he was the first among the Greeks who possessed a navy, and that he conquered and colonized several islands, and finally perished in an expedition against Sicily. Some regard Minos simply as the conc( nlration of that spirit of order, which, about his time, began to exhibit, in the island of Crete, a regular system of laws and government. He seems to be intermediate between the periods of mythol ogy and history, combining, in his person, the characteristics of both. 4. Crete (now called Candia) is a large mountainous island in the Mediterranean Sea, 80 milcn* south-east from Cape Matapan in Greece — ICO miles in length from east to west, with a breadth averaging about 20 miles. Crete was the reputed birth-place of Jupiter, “ king of gods and men.” The laws of Minos are said to have served as a model for those of Lycur’ gus ; and the wealth, number, and flourishing condition of the Cretan cities, are repeatedly referred to by Homer. (See Map No. III.) a. Thirwall’s Greece, i. 77-79, b. According to Herod,' otus , i. 2, 3, the abduction of I-Iel' en, the cause of the Trojan war, w*a In retaliation of the abduction of Medea by Jason in the Argonautic expedition. Bul Herod'- itus goes farther back, and attributes to the Phcenicians the first cause of contention between >he Asiatics and the Grecians, in carrying away from Ar gos, lo, a priestess of Juno. Chap. 1J ] GRECIAN HISTORY. 8b tory by the poems of Homer, 1 2 is represented to ha\e been under- taken about the year 1173 before the Christian era, by the confed erate princes of Greece, against the city and kingdom of Troy, 4 situated on the western coast of Asia Minor. The alleged causes of this war, according to the Grecian legend, were the following : Hel' en, the most beautiful woman of her age, and daughter of Tyn'- darus, king of Lacedae' mon, was sought in marriage by all the princes of Greece; when Tyn' darus, perplexed with the difficulty of ohoosing one without displeasing all the rest, being advised by tlio sage Ulys' ses, bound the suitors by an oath that they would approve of the uninfluenced choice of Hel' en, and would unite together to defend her person and character, if ever any attempts were made to carry her off from her husband. Menelaus became the choice of Ilel' en, and soon after, on the death of Tyn' darus, succeeded to the vacant throne of Lacedae' mon. 3 24. After three years, Paris, son of Priam king of Troy, visited the court of Menelaus, and taking advantage of the temporary ab- sence of the latter, he corrupted the fidelity of Hel' en, whom he induced to flee with him to Troy. Menelaus, returning, prepared to avenge the outrage. He assembled the princes of Greece, who, combining their forces under the command of Agamem' non, brother of Menelaus, sailed with a great armament to Troy, and after a siege of ten years finally took the city by stratagem, and razed it to the ground. (1183 B. C.) Most of the inhabitants were slain or taken prisoners, and the rest were forced to become exiles in distant lands. 1. Homer, the greatest and earliest of the poets, often styled the father of poetry was prob- ably an Asiatic Greek, although seven Grecian cities contended for the honor of his birth. No eircumstaE- “s of his life are known with any certainty, except that he was a wandering poet, and blind. Ti_e principal works of Homer are the Iliad and the Od' yssey , — the former of which relates the circumstances of the Trojan war; and the latter, the history and wandering! of Ulys' ses after the fall of Troy. 2. Troy, the scene of the battles described in the Iliad, stood on a rising ground between th© small river Simois (now theDumbrek) and the Seaman' der, (now the Mendere,) on the esast of Asia Minor, near the entrance to the Hellespont. New Ilium was afterwards built on the spot now believed to be the site of the ancient city, about three miles from the sea. (See Map No. III. and No. IV.) 3. Lacedce'mon, or Spar' ta, the ancient capital of Laconia, was situated in a plain of con Biderable extent, embracing the greater part of Laconia, bounded on the west by the mountain chain of Taygetus, and on the east by the less elevated ridge of mount Thornax, between whioh flows the Eurotas, on the east side of the town. In early times Spar' ta was without walls, Ly- cur'gus having inspired his countrymen with the idea, that the real defence of a town consisted solely in the valor of its citizens ; but fortifications were erected after Sparta became subject to despotic rulers. The remains 01 Spar’ ta are about two miles nor ih-east of tho model n town Mistro. (See Map No. I.) 30 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Fart 1 25. Such is, in brief, tlie commonly-received acecuni of the Tro- jan war, stripped of the incredible but glowing fictions with which the poetic genius of Homer has adorned it. But although the reality of some such war as this can hardly be questioned, yet the causes which led to it, the manner in which it was conducted, and its issue, being gathered, even by Homer himself, only from traditional legends, which served as the basis of other compositions besides the Iliad, are involved in an obscurity which we cannot hope to penetrate. The accounts of Heh en are various and contradictory and so connected with fabulous beings — with gods and goddesses — as clearly to assign her to the department of mythology ; while the real events of the war, if such ever occurred, can hardly be separated from the fictions with which they are interwoven. 1 26. But although little confidence can be placed in the reality of the persons and events mentioned in Homer’s poetic account of the siege of Troy, yet there is one kind of truth from which the poet can hardly have deviated, or his writings would not have been so ac- ceptable as they appear to have been to his cotemporaries ; — and that is, a faithful portraiture of the government, usages, religious no- tions, institutions, manners, and general condition of Grecian society, during the heroic age. a 1. Thus the most ancient account of flel'en is, that she was a daughter of the god Ju piter, hatched from the egg of a swan ; and Ilomer speaks of her in the Iliad as “ begotten of Jupiter.” When, only seven years of age, such were her personal attractions, that Theseus, king of Athens, having become enamored of her, carried her off from a festival at which he saw her danejng ; but her brothers recovered her by force of arms, and restored her to hei family. After her marriage with Mcnelaus, it is said that Jupiter, plotting a war for the pur- pose of ridding the earth of a portion of its overstocked inhabitants, contrived that the beauty of Hel' en should involve the Greeks and Trojans in hostilities. At a banquet of the gods, Dis- cord, by the direction of Jupiter, threw into the assembly a golden apple, on which was in- scribed, “The apple for the Fair one,” (TjJ r the Palace #, (Map No. IV.) ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pari L B* and opulent city were carried away by order of Darius, and settled near the mouth of the Tigris. Darius next turned his resentment against the Athenians and Euboe' ans, who had aided the Ionian revolt, — meditating, however, nothing less than the conquest of all Greece (B. C. 490). The events of the “ Persian War” which fol- lowed, will next be narrated, after we shall have given some general views of cotemporary history, during the period which we have passed ever in the preceding part of the present chapter. COTEMPORARY HISTORY: 1184 to 490 B. C. [I. Phoenician History.] — 1 . The name Phoenicia was applied to the north-western part of Palestine and part of the coast of Syria, embracing the country from Mount Carmel, north, along the coast, to the city and island Aradus, — an extent of about a hundred and fifty miles. The mountain ranges of Lib' anus and Anti-Lib' anus formed the utmost extent of the Phoenician territory oh the east. The surface of the country was in general sandy and hilly, and poorly adapted to agriculture ; but the coast abounded in good harbors, and the fisheries were excellent, while the mountain ranges in the interior afforded, in their cedar forests, a rich supply of timber for naval and other purposes. 2. At a remote period the Phoenicians, who are supposed to have been of the race of the Canaanites, 3 - were a commercial people, but the loss of the Phoenician annals renders it difficult to investigate their early history. Their principal towns were probably indepen- dent States, with small adjacent territories, like the little Grecian republics ; and no political union appears to have existed among them, except that arising from a common religious worship, until the time of the Persians. The Phoenicians occupied Sicily before th : Greeks ; they made themselves masters of Cy' prus, and they formed settlements on the northern coast of Africa ; but the chief seat of their early colonial establishments was the southern part of Spain, whence they are said to have extended their voyages to Brit- ain, and even to the coasts of the Baltic. 3 It is also related by Herod' otus, (B. IV. 42,) that at an epoch which is believed to correspond to the year 604 before the Chris- tian era, a fleet fitted out by Pharaoh Necho, king of Egypt, but manned and commanded by Phoenicians, departed from a port o" a. Niebuhr’s Lect. on Ancient Hist. i. 113. Chap. IIL] JEWISH HISTORY. 59 the Red Sea, and sailing south, and keeping always to the right, doubled the southern promontory of Africa, and, after a voyage of three years returned to Egypt by the way of the straits of Gibral- tar and tho Mediterranean. Herod' otus farther mentions that the navigators asserted that, in sailing round Africa, they had the sun on their right hand, or to the north, a circumstance which, Herod' otus says, to him seemed incredible, but which we know must have been the case if the voyage was actually performed, because southern Africa lies south of the equatorial region. Thus was Africa prob- ably circumnavigated by the Phoenicians, more than two thousand years before the Portuguese voyage of He Grama. 4. The Phoenicians of Tyre and Sidon had friendly connections with the Hebrews ; and through the Red Sea, and by the way of the Arabian desert, and across the wilderness of Syria, they for a long time carried on the commercial exchanges between Europe and Asia. From the time of the great commotions in Western Asia, which caused the downfall of so many independent States, and their subjection to the monarchs of Babylon and Persia, the com- mercial prosperity of the Phoenicians began to decline ; but it was the founding of Alexandria by the Macedonian conqueror, which proved the final ruin of the Phoenician cities. [II. Jewish History.] — 5. The history of the Jews, which has been brought down to the accession of Saul as king of Israel, pre- sents to the historian a fairer field than that of the Phoenicians, and is now to be continued down to the return of the Jews from their Babylonian captivity, and the completion of the rebuilding of the second temple of Jerusalem. 6. Saul, soon after his accession to the throne, (B. C. 1110,) which was about the time of the Dorian emigration, or the “ Return of the Heraclidse” to the Peloponnesus, gave proof of his military qualifications by a signal slaughter of the Ammonites, who had laid siege to Jabesh-Gil' ead. 1 2 * In a solemn assembly of the tribes at Gil'gai, 8 the people renewed their allegiance to their new sovereign, and there Samuel resigned his office. During a war with the Phil- istines soon after, Saul ventured to ask counsel of the Lord- and assuming the sacerdotal functions, he offered the solemn sacrifice, 1. J&besh-Oil' ead was a town on the east side of the Jordan, in Gil' ead. (J\Iap No. VI.) 2. The Oil' gal here mentioned appears to have been a short distance west sinians to this day .—Kitto's Palestine JEWISH HISTORY. 63 Chap. III.] tant country, and tlie most powerful princes of the surrounding na- tions courted his alliance. With Hiram, king of Tyre, the chief city of the Phoenicians, and the emporium of the commerce of the Eastern world, he was united by the strictest bonds of friendship. Seven years and a half was he occupied in building, at Jerusalem, a magnificent temple to the Lord. He also erected for himself a pal- ace of unrivalled splendor. A great portion of his immense wealth was derived from commerce, of which he was a distinguished patron. Fron ports on the Red Sea, in his possession, his vessels sailed to Ophir, some rich country on the shores of the Indian Ocean. By the aid of Phoenician navigators he also opened a communication with Tar' shish, in western Europe, while the commerce between Central Asia and Palestine was carried on by caravans across the desert. 13. But even Solomon, notwithstanding all his learning and wis- dom, was corrupted by prosperity, and in his old age was seduced by his numerous “ strange wives” to forsake the God of his fathers. He became an idolater : and then enemies began to arise up against him on every side. A revolt was organized in E'dom: 1 an inde- pendent adventurer seized Damascus, and formed a new Syrian king- dom there ; and the prophet Ahijah foretold to Solomon that the kingdom of Israel should be rent, and that the dominion of ten of the twelve tribes should be given to Jeroboam, of the tribe of Eph raim, although not till after the death of Solomon. 14. Accordingly, on the death of Solomon, when Rehoboam his son came to the throne, the ten northern tribes chose Jeroboam for their king ; and Israel and Judah, with which latter was united the tribe of Benjamin, became separate kingdoms. The separation thus effected is called “ The Revolt of the Ten Tribes.” (990 B. C.) The subsequent princes of the kingdom of Israel, as the Ten Tribes were called, were all idolaters in the sight of the Lord, although from time to time they were warned of the consequences of their idolatry by the prophets Elijah, Elisha, Hosea, Amos, Jonah, and others. The history of these ten tribes is but a repetition of calamities and revolutions. Their seventeen kings, excluding two of Ezekiel : “ 1 will make Rabbah of the Ammonites a stable for camels, and a couchiDg place or flocks.” (Ezekiel, xxv. 5.) (Map No. VI.) 1. The E’ domites, inhabitants of Idumea, or E' dom , dwelt, at this time, in the country south and south-east of the Dead Sea. During the Babylonian captivity the E' domites took posses- sion of the southern portion of Judea, and made Hebron their capital. They afterwards em- braced Judaism, and their territory became incorporated with Judea although in the timt ot our Saviour it still retained the name of Idum6a. (Map No. VIA 64 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L pretenders, belonged to seven different families, and were placed on the throne by seven sanguinary conspiracies. At length Shalmanezer, king of Assyria, invaded the country; and Samaria, 1 its capital, after a brave resistance of three years, was taken by storm. The ten tribes were then driven out of Palestine, and carried away captive into a distant region beyond the Euphrates, 719 years before the Christian era. With their captivity the history of the ten tribes ends Their fate is still unknown to this day, and their history remains un- written. 15. After the revolt of the ten tribes, Rehoboam reigned seven- teen years at Jerusalem, over Judah and Benjamin, comprising what was called the kingdom of Judah. During his reign he and his subjects fell into idolatry, for which they were punished by an in- vasion by Slnskak, king of Egypt, who entered Jerusalem and car- ried off the treasures of the temple and the palace. We find some of the subsequent kings of Judah practising idolatry, and suffering the severest punishments for their sins : others restored the worship of the true God ; and of them it is recorded that “ God prospered their undertakings.” 16. At the time when Shalmanezer, the Assyrian, carried Israel away captive, the wicked Ahaz was king over J udah. He brought the country to the brink of ruin, but its fall was arrested by the death of the impious monarch. The good Hezekiah succeeded him, and, aided by the advice of the prophet Isaiah, commenced his reign with a thorough reformation of abuses. He shook off the Assyrian yoke, to which his father Ahaz had submitted by paying tribute. Sennacherib, the son and successor of Shalmanezer, determining to be revenged upon Judah, sent a large army against Jerusalem (711 B. C.) ; but “ the angel of the Lord went forth, and smote, in the camp of the Assyrians, a hundred and fourscore and five thousand men.” The instrument by which the Lord executed vengeance upon the Assjuuans, is supposed by some to have been the pestilential simoom of the desert ; for Isaiah had prophesied of the king of As- syria : “Thus saith the Lord; behold, I will send a blast upon him.” a 17. It is interesting to find an account of the miraculous destruc tion of the Assyrian army in the pages of profane history. Senna- 1. Samdria, (now called Sebustieh,) the capital of the kingdom of Israel, stood on Mon.it ' fameron, about forty miles north from Jerusalem. (Map No. VI.) a. Isaiah, xxxvii. 6, 7 Chap. ILL] JEW/SH HISTORY. Cb cherib was at this time marching against Egypt, whose alliance had been sought by Hezekiah, when, unwilling to leave the hostile power of Judah in his rear, he turned against Jerusalem. It was natural therefore, that the discomfiture which removed the fears of the Egypt- ians, should have a place in their annals. Accordingly, Herod' otus gives an account of it, which he had learned from the Egyptians themselves ; but in the place of the prophet Isaiah, it is an Egyptian priest who invokes the aid of his god against the enemy, and pro diets the destruction of the Assyrian host. 18. Herod' otus relates that the Egyptian king, directed by the priest, marched against Sennacherib with a company composed only of tradesmen and artizans, and that “ so immense a number of mice infested by night the enemy’s camp, that their quivers and bows, together with what secured their shields to their arms, were gnawed in pieces;” and that, “ in the morning the enemy, finding themselves without arms, fled in confusion, and lost great numbers of their men.” Herod' otus also relates that, in his time, there was still standing in the Egyptian temple of Vulcan a marble statue of this Egyptian king, having a mouse in his hand, and with the inscription : “ Learn from my fortune to reverence the gods.” a 19. Hezekiah was succeeded on the throne of Judah by his son Manas' seh, who, in the early part of his reign, revelled in the gross- est abominations of Eastern idolatry. Being carried away captive to Babylon by Sardanapalus, the Assyrian king, he repented of his sins, and was restored to his kingdom. The brief reign of his son A' mon was corrupt and idolatrous. The good Josiah then succeeded to the throne. His reign was an era in the religious government of the nation ; but during an invasion of the country by Pharaoh Necho, king of Egypt, he was mortally wounded in battle. Jerusalem was soon after taken, and Jehoahaz, who had been elected to the throne by the people, was deposed, and carried captive to Egypt, where he died. 20. Not long after this, during the reign of, Jehoiakim, the Egypt- ian monarch, pursuing his conquests eastward against the Babylo- nians, was utterly defeated by Nebuchadnez' zarnear the Euphrates, — an event which prepared the way for the Babylonian dominion over Judea and the west of Asia. Pursuing his success westward, Nebuchadnez' zar came to Jerusalem, when the king, Jehoiakim, submitted, and agreed to pay tribute for Judah ; but as he rebelled a. Herod' otus, Book II. p. 141. 4 66 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pakt I after three years, Nebuchadnez' zar returned, pillaged Jerusalem and carried away certain of the royal family and of the nobles, as hostages for the fidelity of the king and people. (B. C. 605.) Among these were the prophet Daniel and his companions. Je- choniah, the next king of Judah, was carried away to Babylon, with a multitude of other captives, so that “ ljone remained save the poorest people of the land.” 21. The throne in Jerusalem was next filled by Zedekiali, who joined some of the surrounding nations in a rebellion against Nebu- chadnez' zar; but Jerusalem, after an eighteen months’ siege, whose miseries were heightened by the horrors of famine, w r as taken by storm at midnight. Dreadful was the carnage which ensued. Zedc- kiah, attempting to escape, was made prisoner ; and the king of Babylon slew the sons of Zedekiah before his eyes, and put out the eyes of Zedekiah, and bound him with fetters of brass, and carried him to Babylon. Nearly all the wretched inhabitants were made companions of his exile. Jerusalem was burned, the temple levelled with the ground, and the very walls destroyed. (586 B. C.) 22. Thus ended the kingdom of Judah, and the reign of the house of David. Seventy years were the children of Israel detained in captivity in Babylon, reckoning from the time of the first pillag- ing of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnez' zar, a period that had been de- clared in prophecy by Jeremiah, and which was distinguished by the visions of Nebuchadnez' zar, the prophetic declarations of Daniel, Belshazzar’s feast, and the overthrow of the kingdom of Babylon by the Medes and Persians. The termination of the Captivity, as had been foretold by the prophets, was the act of Cyrus, the Persian, immediately after the conquest of Babylon. (536 B. C.) 23. The edict of Cyrus permitted all Jews in his dominions to return to Palestine, and to rebuild the city and temple of Jerusalem. Only a zealous minority, however, returned, and but little progress had been made in the rebuilding of the temple, when the work was altogether stopped by an order of the next sovereign ; but during the reign of Darius Hystas' pes, Zerub' babel, urged by the prophets Hag' gai and Zechariah, obtained a new edict for the restoration of the temple, and after four years the work was completed, 516 years before the Christian era. The temple was now dedicated to the worship of Jehovah, the ceremonies of the Jewish law were restored, and never again did the Jews, as a people, relapse into idolatry. 0h\p. m.] PERSIAN HISTORY. 67 [III. Roman History.] — 24. Haying thus brought the events of Jewish history down to the time of the commencement of the wars between Greece and Persia, we again turn back to take a view of the cotemporary history of such other nations as had begun to acquire historical importance during the same period. Our attention is first directed to Rome — to the rise of that power which was destined event' ually to overshadow the world, Rome is supposed to have been found' ed 753 years before the Christian era, about the time of the abolition of the hereditary archonship in Athens— twenty years before the commencement of the first war between Sparta and Messenia, and about thirty years before the reign of Hezekiah, king of Judah. But the importance of Roman history demands a connected account, which can better be given after Rome has broken in upon the line cf history we are pursuing, by the reduction of Greece to a Roman province ; and as we have already arrived at a period of correspond- ing importance in Persian affairs, we shall next briefly trace the events of Persian history down to the time when they became min- gled with the history of the Grecians. [IY. Persian History.] — 25. In the course of the preceding history of the Jews we have had occasion to mention the names of Shalmenesar, Sennacherib, and Sardanapalus, who were the last three kings of the united empire of Assyria, whose capital was Nine- veh. Not long after Sardanapalus had attacked Judah, and carried away its king Manas' seh into captivity, the governors of several of the Assyrian provinces revolted against him, and besieged him in his capital, when, finding himself deserted by his subjects, he destroyed his own life. (671 B. C.) The empire, which, during the latter part of the reign of Sardanapalus, had embraced Media, Persia, Babyl6- nia, and Assyria, was then divided among the conspirators. 26. Sixty-five years later, the Medes and Babylonians, with joint forces, destroyed Nineveh (B. C. 606), a and Babylon became the capi tal of the reunited empire. The year after the destruction of Nine veh, Nebuchadnez'zar, a name common to the kings of Babylon, as was Pharaoh to those of Egypt, made his first attack upon Jerusa- lem (B. C. 605), rendering the Jews tributary to him, and carrying away numbers of them into captivity, and among them the prophet Daniel and his companions. Nineteen years later (B. C. 586), he a. Clinton, i 269. Grote, iii. 255, Note, sava, “ During the last ten years of the reign of Gyax* ares” : — and Cyax ares, the Mede reigned from 636 to 595. ANCIENT HISTORY 68 [Part I destroyed the very walls of Jerusalem and the temple itself, and carried away the remnant of the Jews captive tc Babylon. 27. Soon after the conquest of Judea, Nebuchadnez' zar resolved to take vengeance on the surrounding nations, some of whom had solicited the Jews to unite in a confederacy against him, but had af- terwards rejoiced at their destruction. These were the Am' monites, Moabites, E' domites, Arabians, Sidonians, Tyr' ians, Philistines, Egyptians, and Abyssin' ians. The subjugation of each was par- ticularly foretold by the prophets, and has been related both by sacred and profane writers. In the war against the Phoenicians, after a long siege of thirteen years he made himself master of insular Tyre, the Phoenician capital (B. C. 571), and the Tyr' ians became subject to him and his successors until the destruction of the Clial dean monarchy by Cyrus. 3 - 28. In the war against Egypt (B. C. 570), Nebuchadnez' zar laid the whole country waste, in accordance with previous predictions of the prophets Ezekiel and Jeremiah. The prophecy of Ezekiel, that, after the desolations foretold, “ there shall no more be a prince of the land of Egypt,” has been verified in a remarkable manner ; for the kings of Egypt were made tributary, and grievously oppressed, first by the Babylonians, and next by the Persians ; and since the rule of the latter, Egypt has successively been governed by foreigners — by the Macedonians, the Romans, the Mamelukes, and lastly, by the Turks, who possess the land of the Pharaohs to this day. 29. It was immediately after his return from Egypt that Nebu- chadnez' zar, flushed with the brilliancy of his conquests, set up a golden image, and commanded all the people to fall down and wor- ship it. (B. C. 569.) Notwithstanding the rebuke which his impiety received on this occasion, after he had adorned Babylon with mag- nificent works, again the pride of his heart was exhibited, for as he walked in his palace he said, in exultation, “ Is not this great Baby- lon that I have built for the head of the kingdom, by the might of my power, and for the honor of my majesty ?” But in the same hour that he had spoken he was struck with lunacy, and all his glory departed from him. Of his dreams, and their prophetic interpreta- tion by Daniel, we shall have occasion to speak, as the predictions are successively verified in the progress of history. a. The common statement that it -vyas the inland town that was reduced by Nebuchadnez zar, and that most of ihe inhabitants had previously withdrawn to an island where they buitt “ New Tyre,” seems to be erroneous. See Grote’s Greece, iii. 266-7. Chap III] PERSIAN HISTORY. 69 30 . Not long after the reign of Nebuchadnez' zar, we find Bel- ebaz'zar, probably a grandson of the former, on the throne of Baby Ion. Nothing is recorded of him but the circumstances of his death, which are related in the fifth chapter of Daniel. He was probably slain in a conspiracy of his nobles. (B. C. 553.) In the meantime, the kingdom of Media 1 had risen to eminence under the successive reigns of Phraor' tes, Cyax' ares, and Asty' ages, 2 the for- mer of whom is supposed to be the Ahasuerus mentioned in the book of Daniel. a While some writers mention a successor of Asty' ages, Cyax' ares II., who has been thought to be the same as the Darius of Scripture, others assert that Asty' ages was the last of the Me- dian kings. In accordance with the latter and now generally-received account, Cyrus, a grandson of Asty' ages, but whose father was a Persian, roused the Persian tribes against the ruling Medes, defeated Asty' ages, and transferred the supreme power to the Persians. (558 B. C.) b 31. Cyrus the Great, 0 as he is often called, is generally considered the founder of the Persian empire. Soon after his accession to the throne his dominions were invaded by Crce' sus, king of Lydia but Cyrus defeated him in the great battle of Thymbria, and after wards, besieging him in his own capital of Sardis, took him prisoner, and obtained possession of all his treasures. (B. C. 546.) The sub- jugation of the Grecian cities of Asia Minor by the Persians soon followed. Cyrus next laid siege to Babylon, which still remained an independent city in the heart of his empire. Babylon soon fell be neath his power, and it has been generally asserted that he effected the conquest by turning the waters of the Euphrates from their chan- nel, and marching his troops into the city through the dry bed of the stream ; but this account has been doubted, while it has been thought quite as probable that he owed his success to some internal revolu- tion, which put an end to the dynasty of the Babylonian kings. (B C. 536.) The prophetic declarations of the final and utter de- ]. Media , the boundaries of which varied greatly at different times, embraced the country Immediately south and south-west of the Caspian Sea, and north of the early Persia. (Map No. V.) 2. These kings were probably in a measure subordinate to the -uling king at Babylon. a. Daniel, ix. 1. Hale’s Analysis, iv. 81. b. Niebuhrs Lect. on Ancient Hist. i. 135. Grote’s Greece, iv. 183. c. The accounts of the early history of Cyrus, as derived from Xen' ophon, H erod' otus, Ctdsias, fee., are very contradictory The account of Herod’ otus is now generally preferred, as con- taining a greater proportion of historical truth than the others. Grote calls Ihe Cyropoe' diaof Xen" ophon a “philosophical novel.” Niebuhr says, “No rational man, in pur days, can look upon Xen ophon’s history of Cyrus in any other light than that of a romance.” 70 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 strucfcion of Babylon, winch was eventually to he made a desolate waste — a possession for the bittern — a retreat for the wild beasts of the desert and of the islands — to be filled with pools of water — and to be inhabited no more from generation to generation, have been fully verified. 32. In the year that Babylon was taken, Cyrus issued the famous decree which permitted the Jews to return to their own land, and to rebuild the city and temple of Jerusalem — events which had been foretold by the prophet Isaiah more than a century before Cyrus was born. Cyrus is supposed to have lived about seven years after the taking of Babylon — directing his chief attention to the means of increasing the prosperity of his kingdom. The manner of his death is a disputed point in history, but in the age of Strabo his tomb bore the inscription : “ 0 man, I am Cyrus, who founded the Persian empire : envy me not then the little earth which covers my remains.” 33. Camby' ses succeeded his father on the throne of Persia (530 B. C.) Intent on carrying out the ambitious designs of Cyrus, he invaded and conquered Egypt, although the Egyptian king was aided by a force of Grecian auxiliaries. The power of the Persians was also extended over several African tribes : even the Greek col ony of Cyrenaica 1 was forced to pay tribute to Camby' ses, and the Greek cities of Asia Minor remained quiet under Persian governors ; but an army which Camby' ses sent over the Libyan desert to sub- due the little oasis where the temple of Jupiter Am' moil 2 was the centre of an independent community, was buried in the sands ; and another army which the king himself led up the Nile against Ethiopia, came near perishing from hunger. The Persian king would have attempted the conquest of the rising kingdom of Car- thage, but his Phoenician allies or subjects, who constituted his naval power, were unwilling to lend their aid in destroying the indepen- dence of their own colony, and Camby' ses was forced to abandon the roject. 34. On the death of Camby' ses (B. C. 521), one Siner' dis, an 1. Cyren&ica, a country on the African roast of the Mediterranean, corresponded with the western portion of the modern Barca. It vas sometimes called Pentap' nlis , from its hf * ng five Grecian cities of note in it, of which Cyrene was the capital. (See p. 95, also Map No. V.) 2. The Temple of Jupiter Am' mon was situated in what is now called the Oasis of Siwah, a fertile spot in the desert, three hundred miles south-west from Cairo. The time and the cir- cumstances of the existence of this temple are unknown, but, like that of Delphi, it was famed jbr its treasures. A well sixty feet deep, which has been discovered in the oasis, is supposed to mark the site of .he temple. Chap. TIL] PERSIAN HISTORY. 71 impostor, a pretended son of Cyrus, seized the throne ; but the Per- sian nobles soon formed a conspiracy against him, killed him in his palace, and chose one of their own number to reign in his stead. The new monarch assumed the old Median title of royalty, and is known in history as Darius, or Darius Hystas' pes. Babylon having revolted, he was engaged twenty months in the siege of the city which was finally taken by the artifice of a Persian nobleman, who pretending to desert to the enemy, gained their confidence, and having obtained the command of an important post in the city, opened the gates to the Persians : Darius put to death three thou- sand of the citizens, and ordered the one hundred gates to be pulled down, and the walls of the proud city to be demolished, that it might never after be in a condition to rebel against him. The favor which this monarch showed the J ews, in permitting them to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem, has already been mentioned. 35. The attention of Darius was next turned towards the Scyth- ians, 1 then a European nation, who inhabited the country along the western borders of the Euxine, from the Tan' ais or Don 2 to the north- ern boundaries of Thrace. 3 Darius indeed overran their country, but without finding an enemy who would meet him in battle ; for the Scythians were wise enough to retreat before the invader, and deso- late the country through which he directed his course. When the supplies of the Persians had been cut off on every side, and their strength wasted in useless pursuit, they were glad to seek safety by a hasty retreat. 36. The next important events in the history of Darius we find connected with the revolt, and final subjugation, of the Greek colonies of Asia Minor, an account of which has already been given.. Still Darius was not a conqueror like Cyrus or Camby' ses, but seems to have aimed rather at consolidating and securing his empire, than 1. Scythia is a name given by the early Greeks to the country on the northern and western orders of the Euxine. In the time of the first Ptolemy, however, the early Scythia, together with the whole region from the Baltic Sea to the Caspian, had changed its name to Sarmatta \ while the entire north of Asia beyond the II imalaya mountains was denominated Scythia (■Map Nos. V. and IX.) 2. The Don (anciently Tan' ais), rising in Central Russia, flows south-east until it approach es within about thirty-six miles of the Volga, when it turns to the south-west, and enters he north-eastern extremity of the Sea of Azof (anciently Palus Moeotis). (Map No. IX.) 3. Thrace , embracing nearly the same as the modern Turkish province of Rumilia, was bounded on the north by the Hasmus mountains, on the east by the Euxine, on the south by the Propon' tis and the M' gean Sea, and on the west by Macedonia. Its principal river was the H6brus (now Maritza), and its largest towns, excepting those in the Thiacian Cherso«iG»u? (pee p. 96.) were Hadrianopolis and Byzantium. (Map No. III. and IX.) 72 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Tart 1, at enlarging it. The dominions bequeathed him by his predecessors comprised many countries, united under one government only by their subjection to the will and the arbitrary exactions of a common ruler ; but Darius first organized them into one empire, by dividing the whole into twenty satrapies or provinces, and assigning to each its proper share in the burdens of government. 37. Under Darius the Persian empire had now attained its great- est extent, embracing, in Asia, all that, at a later period, was con- tained in Persia proper and Turkey ; in Africa, taking in Egypt as far as Nubia, and the coast of the Mediterranean as far as Barca ; and in Europe, part of Thrace and Macedonia — thus stretching from the AS' gean Sea*to the Indus, and from the plains of Tartary 1 to the cataracts of the Nile. Such was the empire against whose united power a few Grecian communities were to contend for the preserva- tion of their very name and existence. The results of the contest may be learned from the following chapter. (See Map No. VII.) 1 . Tartary la a name of modem origin, applied to that extensivo portion of Cfntjul AsU whkih extends eastward from the Caspian Se o h? the Pacific Ocean. Chap. IV.i GRECIAN HISTORY 71 CHAPTER I V, THE AUTHENTIC PERIOi) OF GRECIAN HISTORY. SECTION I. HISTORY FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE FIRST WAR WITH PERSIA TO TEE £8 TABLISHMENT OF PHILIP ON THE THRONE OF MACEDON : 490 to 360 b. c. — 130 years. ANALYSIS. First Persian War. 1. Preparations of Darius for the conquest of Greece. Mardonius. Destruction of the Persian fleet. [Mount A' thos.] Rettirn of Mardonius. — 2. Re- newed pitfpiiaiions of Darius. Heralds sent to Greece. Their treatment by the Athenians and Spartans. The A3gin6tans. [Algina.] — 3. Persian fleet sails for Greece. Islands submit. Eubce'a. Persians at Mar’athon. The Platae'ans aid the Athenians. Spartans absent, [Mar'athon. Plata;' a.] — 4. The Athenian army. How commanded. — 5. Hattie of Mar' athon. — 6. Remarks on the battle. Legends of the battle. — 7. The war terminated. Subsequen history of Miltiades. [Paros.] Themis' tocles and Aristides. Their characters. Banish" ment of the latter. [Ostracism.] — 9. Death of Darius. Second Persian War. Xerxes in- vades Greece. Opposed by Leon' idas. [Thermop' ylre.] Anecdote of Dien' eces. — 10. Treachery. Leon' idas dismisses his allies. Self-devotion of the Greeks. — 11. Eurytus and Aristod6mus, — 12. The Athenians desert Athens, which is burned by the enemy. [Treztine.] The Greeks fortify the Corinthian isthmus. — 13. The Persian fleet at Sal' amis. Eurybiades, Themis' tocles, and Aristides. — 14. Battle of Sal' amis. Flight of Xerxes. [Hel' lespont.] Battle of Plat as 'a — of Myc' ale. [Myc' ale.] Death of Xerxes. — 15. Athens rebuilt. Banishment of Themis'- tocles. Ciraon and Fausanias. The Persian dependencies. Ionian revolt. [Cy'prus. By- zan’ tium.) — 16. Final peace with Persia. — 17. Dissensions among the Grecian States. Per' icles. Jealousy of Sparta, and growing power of Athens. — 18. Power and character of Sparta. Earthquake at Sparta. Revolt of the H61ots. Third Messe’nian War. Migration of the Messcnians. — 19. Athenians defeated at Tan' agra. [Tan' agra.] Subsequent victory gained by the Athenians. 20. Causes which opened the First Peloponne' sian War. [Corey' ra. Potidae’a.] — 21. The Spartan army ravages At' tica. The Athenian navy desolates the coast of the Peloponne- sus. [Meg' ara.] — 22. Second invasion of At' tica. The plague at Athens, and death of Per- icles. Potidae'a surrenders to Athens, and Plat®' a to Sparta. — 23. The peace of Nicias. Pre- texts for renewing the struggle. — 24. Character of Alcibiades. His artifices. Reduction of M6Ios. [Melos.] — 25. The Sicilian Expedition. Its object. [Sicily. Syracuse.] Revolt and flight of Alcibiades. — 26. Operations of Nicias, and disastrous result of the expedition. 27. Second Peloponne' sian War. Revolt of the Athenian allies. * Intrigues of Alcibiades, Revolution at Athens. [Er6tria Cys' icus.] Return. of Alcibiades. — 28. He is again banished. The affairs of Sparta are retrieved by Lysan' der. Cyrus the Persian. — 29. The Athenians are defeated at AS' gos-Pot' amos. Treatment of the prisoners. — 30. Disastrous state of Athenian affairs. Submission of Athens, and close of the war.— 31. Change of government at Athens. The Thirty Tyrants overthrown. The rule Of the democracy restored. — 32. Character, accusa- tion, and death of Soc' rates. — 33. The designs of Cyrus the Persian. He is aided by the Greeks — 34. Result of his expedition. — 35. Famous retreat of the Ten Thousand. — 36. The Creek cities of Asia are involved in a war with Persia. The Third Peloponne' sIan War. [Coron£a.j The peace of Antal' cidas. [lm’ brus, Lem' nos, and Scy' ru3.]— 37. The designs of the Persian king promoted by the jealousy of the Greeks. Athens and Sparta- how affected by the peace -38. Sjririsi u involved in new wars, War with Mantin6a. With Olyn'thus. [Mantinb*. D 74 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part i. Olyn'thus.] Seizure of the Theban citadel.— 39. The political morality of the Spartans— 40. The Theban citadel recovered. Pelop' idas and Epaminon' das. Events of the Theban war. [Teg'yra. Leuc’tra.] — 41. The Second Sacred War. [First Sacred War.] Causes of the Second Sacred War. [Phocis.] — 42. The parties to the war. [Locrians.] Cruelties practised. Philip of Macedon. 1. After the subjugation of the Ionian cities of Asia Minor, Darius made active preparations for the conquest of all Greece. A mighty j FIRST PEE . armament was fitted out and intrusted to the command sian war. of his son-in-law Mardonius, who, leading the land force in person through Thrace and Macedonia, succeeded, after being once routed by a night attack, a in subduing those countries ; but the Persian fleet, which was designed to sweep the islands of the JE' gean, was checked in its progress by a violent storm which it encountered off Mount A' thos 1 , and which was thought to have destroyed three hundred ves sels and twenty thousand lives. Weakened by these disasters, Mar- donius abruptly terminated the campaign and returned to Asia. 2. Darius soon renewed his preparations for the invasion of Greece* and, while his forces were assembling, sent heralds through the Grecian cities, demanding earth and water, as tokens of submission. The smaller States, intimidated by his power, submitted ; b but Athens and Sparta haughtily rejected the demands of the eastern monarch, and put his heralds to death with cruel mockery, throwing one into a pit and another into a well, and bidding them take thence their earth and water. The Spartans threatened to make war upon the A^gine- tans 2 for having basely submitted to the power of Persia, and com- pelled them to send hostages to Athens. 0 1. Mount A' thos is a lofty summit, more than six thousand feet high, on the most eastern of three narrow peninsulas which extend from Macedonia into the JE' gean sea. The peninsula which is about twenty-five miles in longth by about four in breadth, has long been occupied In modern times by a number of monks of the Greek Church, who live in a kind of fortified monasteries, about twenty in number. No females are admitted within this peninsula, whose modern name, derived from its supposed sanctity, is Monte Santo , “sacred mountain.” ( Map No. I.) 1 2. JEgma, (now Egina or Engia ,) was an island containing about fifty square miles, in the eentrs of the Saron'ic Gulf, (now Gulf of Athens,) between Attica and Ar'golis, and sixteen miles south-west from Athens. The remains of a temple of Jupiter in the northern part of the island are among the most interesting of the Grecian ruins. Of its thirty-six column* twenty-five were recently standing. ( Map No. I.) a. By the Brygi, a Thracian tribe. Mardonius wounded - b. Among them, probably, the Thebans and Thessalians ; also most of the islands, but not Eubce' a and Nax' os. The Persians desolated Nax’ os on their way across the JE' gean. c. At this time Thebes and iEgina had been at war with Athens fourteen years. Ar' gos, which had contested with Sparta the supremacy of Greece, had recently been subdued ; and Sparta was acknowledged to be the head of the political union »f Greece against the Pep- nans. Grote’s Greece, iv. 311-328. Chap IV J GRECIAN HISTORY. 75 3. In the third year after the first disastrous campaign, a Persian fleet of si s hundred ships, conveying an army of a hundred and twenty thousand men, commanded by the generals Datis and Artapher' nes, and guided by the exiled tyrant and traitor Hip'pias, directed its course towards the Grecian shores. (B. C. 490.). Several islands of the iE' gean submitted without a struggle ; Euboe' a was punished foi the aid it had given the Ionians in their rebellion ; and without farther opposition the Persian host advanced to the plains of Mar' athon, within twenty miles of Athens. The Athenians probably called on th6 Platse' ans 2 as well as the Spartans for aid : a — the former sent their entire force of a thousand men ; but the latter, influenced by jealousy or superstition, refused to send their proffered aid before the full of the moon. 4. In this extremity the Athenian army, numbering only ten thou sand men, and commanded by ten generals, marched against the enemy. Five of the ten generals had been afraid to hazard a battle, but the arguments 1 * of Miltiades, one of their number, finally prevailed upon the polemarch Callim' achus to give his casting vote in favor of fight- ing. The ten generals were to command the whole army successively, each for a day. Those who had seconded the advice of Miltiades were willing to resign their turns to him, but he waited till his own day arrived, when he drew up the little army in order of battle. 1. Mar' athon, which still retains its ancient name, is a small town of Attica, twenty milea northeast from Athens, and about three miles from the sea-coast, or Bay of Mar’ athon. The plain in which the battle was fought is about five miles in length and two in breadth, inclosed on the land side by steep slopes descending from the higher ridges of Pentel' icus and Paros, and divided into two unequal parts by a small stream which falls into the Bay. Towards the middle of the plain may still be seen a mound of earth, twenty-five feet in height, which was raised over the bodies of the Athenians who fell in the battle. In the marsh near the sea. coast, also, the remains of trophies and marble monuments are still visible. The names of the one hundred and ninety-two Athenians who were slain were inscribed on ten pillars erected on the battle-field. ( Map No. I.) 2. Plata' a , a city of Boeotia, now wholly in ruins, was situated on the northern side of the Cithae' ron mountains, seven miles south from Thebes. This city has acquired an immortality of renown from its having given its name to the great battle fought in its vicinity in the yea t 479 B. C. between the Persians under Mardonius, and the Greeks under Pausanias the Spar- tan. (See p. 80.) From the tenth of the spoils taken from the Persians on that occasion, and presented to the shrine of Delphi, a golden tripod was made, supported by a brazen pillai resembling three serpents twined together. This identical brazen pillar may still be seen in thn Hippodrome of Constantinople. (Map No. I.) a Thirwall says : “ It is probable that they summoned the Platae’ ans.” Grote says : “ W« are not told that they had been invited.” b. Herod’ otus describes this debate as having occurred at Mar' athon, after the Greeks hail taken post in sight of the Persians ; while Cornelius Nepos says it occurred before the army left Athens. Thirwall appears to follow the former: Grote declares his preference for th« fttfer, as the most reasonable. 76 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I 5. The Persians were extended in a line across the middle of the plain, having their best troops in the centre. The A thenians were drawn up in a line opposite, but having their main strength in the extreme wings of their army. The Greeks made the attack, and, as had been foreseen by Miltiades, their centre was soon broken, while the extremities of the enemy’s line, made up of motley and undisci- plined bands of all nations, were routed, and driven towards the shore, and into the adjoining morasses. Hastily concentrating his two wings, Miltiades next directed their united force against the flanks of the Persian centre, which, deeming itself victorious, was taken com- pletely by surprise. In a few minutes victory decided in favor of the Greeks. The Persians fled in disorder to their ships; but many perished in the marshes ; the shore was strewn with their dead, — and seven of their ships were destroyed. The loss of the Persians was 6,400 : that of the Athenians, not including the Platsc' ans, only 192. 6. Such was the famous battle of Mar' atlion ; but the glory of the victory is not to be measured wholly by the disparity of the numbers engaged, when compared with the result. The Persians were strong in the terror of their name, and in the renown of their conquests ; and it required a most heroic resolution in the Athenians to face a danger which they had not yet learned to despise. The victory was viewed by the people as a deliverance vouchsafed to the Grecians by the gods themselves : the marvellous legends of the battle attributed to the heroes prodigies of valor ; and represented Theseus and Her' cules as sharing in the fight, and dealing death to the flying barbarians ; while to this day the peasant believes the field of Mar' a- thon to be haunted with spectral warriors, whose shouts are heard at midnight, borne on the wind, and rising above the din of battle. 7. The victory obtained by the Greeks at Mar' athon terminated the first war with Persia. Soon after the Persian defeat, Miltiades, who at first received all the honors which a grateful people could be- stow, experienced a fate which casts a melancholy gloom over his history. Being unfortunate in an expedition which he led against Pa- ros, 1 and which he induced the Athenians to intrust to him, without informing them of its destination, he was accused of having deceived 1. PAros is an island of the JE' gean sea, of the group of the Cyc' lades, about seventy-five miles south east from Attica. It is about twelve, miles in length by eight in breadth, rugged and uneven but generally very fertile. Paros was famous in antiquity for its marble, although that obtained from Mount Pcntel' icus in Attica was of the purest white. In modern times PAros has become distinguished for the discovery there of the celebrated “ Parian or Arunde- lian Chronicle,” cut in a marble slab, and purporting to be a chronological account of Grecian Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY 77 the peop.e, or, as some say, of haying received a bribe. Unable to defend his cause before the people on account of an injury which he had received at Paros, he was impeached before the popular judica- ture as worthy of death ; and although the proposition of his accusers was rejected, he was condemned to pay a fine of fifty talents. A few days later Miltiades died of his wound, and the fine was paid by his son Cimon. 8. After the death of Miltiades, Themis' tocles and Aristides be- come, for a time, the most prominent men among the Athenians. The former, a most able statesman, being influenced by ambitious motives, aimed to make Athens great and powerful, that he himself might rise to greater eminence with the growing fortunes of the state ; — the latter, a pure patriot, had, like Themis' tocles, the good of Athens at heart, but, unlike his rival, he was wholly destitute of selfish ambition, and knew no cause but that of justice and the public welfare. His known probity acquired for him the appellation of The Just ; but his very integrity made for him secret enemies, who, although they charged him with no crimes, were yet able to procure from the people the penalty of banishment against him by ostracism. 1 His removal left Themis' tocles in possession of almost undivided power at Athens, and threw upon him chiefly the responsibility of the measure for resisting another Persian invasion, with which the Greeks were now threatened. 9. Darius made great preparations for invading Greece in person, when death put an end to his ambitious projects. Ten years after the battle of Mar'athon, Xerxes, the son and successor n< 8ECOND of Darius, being determined to execute the plans of his feksian war. father, entered Greece at the head of an army the greatest the world has ever seen, and whose numbers have been estimated at more than two millions of fighting men. This immense force, passing through Thes' saly, had arrived, without opposition, at the strait of Thermop'- ylac, 2 where Xerxes found a body of eight thousand men, command- bistory from the time of C6crops to the year 26 1 B. C. The pretence of Miltiades in attacking Paros was that the inhabitants had aided the Persians; but Herod' otus assures us that hi a real motive was a private grudge against a Phrian citizen. The injury of which he died was caused by a fall that he received while attempting to visit by night, a Parian priestess of Ceres, who had promised to r .weal to him a secret that would place Paros in his power. (Map No. III. 1. The mode of Ostracism was as follows: The people having assembled, each man took a shell (ostralcon) and wrote on it the name of the person whom he wished to have banished. If the number of votes thus given was less than six thousand, the ostracism was void ; but if more, then the person whose name was on the greatest number of shells was sent into banish ment for ten years. 2. Thermop' ylat is a narrow defile on the western shore of the Gulf which lies between Eubce'a and Thessaly, and is almost the only road by which Greece can be entered on the 78 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pabt 1 ed by the Spartan king Leon' idas, prepared to dispute the passage Xerxes sent a herald to the Greeks, commanding them to 'lay down their arms; but Leon' idas replied with true Spartan brevity, “ come and take them.” When one said that the Persians were so numerous that their very darts would darken the sun, “ Then,” replied Dieneces, a Spartan, “ we shall fight in the shade.” 1 0. After repeated and unavailing efforts, during two days, to break the Grecian lines, the confidence of Xerxes had changed into de- spondence and perplexity, when a deserter revealed to him, for a large reward, a secret path over the mountains, by which he was enabled to throw a force of twenty thousand men into the rear of the Gre clans. Leon' idas, seeing that his post was no longer tenable, dis- missed all his allies who were willing to retire, retaining with him anly three hundred fellow Spartans, with some Thes' pians and The bans, in all about a thousand men. The Spartans were forbidden by their laws ever to flee from an enemy ; and Leon' idas and Jiis coun- trymen, and their Thes' pian allies, a prepared to sell their lives as dearly as possible. Falling suddenly upon the enemy, they pene- trated to the very centre of the Persian host, slaying two brothers of Xerxes, and fighting with the valor of desperation, until every one of their number had fallen. A monument was afterwards erected on the spot, bearing the following inscription : u Go stranger, and tell at Lacedaemon that we died here in obedience to her laws,” 11. Previous to the last attack of the Spartans, two of their num- ber, Eurytus and Aristodemus, were absent on leave, suffering from a severe complaint of the eyes. Eurytus, being informed that the hour for the detachment was come, called for his armor, and direct- ing his servant to lead him to his place in the ranks, fell foremost in the fight. Aristodemus, overpowered with physical suffering, was carried to Sparta ; but he was denounced as a coward for not imi- north-east, by way of Thessaly. This famous pass, which is shut in between steep preci- pices and the sea, at the eastern extremity of Mount 03' ta, is about five miles in length, and, where narrowest, was not anciently, according to Herod' otus, more than half a plethron, or fifty feet across, although Livy says sixty paces. The pass has long been gradually widening, however, by the deposits of soil brought down by the mountain streams. In the narrowest part of the pass were hot springs, from which the defile derives its name. ( Thermos , “hoi,” and pule, a “ gate” or “ pass.”) (Map No. I.) a. The rhebans took part in the beginning of the fight, to save appearances, but finally sur rendered to the Persians, loudly proclaiming that they had come to Thermop' ylae against their consent. The story that Leon’ idas made a night attack, and penetrated nearly to the royal Vait, Is a mere fiction. (See Qrote , v 92. Note.) Chajp. rv.] GRECIAN HISTORF. 79 tating liis comrade — no one would speak or con.irunicate with him, or even grant him a light for his fire. After a year of hitter dis grace, he was at length enabled to retrieve his honor at the battle ofPlatse'a, where he was slain, after surpassing all his comrades in heroic and even reckless valor. 3 - 12. After the fall of Leon' idas, the Persians ravaged At' tica, and goon appeared before Athens, which they burned to the ground, but which had previously been deserted of its inhabitants, — those able to bear arms having retired to the island of Sal' amis, while the old and infirm, the women and children, had found shelter in Trezene, 1 a city of Ar' golis. The allied Grecians took possession of the Corin- thian Isthmus, which they fortified by a wall, and committed to the defence of Cleom' brotus, a brother of Leon' idas. 13. Xerxes next made preparations to annihilate the power of the Grecians in a naval engagement, and sent his whole fleet to block up that of the Greeks in the narrow strait of Sal' amis. Eurybiades, the Spartan, who commanded the Grecian fleet, was in favor of sail- ing to the isthmus, that the naval and land forces might act in con- junction, but Themis' tocles finally prevailed upon him to hazard an engagement, and his counsels were enforced by Aristides, now in the third year of his exile, who crossed over in a small boat from iEgina with intelligence of the exact position of the Persian fleet ; — a cir- cumstance that at once put an end to the rivalry between the two ' Athenians, and led to the restoration of Aristides. 14. Xerxes had caused a royal throne to be erected on one of the neighboring heights, where, surrounded by his army, he might wit- ness the battle of Sal' amis, in which he was confident of victory ; but he had the misfortune to see his magnificent navy almost utterly an- nihilated. Terrified at the result, he hastily fled across the Hel' les- pont,’’ 1 and retired into his own dominions, leaving Mardonius, at the head of three hundred thousand men, to complete, if possible, the conquest of Greece. Mardonius passed the winter in Thes'saly, but in the following summer his army was totally defeated and him- 1. Trezene was near the south-eastern extremity of Ar' golis. Its ruins may be seen near the email modem village of Damala. 2. The Hel' lespont (now called Dardanelles ), is the narrow strait which connects the sea of Marmora with the A3’ gean. It is about forty miles in length, and varies in breadth from three quarters of a mile to ten miles. The Dardanelles , from which the modern name of the stratt is derived, are castles , or forts, built on its banks. The strait, being the key to Constantinople and the Black Sea, has been very strongly fortified on both sides by the T irks. (Map IV. a. Grote, v. 95. ~ 80 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pari l self slain in the battle of Platae' a. (B. C. 479.) Two hundred thou* sand Persians fell in battle, and only a small remnant escaped across the Hel' lespont — the last Persian army that gained a footing on the Grecian territory. On the very day of the battle of Platae' a, the re- mains of the Persian fleet which had escaped at Sal' amis, and which had been drawn up on shore at Myc' ale, 1 on the coast of Ionia, were burned by the Grecians, and Tigranes, the Persian commander, and forty thousand of his men, slain. Six years later the career of Xerxes was terminated by assassination, when he was succeeded on the throne by his son, Artaxerx' es Longim' anus. 15. In the meantime, Athens had been rebuilt by the vigor and energy of Themis' tocles, and the Pirae' us fortified, and connected, by long walls, with the town, while Sparta looked with ill-disguised jealousy upon the growing power of a rival city. But the eminence which Themis' tocles had attained provoked the envy of some o 1 his countrymen, and he was condemned to exile by the same process of ostracism which he himself had before directed against Aristides Being afterwards charged with conspiring, against the liberties of Greece, he sought refuge in Persia, where he is said to have ended his life by poison. Clmon, the son of Miltlades, succeeded Themis'- tocles in the chief direction of Athenian affairs, while Pausanias, the hero of Platae' a, was at the head of the Spartans. Under these leaders the confederate Greeks waged successful war upon the de pendencies of Persia in the islands of the iE' gean, and on the coasts of Thrace and Asia Minor. The Ionian cities were aided in a suc- cessful revolt ; Cy' prus 2 was wrested from the power of the Per- sians ; and Byzan' tium, 3 already a flourishing city, fell, with all its wealth, into the hands of the Grecians. (B. C. 476.) 16. Clmon carried on a successful war against Persia many years later, during which the commercial power and wealth of the Athe- nians were continually increasing ; but both parties finally becoming tired of the contest, after the death of Clmon a treaty of peace was on eluded with the Persian monarch, which stipulated that the 16- 1. Myc’ ale was a promontory^of Ionia in Asia Minor, opposite the soutlierr extremitj of the island of SAinos. {Map No. IV.) 2. Cy' prus is a large and fertile island near the north-eastern angle of the Mediterranean, between Asia Minor and Syria : — greatest length, one hundred and thirty-two miles* average breadth, from thirty to thirty-five miles. Under the oppressive rule of the Turks, who con quered the island from the Venetians in 1571, agriculture was greatly neglected, and thopopu. lation reduced to one-seventh of its former nu nber. ( Maps Nos. IV. and V.) 3. Byzan' Ltum, now Constantinople. See lcscription, p. 218. Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 8 nian cities in Asia should be left in the free enjoyment of their inde- pendence, and that no Persian army should come within three days’ march of the sca-coast. a 17. While the war with Persia continued, a sense of common dan- gers had united the Greeks in a powerful and prosperous confederacy, but now jealousies broke out between several of the rival cities, particularly Athens and Sparta, which led to political dissensions and civil wars, the cause of the final ruin of the Grecian republics. The authority of Cimon among the Athenians had gradually yielded to the growing influence of his rival Per' icles, who, bold, artful, and eloquent, — a general, philosopher, and statesman, — managed the multitude at his will, and by his patronage of literature and the arts, and the extension of the Athenian power, raised Athens to the sum- mit of her renown. Sparta looked on with ill-disguised jealousy as island after island in the -ZE' gean yielded to the sway of Athens, and saw not with unconcern the colonies of her rival peopling the wind ing shores of Thrace and Macedon. Athens had become the mis- tress of the seas, while her commerce engrossed nearly the whole trade of the Mediterranean. 18. But Sparta was also powerful in her resources, and in the military renown and warlike character of her people, and she dis- dained the luxuries that were enervating the Athenians. Complaints and reclamations were frequent on both sides ; and occasions for war, when sought by both parties, are not long delayed. But while the Spartans were secretly favoring the enemies of Athens, although still in avowed allegiance with her, Laconia was laid waste by an earthquake (464 B. C.), and Sparta became a heap of ruins. A re volt of the Helots followed; Sparta itself was endan- m T gered; and the remnant of the Messenians, making a messenian vigorous effort to recover their freedom, fortified the WAR ' memorable hill of Ithome, the ancient citadel of their fathers. Hers, for a long time, they valiantly defended themselves ; and the Spartans were compelled to invoke the Athenians and others to their assistance. (461 B. C.) After several years’ duration, the third and last Messenian war was terminated by an honorable capitulation of the Messenians, who were allowed to retire froln the Peloponnesus a. The story of this famous treaty, however, generally called the Cimonian treaty, and attrib- uted to Cimon himself, has been regarded by some writers as a fiction, which, originating in the schools of Greek rhetoricians, was transmitted thence through the orators to the historians. I'See T'lirwall , i. p. 305, and note.) Grote, however, v. 330-42, admits the reality of the treat* but places it after the death of Cimon. 82 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I with tlieir property and their families, and to join the Athenian col- ony of Naupac' tus. 19. While the Athenians were engaged in hostilities with several of their northern neighbors, Sparta sent her forces into the Boeo- tian territory, to counteract the growing influence of Athens in that quarter. The indignant Athenians marched out to meet them, but were worsted in the battle of Tan' agra. 1 In the following year however, they were enabled to wipe off the stain of their defeat by a victory over the aggregate Theban and Boeotian forces then in alli- ance with Sparta; whereby the authority and influence of Sparta were again confined to the Peloponnesus. 20. Other events soon occurred to embitter the animosities of the rival States, and prepare the way for a general war. Corinth, a Dorian city favorable to Sparta, having become involved in a war with Corey' ra, 2 one of her colonies, the latter applied for and ob- tained assistance from Athens. Potidse' a, 3 a Corinthian colony trib- utary to Athens, soon after revolted, at the same time claiming and obtaining the assistance of the Corinthians; and thus in two in- stances were Athens and Corinth, though nominally at peace, brought into conflict with each other as open enemies. The Corinthians, now accusing Athens of interfering between them and their colonies, iv first c h ar g e d her with violating a treaty of the confederated peloponne- States of the Peloponnesus, and easily engaged the Lace- sian war. dag m 6 n i ans j n their quarrel. Such were the immediate causes which opened the First Pelojoonnesian War. 21. The minor States of Greece took sides as inclination or inter- est prompted, and nearly all were involved in the contest. The Spartans and their confederates were the most powerful by land, the Athenians by sea ; and each began the war by displaying its strength on its peculiar element. While a Spartan army of sixty thousand, led by their king, Archidamus, ravaged At' tica, and sat down before the very gates of Athens, the naval force of the Athen 1. Tan' agra , a city near the south-eastern extremity of Boeotia, was situated on an emi- nence on the northern bank of the river Asopus, and near its mouth. ( Map No. 1.) % Corey' ra, now Corfu, the most important, although not the largest, of the Ionian islands, is situated near the coast of Epirus, in the Ionian Sea. At its northern extremity it is separated from the coast by a channel only three-fifths of a mile wide. The strongly-fortified city of Corfu, the capital of the Ionian Republic, stands on the site of the ancient city of Corey’ ra, on the eastern side of the island. ' 3. Potida' a was situated on the isthmus that connects the most western of the three Mace- dori'an peninsulas in the M' gean with the main land. There are no remains of the city exist tag. ( Map No. 1^ Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 83 ians, consisting of nearly two hundred galleys, desolated the coasts of the Peloponnesus. (B. C. 431.) The Spartans being recalled to pro- tect their own homes, Per' icles himself, at the head of the largest force mustered by the Athenians during the war, spread desolation over the little territory of Meg' ara, 1 then in alliance with Sparta. 22. In the following year (B. C. 430) the Spartan force a second time invaded At' tica, when the Athenians again took refuge within their walls ; but here the plague, a calamity more dreadful than war, attacked them, and swept away multitudes of the citizens, and many of the principal men. In the third year of the war, Per' icles him- self fell a victim to its ravages. Before this, Potidee' a had surren- dered to the Athenians (B. C. 430), who banished the inhabitants, and gave their vacant lands and houses to new colonists ; and when Platae'a, after a siege of three years, was compelled to surren- der to the Spartans, the latter cruelly put the little remnant of the garrison to death, while the women and children were made slaves (B. C. 427.) 23. After the struggle had continued with various success ten years, both parties became anxious for peace, and a treaty, for a term of fifty years, called the peace of Nic' ias ; was concluded, on the basis of a mutual restitution of all conquests made during the war. (421 B. C.) Yet interest and inclination, and the ambitious views of party leaders among the Athenians, were not long in find- ing plausible pretexts for renewing the struggle. The Boeotian, Mcgarian, and Corinthian allies of Sparta, refused to accede to the terms of the treaty by making the required surrenders, and Sparta had no power to compel them, while Athens would accept no less than she had bargained for. 24. At the head of the party which aimed at severing the ties that bound Athens and Sparta together, was Alciblades, a wealthy Athenian, and nephew of Per' icles, — a man ambitious, bold, and eloquent, — an artful demagogue, but corrupt and unprincipled, and reckless of the means he used to accomplish his purposes. By his artifices he involved the Spartans in a war with their recent allies the Ar' gives, and induced the Athenians to send an armament against the Dorian island of Melos, 2 which had provoked the enmity 1. Meg' ara , a city of At' tica, and capital of a district of the same name was about twenty- five miles west, or north-west, of Athens, and was connected with the port of Nis’ sa on the Saron' ic Gulf by two walls similar to those which connected Athens and the Pine' us. The miserable village of Meg' ara occupies a part of the site of the ancient city. {Map No. I.) 2. Melos now called Milo , is an island belonging to the group of the dye’ lades, about seventy 84 ANCIENT HISTORY. lPabi 1 of Athens by its attachment • to Sparta, and which was compelled, after a vigorous siege, to surrender at discretion. With deliberate cruelty the conquerors, imitating the Spartans at the reduction of Platm'a, put to death all the adult citizens, and enslaved the women and children — an act which provoked universal indignation through- out Greece. (B. C. 416.) 25. Soon after the surrender of Melos, the Athenians, at the in- stigation of Alcibiades, fitted out an expedition against Sicily, 1 un- der the plea of delivering a people in the western part of the island from the tyranny of the Syracusans, 2 a Dorian colony ; but, in reality, to establish the Athenian supremacy in the island. (415 B. C.) v. Sicilian The armament fitted out on this occasion, the most expedition, powerful that had ever left a Grecian port, was intrust ed to the joint command of Alcibiades, Nic' ias, and Lain' achus ; but ere the fleet had reached its destination, Alcibiades was sum- moned home on the absurd charge of impiety and sacrilege, con nected with designs against the State itself. Fearing to trust himself to the giddy multitude in a trial for life, he at once threw himself upon the generosity of his open enemies, and sought refuge miles east from the southern Dart of Laconia. It has one of the best harbors in the Grecian Archipelago. Near the town of Gastro have been discovered the remains of a theatre built of the finest marble, and also numerous catacombs cut in the solid rock. {Map No. III.) 1. Sicily, the largest, most important, most fruitful, and most celebrated island of the Medi. terranean, is separated from the southern extremity of Italy by the strait of Messina, only two miles across, and is eighty-five miles distant from Cape Bon in Africa. It is of a triangular shape, and wa* anciently called Trinacria , from its terminating in three promontories. Sicily, the name by which it is usually known, seems to have been derived from the Siculi, its earliest known inhabitants. Its length east and west is about two hundred and fifteen miles ; — greatest breadth, one hundred and fifty miles. The volcano iEtna, the most celebrated of European mountains, near the eastern coast of the island, rises to the height of nearly eleven thousand feet above the level of the sea. ( Map No. VIII. For history of Sicily, see p. 115.) 2. Syracuse, the most famous of the cities of Sicily, was situated on the south-eastern coast, partly on a small island, and partly on the main land. Among the existing remains of the ancient city are the prisons, cut in the solid rock, which have been admirably describe! by Cicero in his oration against Verres. The catacombs, also excavated in the solid rock, and consisting of one principal street and several smaller onos, are of vast extent, and may be truly called a city of the dead. The modern city, however, containing a population of twelve or fif teen thousand inhabitants, has little except its ancient renown, its noble harbor, and tbs ex- treme beauty of its situation, to recommend it. ( Map No. VIII.) “ Its streets are narrow an* dirty ; its nobles poor ; its lower orders ignorant, superstitious, idle, and addicted to festival* Much of its fertile land is become a pestilential marsh ; and that commerce which once filleu we finest port in Europe with the vessels of Italy, Rhodes, Alexandria, Carthage, and every other maritime power, is now confined to. a petty coasting trade. Such is modern Syracuse. Yet the sky whi 3k canopies it is still brilliant and serene ; the golden grain is still ready t j spring almost spontaneously from its fields; the azure waves still beat against its wall* ^ send its navies over the main ; nature is still prompt to pour forth her bounties witl a libVtfi hand; but man, alas! is changed ; his liberty is lost ; and with that, the genus of a nauoa ises, sinks, and is extinguished.” — Hughes' Greece. Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 85 at Sparta. When, soon after, he heard that the Athenians had con- demned him to death, “ I hope,” said he, “ to show them that I am still alive.” 26. By the death of Lam' achus, Nic'ias was soon after left in sole c rnimand of the Athenian forces before Syracuse, but he wasted his time in fortifying his camp, and in useless negotiations, until the Syracusans, having received succor from Corinth and Sparta under the famous Spartan general Gylip' pus, were able to bid him defi- ance. Although new forces were sent out from Athens, yet the Athenians were defeated in several engagements, when, still linger- ing in the island, their entire fleet was eventually destroyed by the Syracusans, who thus became masters of the sea. The Athenian forces then attempted to retreat, but were overtaken and compelled to surrender. (B. C. 413.) The generals destroyed themsqjves, on learning that their death had been decreed by the Syracusan assem- bly. The common soldiers, to the number of seven thousand, were crowded together during seventy days in the gloomy prisons of Syracuse, when most of the survivors were taken out and sold as slaves. 27. The aid which Gylip' pus had rendered the Syracusans again brought Sparta and Athens in direct conflict, and opened the second Peloponnesian war. The result of the Athenian expe- yi SEC0ND dition was the greatest calamity that had fallen upon peloponne- Athens. Several of her allies, instigated by Alcibiades, S1AN WAR ' who was now active in the Spartan councils, revolted; and the power of Tisapher' nes, the most powerful satrap of the king of Persia in Asia Minor, was on the point of being thrown into the scale against the Athenians, when a rupture between the Spartans and Alcibiades changed the aspect of affairs, and for awhile revived the waning glory of Athens. By his intrigues, Alcibiades, who now sought a reconciliation with his countrymen, detached Tisapher' nes from the interests of Sparta, and effected a change of government at Athens from a democracy to an aristocracy of four hundred of the nobility ; but the new government, dreading the ambition of Alcibiades re- fused to recall him. Another change soon followed. The defeat of the Athenian navy at Eretria, 1 and the revolt of Euboe' a, produced a new revolution at Athens, by which the government of the four hundred was overthrow, and democracy restored. Alcibiades was • immediately r 2 calle 1 ; but before his return he aided in destroying 1. Erttria was a town on the western coast of the is. and of Euboe' a. Its ruins are still tc be seen ten or twelve miles ;outb-east from the present Neg' ropont. (Map No. I.) 86 ANCIENT HISTQRY. [Pari I the Peloponnesian fleet in tlie battle of Cys'icus. 1 2 (B. C. 411.) Soon after, Alcibiades was welcomed at Athens with great enthusi- asm, a golden srown was decreed him, and he was appointed com- mander-in-chief of all the forces of the commonwealth both by land and by sea. 28. Alcibiades was still destined to experience the instability of fortune, for when one of his generals, contrary to instructions, attacked the Spartan fleet and was defeated, an unjust suspicion of treachery fell upon Alcibiades ; the former charges against him were revived, and he was deprived of his command and again banished. The affairs of Sparta were retrieved by the crafty Lysan' der, a general whose abilities the Athenians could not match since they had de- prived themselves of the services of Alcibiades. The Spartan general had the art to gain the confidence and cooperation of Cyrus, a younger son of Darius No' thus, the Persian king, whom the latter had invested with supreme authority over the whole maritime re- gion of Asia Minor. 29. Aided by Persian gold, Lysan' der found no difficulty in man- ning a numerous fleet, with which he met the Athenians at iE'gos- Pot' amos. s Here, during several days, he declined a battle, but seizing the opportunity when nearly all the Athenians were dispersed on shore in quest "of supplies, he attacked and destroyed all their ships, with the exception of eight galleys, and took three thousand prisoners. The fate of the prisoners is a shocking proof of the bar- barous feelings and manners of the age, for all of them were re- morselessly put to death, in revenge for some recent cruelties of the Athenians, who had thrown down a precipice the crews of two captured vessels, and had passed a decree for cutting off the right thumb of the prisoners whose capture they anticipated in the coming battle. 30. Thus, in one short hour, by the culpable negligence of their generals, were the affairs of the Athenians changed from an equality of resources with their enemy, to hopeless, irretrievable ruin. The maritime allies of Athens immediately submitted to Lysander, who directed the Athenians throughout Greece to repair at once to Athens, with threats of death to all whom he found elsewhere , and 1. Cys' icus was an island of the Propon' tis, (now sea of Marmora,) on the northern coast of My 9 ' ia. It was separated from the main land by a very narrow channel, which has sines been filled up and it is now a peninsula. (Map No. IV.) 2. JE' gos-Pot' amos, (“goat’s river”) was a small stream of the Thracian ChersonGsus, which flows into the Ilellespent from the west. The place where the Athenians landed, appears te have been “ a mere C pen beach, without any habitations.” (Thirwall, i. 485.) (Map No. IV > 3bav. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 87 when famine began to prey upon the collected multitude in the city, he appeared before the Piras' us with his fleet, while a large force from Sparta blockaded Athens by land. The Athenians had no hopes of effectual resistance, and only delayed the surrender to plead for the best terms that could be obtained from the conquerors'. Compelled at last to submit to whatever terms were dictated to them, they agreed to destroy the long walls, and the fortifications of the Pirse' us ; to surrender all their ships but twelve ; to restore their exiles ; to relinquish their conquests ; to become a member of the Peloponnesian confederacy ; and to serve Sparta in all her expedi- tions, whether by sea or by land. (B. C. 404.) Thus closed tho second Peloponnesian war, in the profound humiliation of Athens. 31. A change of government followed, as directed by Lysander and conformable to the aristocratic character of the Spartan institu tions. All authority was placed in the hands of thirty archons, known as the Thirty Tyrants, whose power was supported by a Spartan garrison. Their cruelty and rapacity knew no bounds, and filled Athens with universal dismay. - A large band of exiles soon accumulated in the friendly Theban territories, and choosing Thrasy- biilus for their leader, they resolved to strike a blow for the deliver- ance of their country. They first seized a small fortress on the frontiers of Attica, when, their numbers rapidly increasing, they were enabled to seize the Pirse' us, where they defeated the force which was brought against them. The rule of the tyrants was overthrown, and a council of ten was elected to fill their places ; but the latter emulated the wickedness of their predecessors, and, when the popu- lace turned against them, applied to Sparta for assistance. But the Spartan councils were divided, and eventually, by the aid of Sparta herself, the ten were deposed, when, the Spartan garrison being withdrawn, Athens again became a democracy, with the power in the hands of the people. (B. C. 403.) 32. It was during the rule of democracy in Athens that the wise And virtuous Socrates, the best and greatest of Grecian philosophers, was condemned to death on the absurd charge of impiety, and of «orrupting the morals of the young. His accusers appear to have been instigated by personal resentment, which he had innocently pro- voked, and by envy of his many virtues ; and the result shows not on'.y the instability, but the moral obliquity also, of the Athenian cl aracter. The defence which Socrates made before his judges ia in the tone of a mar vho demands rewards and honors, instead of 88 ANCIENT HISTORY. TPaet L the punishment of a malefactor ; and when the sentence of death had been pronounced against him, he spent the remaining days which the laws allowed him in impressing on the minds of his friends the most sublime lessons in philosophy and virtue ; and when the fatal hour arrived, drank the poison with as much composure as if it had been the last draught of a cheerful banquet. 33. Cyrus has been mentioned as one of the sons of Darius No' thus, and governor of the maritime region of Asia Minor. As his ambi- tion led him to aspire to the throne of Persia, to the exclusion of his elder brother, Artaxerxes Mnemon, he had aided Sparta in the Peloponnesian war, with the view of claiming, in return, her assist- ance against his brother, should he ever have occasion for it. When, therefore, the latter was promoted to the throne in accordance with the dying bequest of his father, Cyrus prepared for the execution of his design by raising an army of a hundred thousand Persian and barbarian troops, which he strengthened by an auxiliary force of thirteen thousand Grecians, drawn principally from the Greek cities of Asia. On the Grecian force, commanded by the Spartan Clear' chus, Cyrus placed his main reliance for success. 34. With these forces he marched from Sardis in the Spring of the year 401, and with little difficulty penetrated into the heart of the Persian empire, when he was met by Artaxerx' es, seventy miles from Babylon, at the head of nine hundred thousand men. In the battle which followed, this immense force was at first routed ; but Cyrus, rashly charging the centre of the guards who surrounded his brother, was slain on the field, when the whole of his barbarian troops took to flight, leaving the Greeks almost alone in the midst of a hostile country, more than a thousand miles from any friendly territory. 35. The Persians proposed to the Grecians terms of accommo- dation, but having invited their leaders to a conference they mer- cilessly put them to death. No alternative now remained to tho Greeks but to submit to the# enemy, or fight their way back to their native country. Where submission was death or slavery they could not hesitate which course to pursue. They chose Xen' ophon, a young Athenian, for their leader, and under his conduct ten thou- sand of their number, after a march of four months, succeeded in reaching Grecian settlements on the banks of the Eux' ine. Xen 'o- plion himself, who afterwards became the historian of his country, has left an admirable narrative of the “ Betreat of the Ten Thou £hap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. m sand,,” written with great clearness and singular modesty. It is one of the most interesting works bequeathed us by antiquity, as the Retreat itself is the most famous military expedition on record. 36. The part which the Greek cities of Asia took in the expedi tion of Cyrus inyolyed them in a war with Persia, in which they were aided by the Spartans, who, under their king Agesilaus, de feated Tisapker' nes in a great battle in the plains of Sardis (B. C 395) ; but Agesilaus was soon after recalled to aid his yn Tnmu countrymen at home in another Peloponnesian war, which peloponne- had been fomented chiefly by the Persian king himself, SIAX WAR> in order to save his own dominions from the ravages of the Spartans. Artaxerx' es supplied Conon, an Athenian, with a fleet which defeat- ed the Spartan navy; and Persian gold rebuilt the walls of Athens. On the other hand, Athens and her allies were defeated in the vicinity of Corinth, and on the*plains of Coronea. 1 (B. C. 394). Finally, after the war had continued eight years, articles of peace were arranged between Artaxerx' es and the Spartan Antal' cidas, hence called the peace of Antal' cidas, and ratified by all the parties engaged in the war, almost without opposition. (387 B. C.) The Greek cities in Asia, together with the islands Clazom'ense 2 and Cy' prus, were given up to Persia, and the separate independence of all the other Greek cities was guaranteed, with the exception of the islands Im' brus, Lem' nos, and Scy' rus, 3 which, as of old, were to belong to Athens. 37. The terms of the peace of Antal' cidas, directed by the king of Persia, were artfully contrived by him to dissolve the power of Greece into nearly its original elements, that Persia might there- after have less to fear from a united Greek confederacy, or the pre- ponderating influence, of any one Grecian State. It was the un- worthy jealousy of the Grecians, which the Persian knew how to stimulate, that prompted them to give up to a barbarian the free cities of Asia; and this is the darkest shade in the picture. Both Athens and Sparta lost their former allies ; and though Sparta was 1. Coronea was a city of Bceotia, to the south-east of Chceronea , and two or three miles 80uth-we3t from the Oopaic Lake. South of Coron6a was Mount Helicon. (Map No. I.) 2. The Clazom' cn.-e here mentioned was a small island near the Lydian coast, west of Smyrna, and in what is now called the Gulf ol^myrna. (Map No. IV.) 3. Im’ brus , Lem' nos , and Scy' rus , (now Imbro, Statimene, and Scyro,) are islands of the gean. The first is about ten miles west from the entrance to the II el' lespont, and the second about forty miles south-west. Scy' rus is ah >ut twenty-five miles north-east from Eubce’ & (Map No. UI.1 90 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part t the most s,roi.gly in favor of the terms of the treaty, yet Athens was the greatest gainer, for she once more became, although a small, yet an independent and powerful State. 38. It .was not long before ambition, and the resentment of past injuries, involved Sparta in new wars. She compelled Mantinea, 1 which had formerly been her unwilling ally, to throw down her walls, and dismember the city into its original divisions, under the pretext that the Mantineans had supplied one of the enemies of Sparta with corn during the preceding war, and had evaded their share of service in the Spartan army. The jealousy of Sparta was next aroused against the rising power of Olyn' thus, 2 which had become engaged in hostilities with some rival cities ; and the Spar- tans readily accepted an invitation of the latter to send an army to their aid. As one of the Spartan forces was marching through the Theban territories on this errand, the Spartan general fraudulently seized upon the Cadmeia, or Theban citadel, although a state of peace existed between Thebes and Sparta. (B. C. 382.) 39. The political morality of the Spartans is clearly exhibited in the arguments- by which Agesilaus justified this palpable breach of the treaty of Antal' cidas. He declared that the only question for the Spartan people to consider, was, whether they were gainers or losers by the transaction. The assertion made by the Athenians on a former occasion was confirmed, that, “of all States, Sparta had most glaringly shown by her conduct that in her political transactions she measured honor by inclination, and justice by expediency.” 40. On the seizure of the Theban citadel the most patriotic of the citizens fled to Athens, while a faction, upheld by the Spartan garrison, ruled the city. After the Thebans had submitted to this yoke four years they rose against their tyrants and put them to leath, and being re-enforced by the exiles, and an Athenian army, soon forced the Spartan garrison to capitulate. (B. C. 379.) Pelop'- idas and Epaminon' das now appeared on the field of action, and by their abilities raised Thebes, hitherto of but little political import 1. Mantinka was in the eastern part of Arcadia, seventeen miles west from Ar’ gos. It wa> situated in a marshy plain through which flowed the small river A' phis, whose waters found a subterranean passage to the sea. Mantin6a is wholly indebted for its celebrity to the great battle fought in its vicinity in the year 3G2 between the Spartans and Thebans. (See p. 91.) The locality of the battle was about three miles southwest from the city. The ruins of the ancient town may be seen near the wretched modern hamlet of Palaiopoli. ( Map No. I.) 2. Olyn' thus was it. the south-eastern part of Macedonia, six or seven miles north-east from Pntidae' a. {Map No I.) Chap IV. GRECIAN HISTORY. 91 anee, to the first rank in power among 'the Grecian States. A1 though Athens joined Thebes in the beginning of the contest, yet she afterwards took the side of the Spartans. At Teg'yra, 1 Pe- lop' idas defeated a greatly superior force, and killed the two Spartan generals , at Leuc' tra, 2 Epaminon' das, with a force of six thousand Thebans, defeated the Lacedaemo' man army of more than double that number. (B. C. July 8, 371.) Epaminon' das afterwards in- vaded Laconia, and appeared before the very gates of Sparta, where a hostile force had not been seen during five hundred years ; and at Mantinea he defeated the enemy in the most sanguinary contest ever fought between Grecians. (B. C. 362.) But Epaminon' das fell in the moment of victory, and the glory of Thebes perished with him. A general peace was soon after established, on the single condition that each State should retain its respective possessions. 41. Four years after the battle of Mantinea the Grecian States again became involved in domestic hostilities, known as the Sacred War, the second in Grecian history to which that epi- vra . SEC ond thet was applied. 4 During the preceding war, the Pho- sacred war. cians, 3 although in alliance with Thebes by treaty, had shown such a predilection in favor of Sparta, that the animosity of the Thebans was roused against their reluctant ally, and they Availed themselves of the first opportunity to show their resentment. The Phocians having taken into cultivation a portion of the plain of Del' phos, which was deemed sacred to Apollo, the Thebans caused them to be accused of sacrilege before the Amphictyon' ic council, which con demned them to pay a heavy fine. The Phocians refused obedience, and, encouraged by the Spartans, on whom a similar penalty had been imposed for their treacherous occupation of the Theban citadel, took up arms to resist the decree, and, under their leader, Philome- lus, plundered the sacred treasures of Del' phos to obtain the means for carrying on the war. 1. Teg' yra was a small village of Boeotia, near the northern shore of the Copaic Lake ( Map No. I.) 2. Leuc’ tra (now Lefka ) was a small town of Boeotia, about ten miles south-west frcia Thebes, and four or five miles from the Corinthian Gulf. It is now only a heap of ruma. (Map No. I.) 3. Phocis was a small tract of country, bounded on the north by Thes' saly, east by Boe6tia, south by the Corinthian Gulf, and west by Locris, vEtolia, and Doris. ( Map No. I.) a. The first sacred war was carried on against the inhabitants of the town of Cris' sa, on the northern shore of the Corinthian Gulf, in the time of Solon. The Crisseans were charged witk extortion and violence towards the strangers who passed through their territory cn their way to the Delphic sanctuary. “ Cris' sa was razed to the ground, its harbor choked up, and itl fruitful plain turned into a wilderness. ’ — Thirwalt, i. 152. 92 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Par L 42. The Thebans, Locrians, 1 Thessalians, and nearly all the States of Northern Greece, leagued against the Phocians, while Athens and Sparta declared in their favor, but gave them little active as- sistance. At first the Thebans, confident in their strength, put their prisoners to death, as abettors of sacrilege ; but Philomelus retaliated so severely upon some Thebans who had fallen into his power, as to prevent a repetition of the crime. After the war had continued five years, a new power was brought forward on the heatre of Grecian history, in the person of Philip, who had recently established himself on the throne of Mac' edon, and whom some of the Thessalian allies of Thebes applied to for aid against the Pho- cians. The interference of Philip forms an important epoch in Grecian affairs, at which we interrupt our narrative to trace the growth of the Macedonian monarchy down to the time when its history became united with that of its southern neighbors. SECTION II. GRECIAN HISTORY FROM THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THILIP ON THE THRONE OF MAO' EDON TO THE REDUCTION OF GREECE TO A ROMAN PROVINCE I 360 to 146 b. c. = 214 years. ANALYSIS. 1. Geographical account of Macedonia.— 2. Early history of Macedonia. Gre- cian rulers. Philip of mac' edon.— 3. Philip’s residence at Thebes.— 4. His usurpation of the kingdom of Mac’ edon. His wars with the Illyr'ians and other tribes. His first efforts against the Phocians. — 5. Philip reduces Pliocis. Decree of-the Amphictyon' ic council against Pliocis. Growing influence of Philip.— 6. The ambitious projects of Philip, [lllyr'ia. Epirus. Acar- nania.]— 7. Rupture between Philip and the Athenians. [Chersonfesus.] Devotion of tho orator ASs' chines to Philip. [Amphis' sa.] Philip throws off the mask. [Elateia.]— 8. Thebes and Athens prepare to oppose him. Dissensions. — 9. The masterly policy of Philip. The con- federacy against him dissolved by the battle of Chaeron6a. [Chaeron6a.]— 10. Philip’s treatment of the Thebans and the Athenians. General congress of the Grecian States, and death of Philip. 11. Alexander succeeds Philip. He quells the revolt against him. His cruel treatment of the Thebans.— 12. Servility of Athens. Preparations of Alexander for his career of Eastern conquest.— 13. Results of his first campaign. [Gran' icus. Halicarnas' bus.]— 14. He resumes his march in the spring of 333. Defeats Darius at Is' sus. [Cappadocia. Cilic' ia. Is' sus.] Results of the battle. Effect of Alexander’s kindness.— 15. Reduction of Palestine. [Gaza.] Expedition into Egypt. [Alexandria.] Alexander returns and crosses the Euphrates in search of Darius— 16. The opposing forces at the battle of Arb61a. [ArbMa. India.]— 17. Results of the battle, and death of Darius.— 18. Alexander’s residence at Babylon. His march beyond 1. The Ldcrians proper inhabited a small territory on the northern shore of the Corinthian Gulf, west of Phocis. There were other Locrian tribes north-east of Phocis, whose territory pordered on the Euboe' an Gulf. (Map No. I.) Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 9* Ihe Indus. [Hyphi sis R.]— 19. His return to Persia. [Persian Gulf. Cedrosia-] llis raeas nres for consolidating his empire. — 20. His sickness and death.— 21. His character.— 22. As judged of by his actions. The results of his conquests. [Seleucia.] — 23. Contentions that followed his death. — 24. Grecian confederacy against Macedonian supremacy. Sparta and T1 ebes. Athena is finally compelled to yield to Antip' ater. — 25. Cassan' der’s usurpation. Views and conquests of Antig' onus. Final dissolution of the Macedonian empire. [Ip' sus. Phryg’ ia.] 26. The four kingdoms that arose on the ruins of the empire. Those of Egypt and Syria tha most powerful. — '27. The empire of Cassan' der. Usurpation of Demetrius. Character of his government. TIks war carried on against him. — 28. Unsettled state of Mac' edon, Greece, and Western Asia.— 29. Celtic invasion of Mac' edon. [Adriat'ic. Pannonia.] — 30. Second Celtic Invasion. The Celts are repelled by the Phocians. Death of Brennus, their chief. — 31. Antig- enus, son of Demetrius, recovers the throne of his father. Is invaded by Pyr' rhus, king of Epirus. — 32. Pyr' rhus marches into Southern Greece. Is repulsed by the Spartans. He enters Ar" gos. His death. — 33. Remarks on the death of Pyr' rhus. Ambitious views of Antig' onus . 34. The Ach^'an League. Aratus seizes Sicyon, which joins the league. — 35. Ar&tus rescues Corinth, which at first joins the league. Conduct of Athens and Sparta. — 36. Antig’- onus II. — 37. League of the AStolians, who invade the Mess6nians. [AStolia.] Defeat of Ara- tus. General war between the respective members of the two leagues. — 38. Results of this war. Tho war between the Romans and Carthaginians. Policy of Philip II. of Mac' edon. — 39. He enters into an alliance with the Carthaginians. His defeat at Apollonia. [Apollonia.] — 40. He causes the death of Aratus. Roman intrigues in Greece.— 41. Overthrow of Philip’s power. The Romans promise independence to Greece. — 42. Remarks on the sincerity of the promise. Treatment oi the AStolians. Extinction of the Macedonian monarchy.* [Pyd' na.] —43. Unjust treatment of the Achse' ans. Roman ambassadors insulted. — 44. The Achse’ an war, and reduction of Greece to a Roman province. Remarks of Thirwall. — 45. Henceforward Grecian history is absorbed in that of Rome. Condition of Greece since the Persian wars. In the days of Strabo. Cotemporary History. — 1. Cotemporary annals of other nations : — Fenians — Egyptians. — History or the Jews. — 2. Rebuilding of the second temple of Jerusalem. The Jews during the reigns of Xerxes and Artaxerxes. Nehemiah’s administration.— 3. Judea a part of the sat' rapy of Syria. Judea after the division of Alexander’s empire. Judqa invaded by Ptolemy Soter. — 4. Judea subject to Egypt. Ptolemy-Philadelphus. The Jews place themselves under the rule of Sj ria. — 5. Civil war among the Jews. Antiochus plunders Jerusalem. Attempts to establish the Grecian polytheism. — 6. Revolt of the Mac' cabees. — 7. Continuation of the war with Syria. [Bethoron.] Death of Judas Maccabeus. — 8. The Syrians become masters of the country. Prosperity of the Jews under Simon MaccaMus.— 9. The remaining history of the Jews. 10. Grecian Colonies. Those of Thrace, Mac’ edon, and Asia Minor. Of Italy, Sicily, and Cyrenaica. 11. Magna Gracia. Early settlements in western Italy and in Sicily. [Cum*. Neay'olis. Nax“os. G61a. Messana. Agrigen’ turn.] — 12. On the south-eastern coast of Italy. History of Syb' aris, Crotona, and Taren’ turn. [Description of the same.]— 13. First two centuries of Sicilian history. [Him' era.] G 61a and Agrigen' turn. The despot G61o. — 14. Grow- ing power of Syracuse under his authority. — 15. The Carthaginians in Sicily — defeated by G61o. [Panor'mus.] — 16. Hiero and Thrasyb ulus. [AStna.] Revolution and change of government.— 17. Civil commotions and renewed prosperity. [Kamarina.]— 18. Syracuse and Agrigen' turn at the time of the breaking out of the Peloponnesian war. The lon’ic and Dorian cities of Sicily during the struggle. Sicilian congress— 19. Quarrel between the cities of Selinus and Eges’ ta. [Description of the same.] The Athenian expedition to Sicily. [Cat' ana.]— 20. Events up to the beginning of the siege of Syracuse.— 21. Death of Lam' achus, and arrival of Gylip' pus, the Spartan.— 22. Both parties reinforced— various battles— total defeat of the Athenians.— 23. Car- thaginian encroachments in Sicily — resisted by Bionys' ius the Elder. Division be tween the Greek and Carthaginian territories. [Him' era.]— 24. The administration of Tim&leon. Of Agath' ocles. The Romans become masters of Sicily. 25. Cyrena’ica. — Colonized by Lacedaemonians. Cyr6ne its chief city. Its ascendancy over the Libyan tribes. War with the Egyptians— 26. Tyranny of Agesilaus — founding of Bar' ca —the war which followed. Agesilaus. Civil dissensions. Camby' ses.— 27. Subsequent his- tory of Cyr6ne and Bar' ca. Dist inguished Cyr6neans. Cyr6neans mentioned ia Bible history 94 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part l 1. Mac'edon, or Macedonia, whose boundaries varied greatly at different times, had its south-eastern borders on the iE'gean Sea, while farther north it was bounded by the river Stry' mon, which separated it from Thrace, and on the south by Thes' saly and Epi- rus. On the west Macedonia embraced, at times, many of the Il- lyrian tribes which bordered on the Adriatic. On the north the natural boundary was the mountain chain of Hse' mus. The prin- cipal river of Macedonia was the Axius (now the Vardar), which fell into the Thermaic Gulf, now called the Gulf of Salon' iki. 2. Tbe history of Macedonia down to the time of Philip, the father of Alexander the Great, is involved in great obscurity. The early Macedonians appear to have been an Illyr' ian tribe, differ- ent in race and language from the Hellenes or Greeks : but Herod'- otus states that the Macedonian monarchy was founded by Greeks from Ar' gos ; and according to Greek writers, twelve or fifteen i. philip of Grecian princes reigned there before the accession of mac' edox. Philip, who took charge of the government about the year 360 B. C., not as monarch, but as guardian of the infant son of his elder brother. 3. Philip had previously passed several years at Thebes, as a hostage, where he eagerly availed himself of the excellent oppor- tunities which tljat city afforded for the acquisition of various kinds of knowledge. He successfully cultivated the study of the Greek language ; and in the conversation of such generals and statesmen as Epaminon' das, Pelop' idas, and their friends, became acquainted with the details of the military tactics of the Greeks, and learned the nature and working of their democratical institutions. Thus with the superior mental and physical endowments which nature had given him, he became eminently fitted for the part which he after- wards bore in the intricate game of Grecian politics. 4. After Philip had successfully defended the throne of Mac' edon during several years, in behalf of his nephew, his military successes nabled him to take upon himself the kingly title, probably with the unanimous consent of both the army and the nation. He annexed several Thracian towns to his dominions, reduced the Illyr' ians and other nations on his northern and western borders, and was at times an ally, and at others an enemy, of Athens. At length, during the sacred war against the Phocians, the invitation which he received from the Thessalian allies of Thebes, as already noticed, afforded him a pretence, which he had long coveted, for a more active inter- Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. ference in the aflairs of his southern neighbors. On entering Tiles'* saly, however, on his southern march, he was at first repulsed by the Phocians and their allies, and obliged to retire into Macedonia, but, soon returning at the head of a more numerous army, he defeated the enemy in a decisive battle, and would have marched upon Phocis at once to terminate the war, but he found the pass of Thermopylae strongly guarded by the Athenians, and thought it prudent to with- draw his forces. 5. Still the sacred war lingered, although the Phocians desired peace ; but the revengeful spirit of the Thebans was not allayed ; Philip was again urged to crush the profaners of the national re- ligion, and having succeeded, in spite of the warnings of the patriotic Demosthenes, in lulling the suspicions of the Athenians with pro- posals of an advantageous peace, he marched into Phocis, and com- pelled the enemy to surrender at discretion. The Amphictyon' ic council, being now reinstated in its ancient authority, with the power of Philip to enforce its decrees, doomed Phocis to lose her inde- pendence forever, to have her cities levelled with the ground, and her population, after being distributed in villages of not more than fifty dwellings, to pay a yearly tribute of sixty talents to the temple, ufitil the whole amount of the plundered treasure should be restored. Finally, the two votes which the Phocians had possessed in the Amphictyon' ic council were transferred to the king of Mac' edon and his successors. The influence which Philip thus obtained in the councils of the Grecians paved the way for the overthrow of their liberties. 6. From an early period of his career Philip had aspired to the sovereignty of all Greece, as a secondary object that should prepare the way for the conquest of Persia, the great aim and end of all his ambitious projects ; and after the close of the sacred war he accord- ingly exerted himself to extend his power and influence, either by arms or negotiation, on every side of his dominions; but his in- trigues in At' tica, and among the Peloponnesian States, were for a time counteracted by the glowing and pitriotic eloquence of the Athenian Demosthenes, the greatest of Grecian orators. In his military operations Philip ravaged Illyr' ia 1 - — reduced Thes' saly more nearly to a Macedonian province — conquered a part of the 1. The term Illyr' ia, or Illyr' icum was applied to the country bordering on the eastern shoro of the Adriatic, and extending from the northern extremity of the Gulf south to the borders of Epirus. (Map No. VIII.) ANCIENT HISTORY. I Part 1 9ft Thracian territory — extended his power into Epirus and Acarnania — and would have gained a footing in E'lis and Achaia, on the western coast of the Peloponnesus, had it not been for the watchful jealousy of Athens, which concerted a league among several of the States to repel his encroachments. 7. The first open rupture with the Athenians occurred while Philip was engaged in subduing the Grecian cities on the Thracian coast of the Hel' lespont, in what was called the Thracian ChersonA sus. a A little later, the Amphictyon' ic council, through the influ- ence of JEs' chines, an orator second only to Demosthenes, but secretly devoted to the interests of the king of Mac'edon, appointed Philip to conduct a war against Amphis' sa, 1 2 3 a Locrian town, which had been convicted of a sacrilege similar to that of the Phocians. It was now that Philip, hastily passing through Thrace at the head of & puwerful army, first threw off the mask, and revealed his de- signs against the liberties of Gf jece by seizing and fortifying Elateia 4 the capital of Phdcis whi ch was conveniently situated for commanding the entrance into Boeotia. • 8 The Thebans and the Athenians, suddenly awaking from their dream of security, from which all the eloquent appeal- of Demosthe- nes had not hitherto been able to arouse them, prepared to defend their territories from invasion ; but most of the Peloponnesian States kept aloof through indifference, rather than through fear. Even in Thebes and Athens there were parties whom the gold and persua- sions of Philip had converted into allies; and when the armies marched forth to battle, dissensions pervaded their ranks. The spirit of Grecian liberty had already been extinguished 9. The masterly policy of Philip still led him to declare that the sacred war against Amphis' sa, with the conduct of which he had 1. Acarn&nia , lying south of Epirus, also bordered on the Adriatic, or Ionian sea. From yEtolia on the east it was separated by the Acheloiis, probably the largest river in Greece. The Acarnhnians were almost constantly at war with the AStolians, and were far behind the rest of the Greeks in mental culture. (Map No. I.) 2. The Thracian Chcrsonesus (“Thracian peninsula”) was a peninsula of Thrace, between the Melian Gulf (now Gulf of Saros) and the Hel' lespont. The fertility of its soil early attracted the Grecians to its shores, which soon became crowded with flourishing and popular cities. (Map No. III.) 3. Amphis' s a, the chief town of Locris, was about seven miles west from Delphi, near the head of the Crissean Gulf, now Gulf of Salona, a branch of the Corinthian Gulf. The modern town of Salona represents the ancient Amphis' sa. ( Map No. I.) 4. Elateia , a city in the north-east of Phocis, on the left bank of the Cephis' sus, was about twenty-five miles north-east from Delphi. Its ruins are to be seeD on a site colled Elepkta. (Map No. I.) Chap. IV j GRECIAN HISTORY. 97 been intrusted by the Amphictyon' ic council, was his only object; and he had a plausible excuse for entering Bceotia when the The- bans and Athenians appeared as the allies of a city devoted by the gods to destruction. At Chseronea 1 the hostile armies met, nearly equal in number; but there was no Per' icles, nor Epaminon' das, to match the warlike abilities of Philip and the young prince Alex- ander, the latter of whom commanded a wing of the Macedonian army. The day was decided against the Grecians, although their loss in battle was not large ; but the event broke up the feeble con- federacy against Philip, and left each of the allied States at his mercy. 10. While Philip treated the Thebans with some severity, and obliged them to ransom their prisoners, and resign a portion of then territory, he exercised a degree of lenity towards the Athen- ians which excited general surprise — offering them terms of peace whicn they themselves would scarcely have ventured to propose to him. He next assembled a congress of all the Grecian States, at Corinth, for the purpose of settling the affairs of Greece. Here all his proposals were adopted, war was declared against Persia, and Philip was appointed commander-in-chief of the Grecian forces ; but while he was making preparations for his great enterprise he was Assassinated on a public occasion by a Macedonian nobleman, in re- venge for some private wrong. 11. Alexander, the son of Philip, then at the age of twenty years succeeded his father on the throne of Mac' edon. At once the Illyr'- ians, Thracians / and other northern tribes that had been made tributary by Philip, took up arms to recover their DEI1 the* independence; but Alexander quelled the spirit of re- great. volt in a single campaign. During his absence on this expedition, the Grecian States, headed by the Thebans and Athenians, made prepara tions to shake off the yoke of Mac' edon ; but Alexander, whose marches were unparalleled for their rapidity, suddenly appeared in their midst Thebes, the first object of his vengeance, was taken by assault, in which six thousand of her warriors were slain. Ever distinguished by her merci/ess treatment of her conquered enemies, she was now 1. The plain of Cheronea, on which the battle was ft light, is on the southern bank of Cha Cephis’ sus river., in Bceotia, a few miles from its entrance into the Coptic lake. In the year i47 B. C. the Athenians had been defeated on the same spot by the Boeotians ; and in the year 86 B. C. the sane place witnessed a bloody engagement between the Romans under Bvlla, and the troops of Mithridates. (Map No. I.) E 98 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1, doomed to suffer tlie extreme penalties of war which she had often inflicted on others. Most of the city was levelled with the ground and thirty thousand prisoners, besides women and children, were con demned to slavery. 12. The other Grecian States which had provoked the resentment of Alexander, hastily renewed their submission ; and Athens, with servile homage, sent an embassy to congratulate the youthful hero on his recent successes. Alexander accepted the excuses of all, renewed the confederacy which his father had formed, and having intrusted the government of Greece and Mac' edon to Antip' ater, one of his generals, set out on his career of eastern conquest, at the head of an army of only thirty -five thousand men, and taking with him a treasury of only seventy talents of silver. He had even distributed nearly all the remaining property of his crown among his friends ; and when he was asked by Perdic' cas what he had reserved for himself, he an- swered, “ My hopes.” 13. Early in the spring of the year 334, Alexander crossed the Hel' lespont, and a few days later defeated an immense Persian army on the eastern bank of the Gran' icus, 1 with the loss on his part of only eighty-five horsemen and thirty light infantry. Proceeding thence south towards the coast, the gates of Sardis and Eph' esus were thrown open to him ; and although at Miletus and Halicar- nas' sus 2 he met with some resistance, yet before the close of the first campaign he was undisputed master of all Asia Minor. 14. Early in the following spring (B. G. 333),- he directed his march farther eastward, through Cappadocia 3 and Cilic' ia, 4 and on the coast of the latter, near the small town of Is' sus, 5 again met 1. The Oran' icus , the same as the Turkish Demotiko , is a a small stream of Mys' ia, in Asia Minor, which flows from Mount I' da, east of Troy, northward into the Propon' tis, or Sea of Marmora. {Map No. IV.) 2. Halicarnas' sus , the principal city of Caria, was situated on the northern shore of the Cer' amic Gulf, now Gulf of Kos, one hundred miles south from Smyrna. Halicarnas' sus was the birth-place of Herod’ otus the historian, of Dionys’ ius the historian and critic, and of Hera- clitus the poet. It was Artemis’ ia, queen of Caria, who erected the splendid mausoleum, or tomb, to her husband, Mausolus. The Turkish town of Boodroom is on the site of the ancient Halicarnas' sus. Near the modern town are to be seen old walls, exquisite sculptures, frag- ments of columns, and the remains of a theatre two hundred and eighty feet in d'ameter, which seems to have had thirty-six rows of marble seats. {Map No. IV.) 3. Cappadocia was an interior province of Asia Minor, south-east of Galatia. {Map No. IV.) 4. Cilic' ia was south of Cappadocia, on the coast of the Mediterranean. {Map No. IV.) 5. Is' sus (now Aiasse, or Urzin) was a sea-port town of Cilic’ ia, at the north-eastern ex- tremity of the Mediterranean, and at the head of the Gulf of Is’ sus. The plain between tha sea and the mountains, where the battle was fought, was less than two miles in width,— a suf ficent space for the evolutions of the Mac’ edonian phalanx, but not large enough for the n»u> tsuvres of so great an army as that of Darius. {Map No. IV.) CflAi . rv.] GRECIAN HISTORY 99 ibe Persian army, immbering seven hundred thousand men, and commanded hy Darius himself, king of Persia. In the battle which followed, Alexander, as usual, led on his army in person, and fought in the thickest of the fight. The result was a total rout of the Per- sians, with a loss of more than a hundred thousand men, while that of the Greeks and Macedonians was less than five hundred. The Persian monarch fled in the beginning of the engagement, leaving nis mother, wife, daughters, and an infant son, to the mercy of the victor, who treated them with the greatest kindness and respect. When, afterwards, Darius heard, at the same time, of the generous treatment of his wife, who was accounted the most beautiful woman in Asia, — of her death from sudden illness, and of the magnificent burial which she had received from the conqueror, — he lifted up his hands to heaven and prayed, that if his kingdom were to pass from himself, it might be transferred to Alexander. 15. The conqueror next directed his march southward through northern Syria and Palestine. At Damascus a vast amount of treasure belonging to the king of Persia fell into his hands : the city of Tyre, after a vigorous siege of seven months, and a desperate resistance, wa3 taken by storm, and thirty thousand of the Tyrians sold as slaves. (B. C.' 332.) After the fall of Tyre, all the cities of Palestine submitted, except Gaza, 1 which made as obstinate a de- fence as Tyre, and was as severely punished. From Palestine Alex- ander proceeded into Egypt, which was eager to throw off the Per- sian tyranny, and he took especial care to conciliate the priests by the honors which he paid to the Egyptian gods. After having founded a new city, which he named Alexandria, 2 and crossed the 1. Gaza, an early Philistine city of great natural strength in the south-western part of Palestine, was sixteen miles south of Ascalon, and but a short distance from the- Mediterranean. The places was called Constantia by the Romans, and is now called Rassa by the Arabs. (Map No. VI.) 2. Alexandria is about fourteen miles south-west from the Canopic, or most western branch of the Nile, and is built partly on the ridge of land between the sea and the bed of the old Lake Mareotis, and partly on the peninsula (formerly island^ of Phhros, which projects into the Mediterranean. Alexandria, the site of which was most admirably chosen by its founder, It the only port on the Egyptian coast that has deep water, and that is accessible at all sea- sons. Lake Mareotis, which for many ages after the Greek and Roman dominion in Egypt wa3 mostly dried up, and whose bed was lower than the surface of the Mediterranean, had no outlet to the sea until the English, in the year 1801, opened a passage into it from the Bay of Aboukir, when it soon resumed its ancient extent. The ancient canal from Alexandria to the Nile, a distance of forty-eight miles, was eopened in 1819. While the commerce of the Indies was carried on by way of the Red Sea and the Isthmus of Suez, Alexandria was a great com- mercial emporium, but it rapidly declined after the discovery of the passage to India by way of the Cape of Good Hope. It is probable that the commerce of the east, through the agency ■»f steam, will again flow, to a great extent, in the ancient channel, and that Alexandria will again become a great commercial emporium. (Map No. V.l (00 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pari 1 Libyan desert to consult the oracle of J iipiter Am' nion. he returned to Palestine, when, learning that Darius was making vast prepara- tions to oppose him, he crossed the Euphrates, and directed his march into the very heart of the Persian empire, declaring that u the world could no more admit two masters than two suns.” 16. On a beautiful plain twenty miles distant from the town of Arbela, 1 whence the battle derives its name, the Persian monarch, surrounded by all the pomp and luxury of Eastern magnificence, had collected the remaining strength of his empire, consisting of an army, as stated by some authors, of more than a million of foot soldiers, and forty thousand cavalry, besides two hundred scythed chariots, and fifteen elephants brought from the west of India. 2 To oppose this force Alexander had only forty thousand foot soldiers, and seven thousand cavalry, but they were well armed and discip- lined, confident of victory, and led by an able general who had never experienced a defeat, and who directed the operations of the battle in person. (B. C. 331.) 17. Darius sustained the conflict with better judgment and more courage than at Is' sus, but the cool intrepidity of the Macedonian phalanx was irresistible, and the field of battle soon became a scene of slaughter, in which, some say, forty thousand, and others, three hundred thousand of the barbarians were slain, while the loss of Alexander did not exceed five hundred men. Although Darius es- caped with a portion of his body-guard, yet the result of the battle decided the contest, and gave to Alexander the dominion of the Per- sian empire. Not long after, Darius himself was slain by one of his own officers. 18. Soon after the battle of Arbela, Alexander proceeded to Babylon, and during four years remained in the heart of Persia, re duoing to subjection the chiefs who still struggled for independence, and regulating the government of the conquered provinces. Am bitious of farther conquests, he passed the Indus, and invaded the country of the Indian king Porus, whom he defeated in a sanguinary engagement, and took prisoner. When brought into the presence of Alexander, and asked how he would be treated, he replied, “ Like a king and so pleased was the conqueror with the lofty demeanor 1. Arbela was about forty miles east of the Tigris, and twenty miles south-east from thj plain of Gaugamhla, where the battle was fought. Gaugamela, a small hamlet, was a shori distance south-east from the site of Nineveh. 2. The term India was applied by the ancient | 'Ographers to all tha part of Asia which it east of the river Indus. (Map No. V.) Ohap. IT.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 10 of the captive ) avid with the ‘valor which he had siiown in battle, that he not only re-instated him in his royal dignity, but conferred upon him a large addition of territory. Alexander continued his march eastward until he reached the Hyphasis, 1 the most eastern tributary of the Indus, when hfo troops, seeing no end of their toils, refused to follow him farther, and he was reluctantly forced to abandon the career of conquest which he had marked out for himself to the eastern ocean. 19. Resolving to return into Central Asia by a new route, he de- scended the Indus to the sea, whence, after sending a fleet with a portion of his forces around through the Persian Gulf 2 to the Eu- phrates, he marched with the rest of his army through the barren wastes of Gedrosia, 3 and ufter much suffering and considerable loss, arrived once more in the fertile provinces of Persia. For some time after his return his attention was engrossed with plans for organizing, on a permanent basis, the government of the mighty empire which he had won. Aiming to unite the conquerors and the conquered, so as to form out of both a nation independent alike of Macedonian and of Persian prejudices, he married Statira, the oldest daughter of Darius, and united his principal officers with Persian and Median women of the noblest families, while ten thousand of his soldiers were induced to folio v the example of their superiors. 20. But while he was occupied with these cares, and with dreams of future conquests, his career was suddenly terminated by death. On setting out to visit Babylon, soon after the decease of an inti- mate friend, which had caused a great depression of his spirits, he was warned by the magicians that Babylon would be Altai to him ; but he proceeded to the city, where, haunted by gloomy forebodings and superstitious fancies, he endeavored to dispel his melancholy by indulging more freely in the pleasures of the table. Excessive drink ing at length brought to a crisis a fever, which he had probably con 1. The Hyph&sis, now called Beyah, or Seas, is the most eastern tributary of the Indus, The Sutledge , which enters the Beyah from the east, has been mistaken by some writers for the ancient Hyphasis. (Map No. V.) 2. The Persian Gulf is an extensive arm of the Indian ocean, separating Southern Persia J'om Arabia. During a long period it was the thoroughfare for the commerce between the western world and India. The navigation of the Gulf, especially along the Arabian coust, is tedious and difficult, owing to its numerous islands and reefs. The Bahrein islands, near the Arabian shore, are celebrated for their pearl fisheries, which yield pearls of the value of more k han a mill. on dollars annually. (Map No. V.) 3. Gedrosia , corresponding to the modem Persian province of Mekran , is a sandy or barren region, extending along the shore of the Indian Ocean from the river Indus to the mouth of thft °e'sian Gulf. (Map No. V.) 102 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I tracted in t le marshes of Assyria, and which suddenly terminated his life in the thirty- third year of his age, and the thirteenth of his reign. (B. C. May, 324.) 21. The character of Alexander has afforded matter for much discus- sion, and is, to this day, a subject of dispute. At times he was guilty of remorseless and unnecessary cruelty to the vanquished, and in a fit of passion he slew the friend who had saved his life ; but on »ther occasions he was distinguished by an excess of lenity, and by > » e most noble generosity and benevolence. His actions and char- avver were indeed of a mixed nature, which is the reason that some have regarded him as little more than a heroic madman, while others give him the honor of vast and enlightened views of policy, which aimed at founding, among nations hitherto barbarous, a solid and flourishing empire. 22. If we are to judge by his actions, however, rather than by his supposed moral motives, he was, in reality, one of the greatest of men ; great, not only in the vast compass and persevering ardor of his ambition, which “ wept for more worlds to conquer,” but great in the objects and aims which ennobled it, and great because his adven- turous spirit and personal daring never led him into deeds of rash- ness ; for his boldest military undertakings were ever guided by sagacity and prudence. The conquests of Alexander were highly beneficial in their results to the conquered people ; for his was the first of the great monarchies founded in Asia that contained any ele- ment of moral and intellectual progress — that opened a prospect of advancing improvement, and not of continual degradation, to its subjects. To the commercial world it opened new countries, and new channels of trade, and gave a salutary stimulus to industry and mercantile activity : nor were these benefits lost when the empire founded by Alexander broke in pieces in the hands of his successors ; for the passages which he opened, by sea and by land, between the Euphrates and the Indus, had become the highways of the commerce of the Indies ; Babylon remained a famous port until its rival, Seleu'* cia, 1 arose into eminence ; and Alexandria long continued to receive and pour out an inexhaustible tide of wealth. 1. Seleu' eia, built by Seleu’ cus, one of Alexander’s generals, was situated on the western bank of the Tigris, about forty-five miles north of Babylon. Seleu’ cus designed it as a free Grecian city ; and many ages after the fall of the Macedonian empire, it retained the charac- teristics of a Grecian colony, — arts, military virtue, and the love of freedom. When at the height of its prosperity H contained a population of six hundred thousand citizens, governed by a senate of three hundred nobles. Chap. IY.J GRECIAN HISTORY. 103 23. The sudden death of Alexander left the government in a very unsettled condition. As he had appointed no successor, several of hi? generals contended for the throne, or for the regency during the minority of his sons : and hence arose a series of intrigues, and bloody wars, which, in the course of twenty-three years, caused the destruction of the entire family of Alexander, and ended in the dis- solution of the Macedonian empire. 24. When intelligence of the death of Alexander reached Greece, the country was already on the eve of a revolution against Antip '- ater ; and Demosthenes, still the foremost advocate of liberty, now found little difficulty in uniting several of the States with Athens in a confederacy against Macedonian supremacy. Sparta, however, was too proud to act under her ancient rival, and Thebes no longer ex- isted. Antip' ater attempted to secure the straits of Thermop' ylse against the confederates, but he was met by Leos' thenes, the Athe- nian general, and defeated. Eventually, however, Antip' ater, having received strong reinforcements from Mac' edon, attacked the confeder ates, and completely annihilated their army. Athens was compelled to abolish her democratic form of government, to receive Macedonia^ garrisons in her fortresses, and to surrender a number of her most famous orators, including Demosthenes. The latter, to avoid falling into the hands of Antip' ater, terminated liis life by poison. 25. Antip' ater, at his death, left the government in the hands of Polysper' chon, as regent during the minority of a son of Alexander ; but Cassan' der, the son of Antip' ater, soon after usurped the sover- eignty of Greece and Mac' edon, and, for the greater security of his power, caused all the surviving members of the family of Alexander to be put to death. Antig' onus, another of Alexander’s generals, had before this time overrun Syria and Asia Minor, and his am- bitious views extended to the undivided sovereignty of all the coun- tries which had been ruled by Alexander. Four of the most powerful of the other generals, Ptol' emy, Seleu' cus, Lysim' achus, and Cas- Ban' der, formed a league against him, and fought with him the famous battle of Ip' sus, 1 in Phryg' ia, 2 which ended in the defeat and death of Antig' onus, the destruction of the power which he had raised, and the final dissolution of the Macedonian empire, three hundred and one years before the Christian era. 1. Ip' sus was a city of Phryg' ia, near the southern boundary of Galatia, but its exact lo- cality is unknown. ( Map No. IV.) 1. Phryg-’ ii was the central province of western Asia Minor. (Maps Nos. IV. and V ' 104 \NCIENT HISTORY. [Pa»t I 26. A new partition of the provinces was now made into four in* dependent kingdoms. Ptol'emy was confirmed in the possession of Egypt, together with Lib' ya, and part of the neighboring territories of Arabia ; Seleu' cus received the countries embraced in the east- ern conquests of Alexander, and the whole region between the coast of Syria and the Euphrates ; but the whole of this vast empire soon dwindled into the Syrian monarchy: Lysim' achus received the northern and western portions of Asia Minor, as an appendage to his kingdom of Thrace ; while Cassan' der received the sovereignty of Greece and Mac’ edon. Of these kingdoms, the most powerful were Syria and Egypt ; the former of which continued under the dynasty of the Seleu' cidee, and the latter under that of the Ptol' emies, until both were absorbed in the growing dominion of the Roman empire Of the kingdom of Thrace under Lysim' achus, we shall have occa sion to speak in its farther connection with Grecian history. 27. Cassan' der survived the establishment of his power only four years. After his death his two sons quarrelled for the succession, and called in the aid of foreigners to enforce their claims. Deme- trius, son of Antig' onus, having seized the opportunity of inter- ference in their disputes, cut off the brother who had invited his aid, and made himself master of the throne of Mac' edon, which was en- joyed by his posterity, except during a brief interruption after his death, down to the time of the Roman conquest. Demetrius possessed in addition to Mac' edon, Thes' saly, At' tica, and Boeotia, together with a great portion of the Peloponnesus; but his government was that of a pure military despotism, which depended on the army for support, wholly independent of the good will of the people. Aim- ing to recover his father’s power in Asia, he excited the jealousy of Seleu' cus, king of Syria, who was able to induce Lysim' achus, of Thrace, and Pyr' rhus, king of Epirus, to commence a war against him. The latter twice overran Macedonia, and even seized the throne, which he' held during a few months, while Demetrius was driven from the kingdom by his own rebellious subjects ; but his son Antig' onus maintained himself in Peloponnesus, waiting a favorable opportunity of placing himself on the throne of his father. 28. During a number of years Mac' edon, Greece, and Western Asia, were harassed with the wars excited by the various aspirants to power. Lysim' achus was defeated and slain in a war with Se- leu' cus ; and the latter, invading Thrace, was assassinated by Ptol' emy Cerau' nus, who then usurped the government of Thra © Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HIS10RY. 106 and Mac* cdon. In this situation of affairs, a storm, unseen in the distance, but which had long been gathering, suddenly burst upon Mac' edon, threatening to convert, by its ravages, the whole Grecian peninsula into a scene of desolation. 29. A vast horde of barbarians of the Celtic race had for some time been accumulating around the head waters of the Adriat' ic,‘ making Pannonia 2 the chief seat of their power. Influenced by hopes of plunder, rather than of conquest, they suddenly appeared on the frontiers of Mac' edon, and sent an embassy to Cerau' nus, offering peace if he were willing to purchase it by tribute. A haughty defiance from the Macedonian served only to quicken the march of the invaders, who defeated and killed Cerau' nus in a great battle, and so completely routed his army that almost all were slain or taken. (B. C. 280.) The conquerors then overran all Mac' edon to the borders of Thes' saly, and a detachment made a devastating inroad into the rich vale of the Peneus. The walled towns alone, which the barbarians had neither the skill nor the patience to reduce by siege, held out until the storm had spent its fury, when the Celts, scattered over the country in plundering parties, having met with some reverses, gradually withdrew from a country where there was little left to tempt their cupidity. 30. In the following year (279 B. C.) another band of Celts, esti- mated at two hundred thousand men, under the guidance of their principal Brenn or chief, called Bren' nus, overran Macedonia with little resistance, and passing through Thessaly, threatened to extend their ravages over southern Greece ; but the allied Grecians, under the Athenian general, Cal' lipus, met them at Thermop' ylse, and at first repulsed them with considerable loss. Eventually, however, the secret path over the mountains was betrayed to the Celts as it had been to the Persian army of Xerxes, and the Grecians were forced to retreat. A part of the barbarian army, under Bren' nus, then marched into Phocis, for the purpose of plundering Delphi, but thsir atrocities roused against them the whole population, and they found their entire march, over roads mountainous and difficult, 1. The Adriat' ic or Hadriatic (now most generally called the Gulf of Venice) is t v at large arm of the Medilen&nean sea which lies between Italy and the opposite shores ol Mlyr ia. Epirus, and Greece. The southern portion of the gulf is now, as anciently, called the Ionian sea. The Adriat' ic derived its name from the once flourishing sea-port town of A' dria north of the river Po. The harbor of A’ dria has long been filled up by the mud and other deposits brought down by the rivers, and the town is now nineteen miles inland. (Map No. VIII.) 2. Pannoma, afterwards a Roman province, was north of Illyr' ia, haring the Danube for ita northern and ea*‘ern boundary ( Map No. VIII &. IX.) 106 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 beset widi enemies burning for revenge. The invaders also suffered grea’dy from the cold and storms in the defiles of the mountains. It was said that the gods fought for the sacred temple, and that an earthquake rent the rocks, and brought down huge masses on the heads of the assailants. Certain it is that the invaders, probably acted upon by superstitious terror, were repulsed and disheartened. Bren' nus, who had been wounded before Delphi, is said to have killed himself in despair ; and only a remnant of the barbarians regained their original seats on the Adriat' ic. 31. After the repulse of the Celts, Antig' onus, the son of Deme- trius, was able to gain possession of the throne of Mac' edon, but he found a formidable competitor In Pyr' rhus, king of Epirus, who re- solved to add Mac' edon, and, if possible, the whole of Greece to his own dominion. Pyr' rhus had no sooner returned from his famous expedition into Italy, of which we shall have occasion to speak in Roman history, a than he seized a pretext for declaring war against Antig' onus, and invaded Macedonia with his small army, (274 B. C.) the remnant of the forces which he had led against Rome, but which he now strengthened with a body of Celtic mercenaries. When Antig' onus marched against him, many of his troops, who had little affection or respect for their king, went over to Pyr' rhus, whose celebrated military prowess had won their admiration. 32. Antig' onus then retired into Southern Greece, whither he was followed by Pyr' rhus, who professed that the object of his expe- dition was merely to restore the freedom of the cities which were held in subjection by his rival ; but when he reached the borders of Laconia he laid aside the mask, and began to ravage the country, and made an unsuccessful attempt to surprise Sparta, which was lit- tle prepared for defence. He then marched to Ar' gos, whither he had been invited by one of the rival leaders of the people, but he found Antig' onus, at the head of a strong force, encamped on one of the neighboring heights. Pyr' rhus gained entrance into the city by night, through treachery, but at the same time the troops of Antig'- onus were admitted from an opposite quarter — the citizens arose in arms, and a fierce struggle was carried on in the streets until day- light, when Pyr' rhus himself was slain (272 B. C.) by the hand of an Ar'give woman, who, exasperated at seeing him about to kill her son, hurled upon him a ponderous tile from the house-top. The greater part of the army of Pyr' rhus, chiefly composed of Macedonians, GRECIAN HISTORY. Chap. IV.J 107 then went over to their former sovereign, who soon after gained the throne of Mac' edon, which he held until his death. 33. The death of Pyr' rhus forms an important epoch in Grecian history, as it put an end to the struggle for power among Alexander’s successors in the West, and left the field clear for the final contest between the liberty of Greece and the power of Mac' edon, which was only terminated by the ruin of both. When Antig'onus re- turned to Mac' edon, its acknowledged sovereign, he cherished tho hope of ultimately reducing all Greece to his sway, little dreaming that the power centered in a recent league of a few Achae' an cities was destined to become a formidable adversary to his house. 34. The Achce ' an League comprised at first twelve towns of Achaia, which were associated together for mutual safety, forming a little federal republic — all the towns having an equality IIL A ch.e'an of representation in the general government, to which league. all matters affecting the common welfare were intrusted, each town at the same time retaining the regulation of its own domestic policy. The Achse' an league did not become of sufficient political importance to attract the attention of Antig' onus until about twenty years after the death of Pyr' rhus, when Aratus, an exile from Sic' yon, at the head of a small band of followers, surprised the city by night, and without any bloodshed delivered it from the dominion of the tyrants who, under Macedonian protection, had long oppressed it with despotic sway. (251 B. C.) Fearful of the hostility of Antig'onus, Aratus induced Sic' yon to join the Achse' an league, and although its power greatly exceeded that of any Achse' an town, it claimed no superiority of privilege over the other members of the confederacy, but obtained only one vote in the general council of the league , a precedent which was afterwards strictly adhered to in the admission of other cities. Aratus received the most distinguished honors from the Achse' ans, and, a few years after the accession of Sic' yon, was placed at the head of the armies of the confederacy. (B. C. 24C.) 35. Corinth, the key to Greece, having been seized by a stratagem of Antig' onus, and its citadel occupied by a Macedonian garrison, was rescued by a bold enterprise of Aratus, and induced to join the league. (243 B. C.) Other cities successively gave in their adhe- rence, until the confederacy embraced nearly the whole of Pelopon- nesus. Although Athens did not unite with it, yet Aratus obtained the withdrawal of its Macedonian garrison. Sparta opposed the league — induced Ar'gos and Corinth to withdraw from it — and by IOS ANCIENT HISTORY. [P; BT 1. her successes o ver the Achse' ans, eventually induced them to call in the aid of the Macedonians, their former enemies. 36. Antig' onus II., readily embracing the opportunity of restor ing the influence of his family in Southern Greece, marched against the . Lacedaemonians, over whom he obtained a decisive victory, which placed Sparta at his mercy. But he used his victory moder- ately, and granted the -Spartans peace on liberal terms. On his death, which occurred soon after, he was succeeded on the throne of Mac' edon by his nephew and adopted son, Philip II., a youth of only seventeen. 3 7V 'The JEtolians, 1 the rudest of the Grecian tribes, who had acquired the character of a nation of freebooters and pirates, had at this time formed a league similar to the Achse' an,' and counting on the inexperience of the youthful Philip, and the weakness of the Achse' ans, began a series of unprovoked aggressions on the sur- rounding States. The Messenians, whose territory they had invaded by way of the western coast of the Peloponnesus, called upon the Achse' ans for assistance, but Aratas, going to their relief, was attack- ed unexpectedly, and defeated. Soon after, the youthful Philip was placed a?t the head of the Achse' an League, when a general war be- gaii between the Macedonians, Achse' ans, and their confederates, on the one side, and the JEtolians, who were aided by the Spartans and E' leans, on the other. 38. The war continued four years, and was conducted with great cruelty and obstinacy on both sides ; but Philip and the Achse' ans were on the whole successful, and the JEtolians and their allies be- came desirous of peace, while new and ambitious views more eagerly inclined Philip to put an end to the unprofitable contest. At this time the Carthaginians and Romans were contending for mastery in the second Punic war, and Philip began to view the struggle as one in which an alliance with one of the parties would be desirable, by opening to himself prospects of future conquest and glory. By siding with the Carthaginians who were the most distant party, and from whom he would have less to fear than from * the Romans, he hoped to be able eventually to insure to himself the sovereignty of all Greece, and to make additions to Macedonia on the side of Italy. He therefore proposed terms of peace to the JEtolians ; and a treaty 1. JEtolia was a country of Northern Greece, bounded on the north by Thes’ saly, on the east by Doris, Phocis, and Locris, on the south by the Corinthian Gulf, and on the west by Acam&nia. It was in general a rough and mountainous country, although seme f p the valley* were remarkable for their fertility. (Map No. I.) Chap. IV.] GRECIAN HISTORY. 109 was concluded at Naupac'tui, which left all the parties in th«> e«t the year 54 B. C. ANCIENT HISTORY. 112 [Part 1 mg chapter.' the history of Judea down to the time when that country became a province of the Roman empire. 2 It has been stated that the rebuilding of the second temple of Jerusalem was completed during the reign of Darius Hystas'pes, aRout twenty-five years before the commencement of the war between the Greeks and Persians. During the following reign of Xerxes, the Jews appear to have been treated by their masters with respect, and also during the early part of the reign of Artaxerx' es Longimanus who had taken for his second wife a Jewish damsel named Esther the niece of the Jew Mor' decai, one of the officers of the palace. The story of Haman, the wicked minister of the king, is doubtless familiar to all our readers. After the J ews had been delivered from the wanton malice of Haman, Nehemfah, also an officer in the king’s palace, obtained for them permission to rebuild the walls of the holy city, and was appointed governor over Judea. With the close of the administration of Nehemfah the annals embraced in the Old Testament end, and what farther reliable information we possess of the history of the Jews down to the time of the Roman conquest is mostly derived from Josephus. 3. After Nehemfah, Judea was joined to the satrapy of Syria, al- though the internal government was still administered by the high- priests, under the general superintendence of Persian officers — the people remaining quiet under the Persian government. After the division of the vast empire of Alexander among his generals, J udea, lying between Syria and Egypt, and being coveted by the monarchs of both, suffered greatly from the wars which they carried on against each other. At one time the Egyptian monarch, Ptol' emy Soter, having invaded the country, stormed Jerusalem on the Sabbath day, when the Jews, from superstitious motives, would -not defend their city, and transported a hundred thousand of the population to Egypt, — apparently, however, as colonists, rather than as prisoners. 4. During the reigns of Ptol' emy Soter, Ptol' emy Philadel' phus, Ptol' emy Euer' getes, and Ptol' emy Philop'ater, Judea remained subject to Egypt, but was lost by Ptol' emy Epiph' anes. Ptol' emy Philadel' phus, by his generous treatment of the Jews, induced large numbers of them to settle in Egypt. He was an eminent patron of learning, and caused the septuagint translation of the scriptures to bo made, and a copy to be deposited in the famous library which he es- tablished at Alexandria. On the accession of Ptol' emy Epiph' anes tn the throne, (204 B. C.) at the age of only five years, Antfofiius Chap. 17 .] JEWISH HISTORY. 113 the Great, king of Syria, easily persuaded the Jews to place them selves under his rule, and in return for their confidence in him he lonferred such favors upon Jerusalem as lie knew were best calculated to win the hearts of the people. 5. Antiochus Epipli' anes, the successor of Antiochus the Great, having invaded Egypt, a false rumor of his death was brought to Jerusalem, whereupon a civil war broke out between two factions of the Jews who had long been quarrelling about the office of the high priesthood. The tumult was quelled by the return of Antiochus, who, exasperated on learning that the Jews had made public rejoio- ings at his supposed death, marched against Jerusalem, which he plundered, as if he had taken it by storm from an enemy. (169 B. C.) He even despoiled the temple of its holy vessels, and carried off the treasures of the nation collected there. Two yeais later he attempted to carry out the plan of reducing the various religious systems of his empire to one single profession, that of the Grecian polytheism. He polluted the altar of the temple — put a stop to the daily sacrifice — to the great festivals — to the rite of circumcision — burned the copies of the law — and commanded that the temple itself should be convert- ed into an edifice sacred to the Olympian J upiter. 6. These acts, and the insolent cruelties with which they were ac- companied, met with a fierce and desperate resistance from the brave family of the Mac' cabees, a or Asmoneans, who, under their heroic leader Judas, first fled to the wilderness, and the caves of the moun- tians, where they were joined by numerous bands of their exasperated countrymen, who, ere long, began to look upon Judas as an instru ment appointed by heaven for their deliverance. Thoroughly ac quainted with every impregnable cliff and defile of his mountain land, Judas was successful in every encounter in which he chose to engage with the Syrians : — by rapid assaults he made himself master of many fortified places, and within three years after the pollution of the temple he had driven out of Judea four generals at the head of large and regular armies. He then went up to Jerusalem, and although a fortress in the lower city was still held by a Syrian garri- son, he restored the walls and doors of the temple, caused the daily sacrifice to be renewed, and proclaimed a solemn festival of eight days on the joyful occasion. a. The appellation < f Mac' cabees was given them from the initial letters of tne text display©;! on their standard, which was, Mi Chamoka Baalim , Jahohl “ Wi o is like unto (bee amount die gods, O Lord !”— from Exod. xv. 11. a 114 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pah i *. 7 The war with Syria continued during the brief reign of the youthful son of Antiochus Epiph' anes, and was extended into the subsequent reign of Demetrius Soter, (B. C. 162,) who sent two powerful armies into Judea, the first of which was defeated in the defile of Bethoron, 1 and its general slain. Another army was more successful, and Judas himself fell, after having destroyed a multi- tude of his enemies ; but his body was recovered, and he was buried in the tomb of his fathers. “ And all Israel mourned him with a great mourning, and sorrowed many days, and said, How is the mighty fallen that saved Israel.” 8. After the death of Judas a time of great tribulation followed; the Syrians became masters of the country, and Jonathan, the brother of Judas, the new leader of the patriotic band, was obliged to retire to the mountains, where he maintained himself two years, while the cities were occupied by Syrian garrisons. Eventually, during the changing revolutions in the Syrian empire itself, Jonathan was en-^ abled to establish himself in the priesthood, and under his adminis- tration Judea again became a flourishing State. Being at length treacherously murdered by one of the Syrian kings, (B. C. 143,) his brother Simon succeeded to the priesthood, and during the seven years in which he judged Israel, general prosperity prevailed through- out the land. “ The husbandmen tilled the field in peace, and the earth gave forth her crops, and the trees of the plain their fruits. The old men sat in the streets ; all talked together of their blessings, and the young men put on the glory and the harness of war.” 9. The remaining history of the Jews, from the time of Simon down to the formation of Judea into a Roman province, is mostly occupied with domestic commotions, whose details would possess little interest for the general reader. The circumstances which placed Judea under the sway of the Romans will be found detailed in their connection with Roman history. 10. Before the beginning of the “authentic period” of Grecian history, various circumstances, such as the desire of adventure com ii. Grecian mercial interests, and, not unfrequently, civil dissension colonies. a t home, led to the planting of Grecian colonies on many distant ooasts of the Mediterranean. Those of Thrace, Mac' edon, anl Asia-Minor, were ever intimately connected with Greece proper, in whose general history theirs is embraced ; but the Greek cities 1. Beth6ron was a village about ten miles north-west from Jerusalem. Chap. 1V.1 GRECIAN COLONIES. 115 of Italy, Sicily , and Cyrenaica, were too far removed from the drama that was enacting around the shores of the iE'gean to he more than occasionally and temporarily affected by the changing fortunes of the parent States. Nevertheless, a brief notice of those distant settle- ments that eventually rivalled even Athens and Sparta in power and resources, cannot be uninteresting, and it will serve to give the reader more accurate views, than he would otherwise possess, of the extent and importance of the field of Grecian history. 11. At an early period the shores of southern Italy and Sicily were peopled by Greeks’ and so numerous and powerful did the Grecian cities in those countries become, that the whole were comprised by Strabo and others under the appellation Magna IIL MAGNA Gracia or “ Great Greece” — an appropriate name for a Gracia. region containing many cities far superior in size and population to any in Greece itself. The earliest of these distant Grecian settle- ments appear to have been made at Cumae, 1 and Neap'olis, 2 on the western coast of Italy, about the middle of the eleventh century Nax'os, 3 on the eastern coast of Sicily, was founded about the year 735 B. C. ; and in the following year some Corinthians laid the foundation of Syracuse. Gela, 4 5 on the western coast of the island, and Messana 6 on the strait between Italy and Sicily, were founded 1. Ciimce, a city of Campania, on the western coast of Italy, a short distance north-west from Neapolis, and about a hundred and ten miles south-east from Rome, is supposed to have been founded by a Grecian colony from Euboe' a about the year 1050 B. C. Cumae was built on a rocky hill washed by the sea ; and the same name is still applied to the ruins that lie scattered around its base. Some of the most splendid fictions of Virgil relate to the Cumaean Sibyl, whose cave, hewn out of solid rock, actually existed on the top of the hill of Cumae. (Map No. VIII.) 2. Neap' olis , (a Greek word meaning the new city,) now called Naples , was founded by a colony from Cumae. It is situated on the north side of the Bay of Naples, in the immediate vicinity of Mount Vesuvius, one hundred and eighteen miles south-east from Rome. (Map No. VIII.) 3. Nax'os was north-east from Mount ./Etna, and about equi-distant from Messina and Cat' ana. Nax' os was twice destroyed ; first by Dionysius the Elder, and afterwards by the Siculi ; after which Tauromenium was built on its site. The modem Taormina occupies the site of the ancient city. (Map No. VIII.) 4. Gela was on the southern coast of Sicily, a short distance from the sea, on a river of th« same name, and about sixty miles west from Syracuse. . On the site of the anal tnt city stands the modem Terra Nova. (Map No. VIII.) 5. Messdna , still a city of considerable extent under the name of Messina , was situated at the north-eastern extremity of the island of Sicily, on the wtrait of its own name. It was re* garded by the Greeks as the key of the island, but the circumstance of its commanding position always made it a tempting prize to the ambitious and powerful neighboring princes. It under- went a great variety of changes, under the power of the Syracusans, Carthaginians, and Ro- mans. It was treacherously seized by the Mamertini, (see p. 152) who slew the males, and took the wives and children as their property, and called the city Mamertina. Finally, a portion oi be inhabitants called in the aid of the Romans, and thus began the first Punic war. (265 B. 0 116 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pari I soon after. Agrigen' turn, 1 on the south-western coast, was founded about a century later. 12. In the meantime the Greek cities Syb' aris, Crotona, 3 and Taren' turn, 4 had been planted, and had rapidly grown to power and opulence, on the south-eastern coast of Italy. The territorial do- minions of Syb' aris and Crotona extended across the peninsula from sea to sea. The former possessed twenty-five dependent towns, and ruled over four distinct tribes or nations. The territories of Crotona were still more extensive. These two Grecian States were at the maximum of their power about the year 560 B. C. — the time of the accession of Pisis' tratus at Athens ; but they quarrelled with each other, and the result of the fatal contest, was the ruin of Syb' aris, 510 B. C. At the time of the invasion of Italy by Pyr'rhus, (see p. 149.) Crotona was still a considerable city, extending on both sides of the jPisarus, and its walls embracing a circumference of twelve miles. Taren' turn was formed by a colony from Sparta about the year 707, — soon after the first Messenian war. No details of its his- tory during the first two hundred and thirty years of its existence ‘The modern city has a most imposing appearance from the sea, forming a fine circular sweep about two miles in length on the west shore of its magnificent harbor, from which it rises in the form of an amphitheatre ; and being built of white stone, it strikingly contrasts with the dark fronts that cover the forests in the background.” (Map No. VIII.) 1. Jigrigen' turn was situated near the southern shore of Sicily, about midway of the island. Next to Syracuse it was not only one of the largest and most famous cities of Sicily, but of the ancient world ; and its ruins are still imposingly grand and magnificent. The modern town of Girgenti lies adjacent to the ruins, from which it is separated by the small river Arcagas (Map No. VIII.) 2. Syb' aris was a city of south-eastern Italy on the Tarentine Gulf. Crotona was about seventy miles south of it. Pythogoras resided at Crotona during the latter years of his life ; and Milo, the most celebrated athlete of antiquity, was a native of that city. The Sybarites were noted for the excess to which they carried the refinements of luxury and sensuality. He events which led to the destruction of Syb' aris, about 510 B. C., are thus related. A democratical party, having gained the ascendancy at Syb' aris, expelled five huud ed of the principal citizens, who sought refuge at Crotona. The latter refusing, by the advice of Pytha- goras, to give up the fugitives, a w r ar ensued. Milo led out the Crotoniats, ten thousand in number, who were met by three hundred thousand Syb' arites ; but the former gained a com- plete victory, and then, marching immediately to Syb' aris, totally destroyed the city. (Map No. VIII.) 3. Taren' turn, the emporium of the Greek towns of Italy, was an important commercial city near the head of the gulf of the same name. It stood on what was formerly an isthmus, but which is now an island, separating the gulf from an inner bay fifteen or sixteen miles in circumference. The early Tarentines were noted for their military skill and prowess, and for the cultivation of literature and the arts ; but their wealth and abundance so enervated their minds and bodies, and corrupted their morals, that even the neighboring barbarians, who ha*’ hated and feared, learned eventually to despise them. The Tarentines fell an easy prey to tne Romans, after Pyrrhus had withdrawn from Italy. (See p. 150.) The modern town »f Toranto, containing a population of about eighteen thousand inhabitants, ocr cqies the site of th9 ancienf pity. ( Map No. VIII.) Chap. IY.j GRECIAN COLONIES. 117 are known to us; but in tbe fourth century B. C. the Tarcntinea stand foremost among the Italian Greeks. 13. Daring the first two centuries after the founding of Nax'os in Sicily, Grecian settlements were extended over the eastern, southern, and western sides of the island, while Him' era 1 2 was the only Gre- cian town on the northern coast. These two hundred years were a period of prosperity among the Sicilian Greeks, who did not yet ex- tend their residences over the island, but dwelt chiefly in fortified towns, and exercised authority over the surrounding native popula fion, which gradually became assimilated in manners, language, and religion, -to the higher civilization of the Greeks. During the sixth century before the Christian era, the Greek cities in Sicily and southern Italy were among the most powerful and flourishing that bore the Hellenic name. Gela and Agrigen' turn, on the south side of Sicily, had then become the most prominent of the independent Sicilian governments ; and at the beginning of the fifth century we find Gelo, a despot, or self-constituted ruler of the former city, sub- jecting other towns to his authority, and finally obtaining possession of Syracuse, which he made the seat of his empire, (485 B. C.) leaving Gela to be governed by his brother Hiero, the first Sicilian ruler of that name. 14. Gelo strengthened the fortifications and greatly enlarged the limits of Syracuse, while, to occupy the enlarged space, he dis- mantled many of the surrounding towns, and transported their inhab- itants to his new capital, which now became, not only the first city in Sicily, but, according to Herod' otus, superior to any other Helle- nic power; for we are told that when, in 481 B. C., the Corinthians solicited aid from Gelo to resist the invasion of Xerxes, the Syracu- sans could offer twenty thousand heavy armed soldiers, and, m all, an army of thirty thousand men, besides furnishing provisions for the entire Grecian host so long as the war might last ; but as Gelo de- manded to be constituted commander-in-chief of all the Greeks in the war against the Persians, the terms were not agreed to. 15. During the invasion of Greece by Xerxes, a formidable Car- thaginian force under Hamil' car, said to consist of three hundred thousand men, landed at Panor' mus, 3 a Carthaginian sea port on the 1. Him ’ era was on the northen coast of Sicily, near the mouth of the river of the same name, one hundred and ten miles north-west from Syracuse. The modem town of Termini , at the mouth of the river Leonardc , occupies the site of the ancient city. (Map No. VIII.) 2. Panor' mus , supposed to have been first settled by Phoenicians, was in tho nortn-western i ib ANCIENT HISTORY. [T AET 1 northern coast of the island, and proceeded to attack the Gveek city of Him' era. (480 B. C.) Gelo, at the head of fifty-five thousand men, marched to the aid of his brethren ; and in a general battle which ensued, the entire Carthaginian force was destroyed, or com pelled to surrender, Hamil' car himself being numbered among the slain. The victory of Him' era procured for Sicily immunity from foreign war, while at the same time the defeat of Xerxes at Sal' amia dispelled the terrific cloud that overhung the Greeks in that quarter. 16. On the death of Gelo, a year after the battle of Him' era, the government fell into the hands of his brother Hiero, a man whose many great and noble qualities were alloyed by insatiabler cupidity and ambition. The power of Hiero, not inferior to that of Gelo, was probably greater than that of any other Grecian ruler of that period. Hiero aided the Greek cities of Italy against the Carthagi- nian and Tyrrhenian fleets ; he founded the city of JEt' na, 1 and added other cities to his government. He died after a reign of ten years, and was succeeded by his brother Thrasybulis, whose cruelties led to his speedy dethronement, which was followed, not only by the extinction of the Gelonian dynasty at Syracuse, but by an extensive revolution in the other Sicilian cities, resulting, after many years of civil dissensions, in the expulsion of the other despots who had relied for protection on the great despot of Syracuse, and the establish- ment of governments more or less democratical throughout the island. 17. The Gelonian dynasty had stripped of their possessions, and banished, great numbers of citizens, whose places were filled by for- eign mercenaries ; but the popular revolution reversed many of these proceedings, and restored the exiles ; although, in the end, adherents of the expelled dynasty were allowed to settle partly in the territory of Messana, and partly in Kamarlna. 2 After the commotions at tendant on these changes had subsided, prosperity again dawned on art of Sicily, and had a good and capacious harbor. It early passed into the hands of tha Carthaginians, and was their stronghold in Magna Graecia. It is now called Palermo , and is the capital city and principal sea-port of Sicily, having a population of about one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants. It is built on the south-west side of the Bay of Palermo, in a plain, which, from its luxuriance, and from its being surrounded by mountains on three sides, has been termed the “ golden shell,” conca d? oro. (Map No. VIII.) 1. JEt ' na, first called Inessus , was a small town on the southern declivity of Mount Mi' na, near Cat' ana. The ancient site, now marked with ruins, bears the name Castro. (Map No, VIII.) 2. Kamarlna was on the southern coast, about fifty miles south west from Syracuse^ and twenty miles south-east from G ela. Chaf IV.] GRECIAN COLONIES. 119 Sicily, and the subsequent period of more than fifty years, to the time of the elder Dionysius, has been described as by far the best and happiest portion of Sicilian history. 18. At the time of the breaking out of the Peloponnesian war, 431 B. C., Syracuse was the foremost of the Sicilian cities in power and resources. Agrigen' turn was but little inferior to her, while in her foreign commerce and her public monuments the latter was not sur- passed by any Grecian city of that age. In the great Peloponnesian struggle, the Ion' ic cities of Sicily, few in number, very naturally sympathized with Athens, and the Dorian cities with Sparta ; and m the fifth year of the war we find the Ion' ic cities soliciting Athens for aid against Syracuse and her allies. Successive expeditions were sent out by Athens, and soon nearly all Sicily was * involved in the war, when at length, in 424 B. C., a congress of the Sicilian cities decided upon a general peace among themselves, to the great dissat- isfaction of the Athenians, who were already anticipating important conquests on the island. 19. A few years later, (417 B. C.,) a quarrel broke out between the neighboring Sicilian cities Selinus and Eges' ta, 1 2 the latter of which, although not of Grecian origin, had formerly been in alliance with Athens. Selinus was aided by the Syracusans ; and Eges' ta applied to Athens for assistance, making false representations of her own resources, and enlarging upon the dangers to be apprehended from Syracusan aggrandizement as a source of strength to Sparta The Athenian Nic'ias, most earnestly opposed any farther interven tion in Sicilian affairs ; but the counsels of Alcibiades prevailed, and in the summer of 415 B. C., the largest armament that had ever left a Grecian port sailed on the most distant enterprizc that Athens had ever undertaken, under the command of three generals, Nic' ias. Lam' a^hus, and Alcibiades; but the latter was recalled soon jifter the fleet had reached Cat' ana, 1 on the eastern coast of the island. 1. Selinus was a flourishing city of more than thirty thousand inhabitants, on the souther a Lore of the western part of the island. Its ruins may still be seen near what is called Torre ii Polluce. Eges' ta, called by the Romans Segesla, was on the northern coast, near the modem Mcamo. Selinus and Eges’ ta were engaged in almost continual wars with each other. After the Athenian expedition the Egestans called to their assistance the Carthaginians, who took, plundered, and nearly destroyed Selinus ; but Eges' ta, under Carthaginian rule, expe- rienced a fate but little better. {Map No. VIII.) 2. Cat' ana, now Catania was at the southern base of Mount MV na, thirty-two miles north 'rom Syracuse. The distance from the city to the summit of the mountain was thirty miles. Oatiinia has been repeatedly destroyed by earthquakes, and by torrents of liquid fire from tie aeighbr ring volcano ; but it has risen like the fabled phoenix, more splendid from its ashes, 120 ANCIENT HISTORY. |Paet I 20. From Cat' ana Nic' ias sailed around the northern coast to Eges' ta, whence he marched the land forces back through the island to Cat' ana, haying achieved nothing but the acquisition of a few in- significant towns, while the Syracusans improved the time in making preparations to receive the invaders. At length, about the last of October, Nic' ias sailed with his whole force to Syracuse — defeated the Syracusans in the battle which followed- — and then went into winter quarters at Nax'os; but in the spring he returned to his former station at Cat' ana, soon after which he commenced a regular siege of Syracuse. 21. In a battle which was fought on the grounds south of the city, towards the river Anapus, Lam' achus was slain, although the Athe mans were victorious. Nic' ias continued to push forward his suc- cesses, and Syracuse was on the point of surrendering, when the ar- rival of the Spartan general Gylip'pus at once changed the fortune of war, and the Athenians were soon shut up in their own lines. 22. At the solicitation of Nic' ias a large reenforcement, commanded by the Athenian general Demosthenes, was sent to his assistance in the spring of 413; but at the same time the Spartans reenforced Gylip' pus, and, in addition, sent out a force to ravage At'tica. During the summer many battles, both on land and in the harbor of Syracuse, were fought by the opposing forces, in nearly all of which the Syracusans and their allies were victorious ; and, in the end, the entire Athenian force in Sicily, numbering at the time not less than forty thousand men, was destroyed. “ Never in Grecian history,” says Thucyd' ides, “ had ruin so complete and sweeping, or victory so glorious and unexpected, been witnessed.” 23. Soon after the termination of the contest between the Athe nians and Syracusans, the Carthaginians again sought an opportunity of invading the island, and established themselves over its entire western half ; but they were ably resisted by Dionysius the Elder, 11 tyrant of Syracuse,” who was proclaimed chief of the republic about 405 B. C. ; and it was owing to his exertions that any part of the island was saved from falling into the hands of the enemy It was at length agreed that the river Him' era 1 should form the limit between the Grecian territories on the east and the Carthagi- and is still a beautiful city. The streets are paved with lava ; and houses, palaces, churches, and convents, are built of it. Remains of ancient temples, aqueducts, baths, &c., are numer- ous. The environs are fruitful, and well cultivated. (Map No. VIII.) 1. The river Him' < ra here mentioned, now the Salso, falls into the Mediterranean on th« southern coast, to the west of Cela. (Map No. VIII.) Chap. IV.] GRECIAN COLONIES. tfc, nian dependencies on the west ; but the peace was soon broken by the Carthaginians, who, amid the civil dissensions of the Greeks, sought every opportunity of extending their dominion over the entire island. 24. Subsequently the aspiring power of Carthage was checked by Timoleon, and afterwards by Agath'ocles. The former, a Corinthian by birth, having made himself master of the almost deserted Syra- cuse, about the year 340 B. C., restored it to some degree of its former glory. He defeated the Carthaginians in a great battle, and established the affairs of government on so firm a basis that the whole of Sicily continued, many years after his death, in unusual quiet and prosperity. Agath' ocles usurped the sovereignty of Syra- cuse by the murder of several thousand of its principal citizens in the year 317 B. C. He maintained his power twenty-eight years. Having been defeated by the Carthaginians, and being besieged in Syracuse, with a portion of his army he passed over to Africa, where he sustained himself during four years. In the year 306 he con- cluded a peace with the Carthaginians. He died by poison, 289 B. C., leaving his influence in Sicily and southern Italy to his son-in-law, the famous Pyr'rhus, king of Epirus. After the death of Agath'- ocles, the Carthaginians gained a decided, ascendancy in Sicily, when the Romans, alarmed by the movements of so powerful a neighbor, and being invited over to the assistance of a portion of the people of Messana, commenced the first Punic war, (265 B. C.,) and after a struggle of twenty-four years made themselves masters of the whole of Sicily, —nearly a hundred years before the reduction of Greece itself to a Roman province. 25. On the northern coast of Africa, within the district of the modern Barca, the important Grecian colony of Cyrenaica 1 was planted by Lacedaemonian settlers from Thera, 2 an IV island of the iE'gaen, about the year 630 B. C. Its ctrena ica. chief city, Cyrene, was about ten miles from the sea, having a sheltered port called Apollonia, itself a considerable town. Ovei the Libyan tribes between the borders of Egypt and the Groat Desert, the Cyreneans exercised an ascendancy similar to that which Carthage possessed over the tribes farther westward. About the year 550 B. C., one of the neighboring Libyan kings, finding che Gieekn rapidly encroaching upon his territories, declared himself 1. C ‘yrenbica, see p. 70. ere open, but in I’me of peace they were closed to keep wars within. Chap V.] ROMAN HISTORY. 131 was levelled to the ground, and the people were removed to the Cselian hill, adjoining the Pal' atine on the east. After a reign of thirty-two years, Tullus and all his family are said to have been killed by lightning. (642 B. C.) 21. We find the name of Ancus Martius, said to have been a grandson of Numa, next on the list of Roman kings. He is rep resented both as a warrior, and a restorer of the ordi- vr- ANCIJS nances and rituals of the ceremonial law, which had fallen martius. into disuse during the reign of his predecessor. He subdued many of the Latin towns — founded the town and port of Ostia 1 — built the first bridge over the Tiber — and established that principle of the Roman common law, that the State is the original proprietor of all lands in the commonwealth. The middle of his reign is said to have been the era of the legal constitution of the plebeian order, and the assignment of lands to this body out of the conquered territories. He is said to have reigned twenty-four years. 22. The fourth king of Rome was Tarquinius Priscus, or Tarquin the Elder. The accounts of his reign are obscure and conflicting. By some his parents are said to have fled from Corinth to Tarquin' ii,* a town of Etruria, where Tarquin was born : by others VII> TARQU1N he is said to have been of Etruscan descent ; but Niebuhr THE elder. believes him to have been of Latin origin. Having taken up his residence at Rome at the suggestion of his wife Tanaquil, who was celebrated for her skill in auguries, he there became distinguished for his courage, and the splendor in which he lived ; and his liber- ality and wisdom so gained him the favor of the people that, when the throne became vacant, he was called to it by the unanimous voice of the senate and citizens. (617 B. C.) 23. Tarquin is said to have carried on successful wars against the Etrus' cans, Latins, and Sabines, and to have reduced all those people under the Roman dominion ; but his reign is chiefly memorable on account of the public works which he commenced for the security and improvement of the city. Among these were the embanking of 1. Os' tia, the early port and harbor of Rome, once a place of great wealth, population, and importance, was situated on the east side of the Tiber, near its mouth, fifteen miles from Rome. Os' tia, which still retains its ancient name, is now a miserable village of scarcely a hundred inhabitants, and is almost uninhabitable, from Malaria ; the fever which it engenders carrying off annually nearly all whom necessity confines to this pestilential region during the hot season. The harbor of Os’ tia is now merely a shallow pool. {Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) 2. Tarquin' ii , one of the most powerful cities of Etruria, was about f< rty miles north-west from Rome, on the left bank of the river Marta, several miles from its mouth. The ruins o> Turck '-na mark the si e of the ancient city. ( Maps Nos. VII . and X.) 132 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Paet i the Tiber; the sewers, which yet remain, for draining the marshes and lakes in the vicinity of the capital ; the porticos around the market-place, the race-course of the circus, and the foundations of the city waHs, which were of hewn stone. It is said that Tarquin, after a reign of thirty-eight years, was assassinated at the instigation ol the sons of Ancus Martius, who feared that he would secure the sue cession to his son-in-law Servius Tullius, his own favorite, and the darling- of the Roman people. (579 B. C.) 24. Notwithstanding the efforts of the sons of Ancus Martius, the senate and the people decided that Servius. should rule over them The birth of this man is said, in the old legends, to have vm . SERV ius been very humble, and his infancy to have been attended tullius. with marvellous omens, which foretold his future greatness. Of his supposed w r ars with the revolted Etrus' cans nothing certain is known ; but his renown as a law-giver rests on more substantial grounds than his military fame. 25. The first great political act of his reign was the institution of the census, and the division of the people into one hundred and ninety- three centuries , whose rights of suffrage and military duties were regulated on the basis of property qualifications. The several Latin communities that had hitherto been allied with the Romans by treaty he now incorporated with them by a federal union ; and to render that union more firm and lasting, he induced the confederates to unite in erecting a temple on Mount Aventine to the goddess Diana, and there unitedly to celebrate her worship. He also made wise regulations for the impartial administration of justice, prohibited bondage for debt, and relieved the people from the oppressions with which they already began to be harassed by the higher orders. 26. His legislation was received with displeasure by the patricians ; and when it was known that Servius thought of resigning the crown, and establishing a consular form of government, which would have rendered a change of his law T s difficult, a conspiracy was formed for securing the throne to Tarquinius, surnamed the Proud, a son of the former king, who had married a daughter of Servius. The old king Servius was murdered by the agents of Tarquin, and his body left exposed in the street, while his wicked daughter Tullia, in her haste to con gratulate her husband on his success, drove her chariot over her father’s corpse, so that her garments were stained with his blood. (535 B. C.) 27 The reign of Tarquinius Superbus, or the Proud, was distm Chat. V .] ROMAN HISTORY. 133 guished by a series^ of tyrannical usurpations, which made his name odious to all classes ; for although he at first gratified his supporters by diminishing the privileges of the plebeians, or the IX TARQUIN common people, he soon made the patricians themselves THE raouD. feel the weight of his tyranny. The laws of Servius were swept away — the equality of civil rights abolished — and even the ordinances of religion suffered to fall into neglect. But although Tarquin was a tyrant, he exalted the Boman name by his successful wars, and alliances with the surrounding nations. In the midst of his successes, however, he was disturbed by the most fearful dreams and appalling prodigies. He dreamed that the sun changed its course, rising in the west ; and that when the two rams were brought to him for sac- rifice, one of them pushed him down with its horns. At one time a serpent crawled from the altar and seized the flesh which he had brought for sacrifice : a flock of vultures attacked an eagle’s nest in his garden, threw out the unfledged eaglets upon the ground and drove the old birds away ; and when he sent to Delphi to consult the oracle, the responses were dark and fearful. 28. The reverses threatened were brought upon him by the wick- edness of Sextus, one of his sons. It is related that while the Bo- mans were besieging Ardea, 1 2 a Butulian city, Sextus, with his brothers Titus and Aruns, and their cousin Collatinus, happened to be disputing, over their wine, about the good qualities of their wives when, to settle the dispute, they agreed to visit their homes by sur prise, and, seeing with their own eyes how their wives were then em- ployed, thus decide which was the worthiest lady. So they hastilj rode, first to Borne, where they found the wives of the three Tar quins feasting and making merry. They then proceeded to Collatia/ the residence of Collatinus, where, although it was then late at night, they found his wife Lucretia, with her maids around her, all busy working at the loom. On their return to the camp all agreed that Lucretia was the worthiest lady. 29. But a spirit of wicked passion had seized upon Sextus, and a few days later he went alone to Collatia, and being hospitably lodged in his kinsman’s house, violated the honor of Lucretia. Thereupon 1. Ardea, a city of Latium, and the capital of the Rutulians, was about twenty-four ml.es south from Rome, and three miles from the sea. Some ruins'of the ancient city are still visible, and bear the name of Ardea. (Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) 2. Collatia , a town of Latium, was near the south bank of the river Amo, twelve or thirteen mile# east from Rome. Its ruins may still be traced on a hil which has obtained the name ol Castiliacie. (Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) 134 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I she sen t in haste for her father, and husband, and other relatives, and having told them of the wicked deed of Sextus, and made them swear that they would avenge it, she drew a knife from her bosom and stabbed herself to the heart. The vow was renewed over the dead body, and Lucius Junius Brutus, who had long concealed patri- otic resolutions under the mask of pretended stupidity, and thus saved his life from the jealousy of Tarquin, exhibited the corpse to the people, whom he influenced, by his eloquence, to pronounce sen- tence of banishment against Tarquin and his family, and to declare tha the dignity of king should be abolished forever. (510 B. C.) SECTION II. THE ROMAN REPUBLIC, FROM THE ABOLITION OF ROYALTY, 510 B.C., TO THE BEGINNING OF THE WARS WITH CARTHAGE: 263 B. C. = 247 YEARS. ANALYSIS. 1. Royalty abolished. The laws of Servius reestablished. Consuls elected. — 2. Aristocratic character of the government. The struggle between the patricians and ple- beians begins. — 3. Extent of Roman territory. — 4. Conspiracy in favor of the Tarquins. Etrus- can war. — 5. Conflicting accounts. Legend of the Etrus' can war. [Clusium.] — 6. The story of Mutius Scsev’ ola. — 7. Farther account of the Roman legend. The probable truth. — 8. Hu- miliating condition of the plebeians after the Etrus can war. — 9. Continued contentions. The office of Dictator. — 10. Circumstances of the first Plebeian Insurrection. [Volscians.] — 11. Confusion. Withdrawal of the Plebeians. [Mons Sacer.] — 12. The terms of reconciliation. Office and power of the Tribunes. — 13. League with the Latins and Hernicians. — 14. Vol- scian and ASquian wars. Contradictory statements. [ASquians. Corioli.] Proposal of Coriolanus. — 15. His trial — exile — and war against the Romans. — 16. The story of Cincinatus. — 17. The public lands — and the fate Of Spurius Cassius. — 18. Continued demands of the people. Election and office of the Decem’virs. — 19. The laws of the decern' virs. — 20. The decem- virs are continued in office— their additional laws — and tyranny. — 21. The story of Virginia. — 22. Overthrow of the decern' virs, and .death of Appius.— 23. Plebeian innovations. The office of Censors. — 24. Rome, as viewed by the surrounding people. Circumstances that led to the war with Veii. [Situation of Veii.] — 25. Destruction of Veii, and extension of Roman territory. 26. Gallic invasion. Circumstances of ihe introduction of the Gauls into Italy. [Cisalpine Gaul.] — 27 The Roman ambassadors. Conduct of Brennus.— 28. The Romans defeated by the Gauls. General abandonment of Rome. [The Alii a. Roman Forum.]— 29. Entrance of the Gauls into the city. Massacre of the Senators. Rome plundered and burned. — 30 Vain at- tempts tc storm the citadel. The Roman legend of the expulsion of the Gauls. The more probable account. [The Venetians.]— 31. The rebuilding of Rome.— 32. Renewal of the Ple- beian and Patrician contests. Philanthropy and subsequent history of Manlius. — 33. Con- tinued oppression of the plebeians.— 34. Great reforms made by Licinius Stolo and Lucius Sex tua The office of Praetor. — 35. Progress of the Roman power. The Samnite confederacy [The Samnites.]— 36. First Samnite war. [Cap' ua.] League with tin Samnites. Latia war. — 37 Second Samnite war. — Defeat of the Romans, and renewed albance. [Caudine Chap. V.] RJMAN HISTORY. 135 Forks.]— 38. The senate declares the treaty void. Magnanimity of Pontius.— 39. The third Samnite war. Fate of Pontius. [Um'bria.] — 40. War with the Tarentines and Pyr rhus. — 41. First encounter of Pyr rhus with the Romans. — 42. Pyr' rhus attempts negotiation. His second battle. — 43. Story of the generosity of Fabricius, and magnanimity of Pyr' rhus. Pyr' rhus passes over to Sicily — returns, and renews the war — is defeated — and abandons Italy Roman supremacy over all Italy. [Rubicon. Arnus. Tuscan Sea.] — 44. Alliance with Egypt Sicilian affairs. Widening circle of Roman history. 1. As narrated at the close of the previous section, royalty was abolished at Rome, after an existence of two hundred and forty years. The whole Roman people took an oath that whoever should express a wish to rule as king should be declared an outlaw. The laws of Servius were reestablished, and, according to the ....... . , . .1. CONSULS code which he had proposed, the royal power was in- trusted to two consuls, a annually elected. The first chosen were Butus and Collatinus. 2. From the expulsion of the Tarquins, and the downfall of mon- archy, is dated the commencement of what is called the Roman Republic. Yet the government was* at this time entirely aristo- cratical ; for all political power was in the hands of the nobility, from whom the consuls were chosen, and there was no third party to hold the balance of power between them and the people. Hence arose a struggle between these two divisions of the body politic ; and it was not until the balance was properly adjusted by the in- creased privileges of the plebeians, and a more equal distribution of power, that the commonwealth attained that strength and influence which preeminently exalted -Borne above the surrounding nations. 3. The territory possessed by Rome under the last of the kings is known, from a treaty made with Carthage in the first year of the Republic, to have extended at least seventy miles along the coast south of the Tiber. Yet all this sea-coast was destined to be lest to Rome by civil dissensions and bad government, before her power was to be firmly established there. a The consuls had at first nearly the same power as the kings ; and all other rc&gUjtrztc-s were subject to them, except the tribunes of the people. They summoned the meetings of the senate and of the assemblies of the people — they had the chief direction of the foreign affairs of the government — they levied soldiers, appointed most of the military officers, and, in time of war, had supreme command of the armies. In dangerous conjunctures they were armed with absolute power by a decree of the senate that “ they should take care that the republic receives no harm.” Their badges of office were the toga pmtexta , or mantle bordered with purple, and an ivory sceptre ; and when they appeared in public they were accompanied by twelve officers called lictors , each of whom carried a bundle of rods, ( fas' < es,) with an a*a (securis) placed in the middle of them ; — the former denoting the powirof scourging, or of ordinary punishment — and the latter, the power of life and lea' h. 136 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L 4. The efforts of Tarquin to recover the throne gave rise to a con spiracy among some of the younger patricians who had shared in the tyrant’s extortions. Among the conspirators were the sons of Brutus ; and the duty of pronouncing their fate devolved upon the consul their father, who, laying aside parental affection, and acting the part of the magistrate only, condemned them to death. The it. etrus' can cause of the Tarquins was also espoused by the Etrus'- WAR - cans, to whom they had fled for protection, and thus a wa* was kindled between the two people. 5. The accounts of the events and results of this war are exceed mgly conflicting. The ancient Boman legend relates that when Porsenna, king of Clusium, 1 the most powerful of the Etrus' can princes, led an overwhelming force against Borne, the Bomans were at first repulsed, and fled across a wooden bridge over the Tiber ; and that the army was saved by the valor of Horatius Codes, who alone defended the pass against thousands of the enemy, until the bridge was broken down in the rear, when he plunged into the stream, and, amid a shower of darts, safely regained the opposite shore. 6. It is farther related, that when Porsenna had reduced Borne to extremities by famine, a young man, Mutius Scsev' ola, undertook, with the approbation of the Senate, to assassinate the invading king. Making his way into the Etrus' can camp, he slew one of the king’s attendants, whom he mistook for Porsenna. Being disarmed, and threatened with torture, he scornfully thrust his right hand into the flame, where he held it until it w r as consumed, to show that the rack had no terrors for him. The king, admiring such heroism, gave him his life and liberty, when Scaev' ola warned him, as a token of grati- tude, to make peace, for that three hundred young patricians, as brave as himself, had conspired to destroy him, and that he, Scasv' ola, had only been chosen by lot to make the first attempt. 7. The Boman legend asserts that Porsenna, alarmed for his life, offered terms of peace, which were agreed upon. And yet it is known, from other evidence, that the Bomans, about this time, surrendered their city, and became tributary to the Etrus' cans ; and it is prob- able that when, soon after, Porsenna was defeated in a war with the Latins, the Bomans embraced the opportunity to legain their inde- pendence. 8. It was only while the attempts of the Tarquins to regain the 1. Clusium, now Chiusi , was a town of Etruria, situated on the western bank of the river tTanis, a tributary of the Tiber, about eighty-five miles north-west from Rome. (Map No. VIIL) Chap V.] ROMAN HISTORY. 137 throne excited alarm, and the Etrus' can war continued, that the gov- ernment under the first consuls was administered with justice and moderation. When these dangers were over, the patricians, again began to exert their tyranny over the plebeians, and as nearly all the wealth of the State had been engrossed by the former, the latter were reduced to a condition differing little from tne most abject slavery. A decree against a plebeian debtor made not only him, but his children also, slaves to the creditor, who might imprison, scourge, or otherwise maltreat them. 9. The contentions between the patricians and plebeians were at length carried to such an extent, that in time of war the latter re- fused to enlist ; and as the consuls, for some cause now unknown could not be confided in, the plebeians were induced to consent tc the creation of a dictator , who, during six months, had m . QFF1CE of supreme power, not only over patricians, plebeians, and dictator. consuls, but also over the laws themselves. Under a former law of Valerius the people had the right of appeal from a sentence of the consul to a general assembly of the citizens ; but from the decision of the dictator there was no appeal, and as he was appointed by the Senate, this office gave additional power to the patrician order. a 10. During a number of years dictators continued to be appointed in times of great public danger ; but they gave only a temporary calm to the popular dissensions. It was during a war with the V ol- seians 1 and Sabines that the long-accumulating resentment of the plebeians against the patricians first broke forth in open IV . plebeian insurrection. An old man, haggard and in rags, pale insurrection and famishing, escaping from his creditor’s prison, and bearing the marks of cruel treatment, implored the aid of the people. A crowd gathered around him. He showed them the scars that he had re- ceived in war, and he was recognized as a brave captain who had fought for his country in eight and twenty battles. His house and farm-yard having been plundered bythe enemy in the Etrus' can war I. The Volscians were the most southern of the tribes that inhabited Latiurn. Their terri- tory extending along the coast southward from Anti uni about fifty miles, swarmed with cities fille. with a hardy and warlike race. ( Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) a. The office of dictator had existed at Alba and other Latin towns long before this time. The authority of all the other magistrates, except that of the tribunes, (see p. 138,; ceased as soon as the dictator was appointed. lie had the power of life and death, except per- haps in the case of knights and senators, and from -his decision there was no appeal ; but for any abuse of his power he might be called to account after his resignation or the expiration of his terra of office. At first the dictator was taken from the patrician ranks only ; but about lb# year 356 B. C. it was opened by 0. Marcius to the plebeians also. See Niebuhr's Rome, i 270 138 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pabt 1 famine had first compelled him to sell his all, and then to borrow; and when he could not pay, his creditors had obtained judgment against him and his two sons, and had put them in chains. (495 B C.) 11. Confusion and uproar spread through the city. All who had been pledged for debt were clamorous for relief ; the people spurned the summons to enlist in the legions ; compulsion was impossible, and the Senate knew not how to act. At length the promises of the consuls appeased the tumult ; but finally the plebeians, after having been repeatedly deceived, deserted their officers in the very midst of war, and marched in a body to Mons Sacer, 1 or the Sacred Mount within three miles of Rome, where they were joined by a vast mul titude of their discontented brethren. (493 B. C.) 12. After much negotiation, a reconciliation was finally effected on the terms that all contracts of insolvent debtors should be can celled ; that those who had incurred slavery for debt should recover their freedom ; that the Valerian law should be enforced, and that two annual magistrates, (afterwards increased to five,) called trib v. tribunes unes > a whose persons were to be inviolable, should be of the chosen by the people to watch over their rights, and pre- people. ven ^ an y abuses of authority. It will be seen that the power of the tribunes, so humble in its origin, eventually acquired a preponderating influence in the State, and laid the foundation of monarchical supremacy. 13 13. During the same year that the office of the tribunes was created, a perpetual league was made with the Latins, (493 B. C.) and seven years later with the Ilernieians, who inhabited the north- eastern parts of Latium, both on terms of perfect equality in the contracting parties, and not, as before, on the basis of Roman supe- 1. The Mons Sacer , or “ Sacred Mountain,” is a low range of sandstone hills extending along the right bank of the Anio, near its confluence with the Tiber, about three miles from Rome. ( Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) a. The tribunes of the people wore no external marks of distinction ; but an officer cal.ed aralor attended them, to clear the way and summon people. Their chief power at first con- sisted in preventing, or arresting, by the word veto , “ I forbid,” any measure which they thought detrimental to the interests of the people. b. After the plebeians had withdrawn to the “ Sacred Mount,” the Senate despatched an embassy of ten men, headed by Menenius Agrippa, to treat with the insurgents. Agrippa it said, on this occasion, to have related to the people the since well-known fable of the Belly and the Members. The latter, provoked at seeing all the fruits of their toil and care applied to the use of the belly, refused to perform any more labor ; in consequence of which the whole body was in danger of perishing. The people understood the moral of the fable, and were ready to enter upon a negotiation. Chap. VI.] ROMAN HISTORY. 139 riority. These leagues made with cities that were once subject to the Romans, show that the Roman power had been greatly dimin- ished by the plebeian and aristocratic contentions in the early years of the Republic. 14. In the interval between these treaties, occurred important ffars with the Yolscians and iEquians. 1 2 The historical VI V olsciah contradictions of this period are so numerous, that little and a:qui- reliance can be placed on the details of these wars ; but AN W ^ RS> it is evident that the Yolscians and iEquians were defeated, and tha Caius Marcius, a Roman nobleman, acquired the surname of Coriola- nus from his bravery at the capture of the Yolscian town of Corloli* and that Lucius Quinctius, called Cincinnatus, acquired great dis- tinction by his conduct of the war against the iEquians. Coriolanus belonged to the patrician order, and was an enemy of the tribunes ; and it is related that when, during a famine, a Sicilian prince sent a large supply of corn to relieve the distresses of the citizens, Coriola- nus proposed in the Senate that the plebeians should not share in the subsidy until they had surrendered the privileges which they had acquired by their recent secession. 15 The rage of the plebeians was excited by this proposition, and fhey would have proceeded to violence against Coriolanus, had not the tribunes summoned him to trial before the assembly of the peo- ple. The senators made the greatest efforts to save him, but the commons condemned him to exile. Enraged by this treatment, he went over to the Yolscians — was appointed a general in their armies — and, after defeating the Romans in several engagements, laid siege to the city, which must have surrendered had not a deputation of Roman matrons, headed by the wife and the mother of Coriolanus, prevailed upon him to grant his countrymen terms of peace. It is said that on his return to the Y olscians he lost his life in a popular tumult ; but a tradition relates that he lived to a very advanced age, and that he was often heard to exclaim, “ How miserable is the con- dition of an old man in banishment.” 1G. It is related that during the war with the iEquians the enemy had surrounded the Roman consul in a defile, where there was neither forage for the horses nor food for the men. In this extremity, the 1. The JEquians dwelt principally in the upper valley of the Anio, nortli of that stream, and between the Sabines and the Marsi. ( Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) 2. Corioli is supposed to have been about twenty-two or twenty-three miles south-east from Rome. A hill now known by the name of Monte Oiove, is thought, with some degree of prob- ability, to represent the site of this ancient Volscian city. ( Map No. X.) 14C ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part i Senate and people chose Cincinnatus dictator, and sending in haste to inform him of his election, the deputies found him at work in his field, dressed in the plain habit of a Roman farmer. After he had put on his toga, or cloak, that he might receive the message of the Senate in a becoming manner, he was saluted as dictator, and con- ducted into the city. He soon raised an army, surrounded the enemy, and took their whole force prisoners, and at the end of sixteen days, having accomplished the deliverance of his country, resigned hia power, and returned to the peaceful pursuits of private life. a 17. The first acquisitions of territory made by the Romans appear to have been divided among the people at -large ; but of late the con quered lands had been suffered to pass, by connivance, occupation, or purchase, chiefly into the hands of the patricians. The complaints of the plebeians on this subject at length induced one of the consuls, Spurius Cassius, to propose a division of recently-conquered lands into small estates, for the poorer classes, who, he maintained, were justly entitled to their proportionate share, as their valor and labors had helped to acquire them. But while this proposition alarmed the Senate and patricians with danger to their property, the motives of Cassius appear to have been distrusted by all classes, for he was charged with aiming at kingly power, and, being convicted, was ig- nominiously beheaded, and his house razed to the ground. (458 B. C.) 18. Still the people continued to demand a share in the conquered lands, now forming the estates of the wealthy, and, as the only way of evading the difficulty, the Senate kept the nation almost constantly involved in war. During thirty years succeeding the death of Cas sius, the history of the Republic is occupied with desultory wars waged against the iEquians and Yolscians, and with continued strug- gles between the patricians and plebeians. At length the tribunes succeeded in getting their number increased from five to ten, when the Senate, despairing of being able to divert the . people any longer from their purpose, consented to the appointment of ten persons, vii. the hence called decern virs, who were to compile a body of decemvirs. l aws f or the commonwealth, and to exercise all the pow ers of government until the laws should be completed. (451 B. G.) 19. After several months’ deliberation, this body produced a code a. It should be remarked here, that the story of Cincinnatus formed the subject ot a beauti- ful poem, to the substance of whiQh most writers have given the credit of histor ical authen- ticity, although Niebuhr has shown that the truth of the legend will not stand the test of criticism. (See Niebuhr, vol. ii. pp. 125-6. and Arnold’s Rome, i. pp. 131-5. and notes.) Chap. Y._J ROMAN HISTORY. 141 of laws, engraven on ten tables, which continued, down to the time af the emperors, to be the basis of the civil and penal jurisprudence of the Roman people, though almost concealed from view under the enormous mass of additions piled upon it. The new constitution aimed at establishing the legal equality of all the citizens, and there was a show of dividing the great offices of State equally between patri- cians and plebeians, but the exact character of the ten tables cannot now be satisfactorily distinguished from two others that were sub- sequently enacted. 20. After the task of the decemvirs had been completed, all classes united in continuing their office for another year ; and an equal num- ber of patricians and plebeians was elected ; but the former apppar to have sought seats in the government for the purpose of overthrow- ing the constitution. The decemvirs now threw off the mask, and enacted two additional tables of laws, by which the plebeians were greatly oppressed, for, among the laws attributed to the twelve tables, we find that although all classes were liable to imprisonment for debt, yet the pledging of the person affected plebeians only, — that the latter were excluded from the enjoyment of the public lands, — that their intermarriage with patricians was prohibited, — and that consuls could be elected from the patrician order only. Moreover, the de- cemvirs now refused to lay down the powers of government which had been temporarily granted them, and, secretly supported by the patricians, ruled without control, thus establishing a tyrannical oli- garchy. 21. At length a private injury accomplished what wrongs of a more public nature had failed to effect. Appius Claudius, a leading decemvir, had fallen in love with the beautiful Virginia, daughter of Virginius, a patrician officer ; but finding her betrothed to another, in order to accomplish his purpose he procured a base dependant to claim her as his slave. As had been concerted, Virginia was brought before the tribunal of Appius himself, who, by an iniquitous decision, ordered her to be surrendered to the claimant. It was then that the distracted father, having no other means of preserving his daughter’s honor, stabbed her to the heart in the presence of the court and the assembled people. (448 B. C.) 22. A general indignation against the decemvirs spread through the city ; the army took part with the people ; the power of the decem- virs was overthrown ; and the ancient forms of government were re- stored ; while additional rights were conceded to the commons, by 142 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L giving to their votes, in certain cases, the authority :>f law. Appius, having been impeached, died in prison, probably by his own hand before the day appointed for his trial. 23. Other plebeian innovations followed. After a difficult strug- gle the marriage law was repealed, (B. C. 445,) and two years latei military tribunes, with consular powers, were chosen from the ple- beian ranks. One important duty of the consuls had been the taking of the census once in every five years, and a new distribution of the people, at such times, among the different classes or ranks, according to their property, character, and families. But the patricians, un- willing that this power should devolve upon the plebeians, stipulated that these duties of the consular office should be disjoined from the military tribuneship, and conferred upon two new officers of patrician vni. office birth, who were denominated censors ; a and thus the of censors, long-continued efforts of the people to obtain, from their own number, the election of officers with full consular powers, were defeated. 24. But while dissensions continued to mark the domestic councils of the Itomans with the appearance of divided strength and wasted energies, the state of affairs presented a different aspect to the sur- rounding people. They saw in Rome only a nation of warriors that had already recovered the strength it had lost by a revolutionary change of government, and that was now marching on to increased dominion without any signs of weakness in the foreign wars it had to maintain. Veii, 1 the wealthiest and most important of the Etruscan cities, had long been a check to the progress of the Romans north of the Tiber, and had often sought occasion to provoke hostilities with ix. war the young republic. At length the chief of the people with veii. 0 f y &{[ p U f to death the Roman ambassadors ; and the Roman Senate, being refused satisfaction for the outrage, formally resolved that V eii should be destroyed. 25. The Etruscan armies that marched to the relief of Veii were l. numerous remains of which still exist, was about twelve miles north from Rome, &/> place now know n by the name of Plnsola Farncse. ( Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) a. An important duty of the censors was that of inspecting the morals of the people. They had the power of inflicting various marks of disgrace upon those who deserved it, — such af ex- cluding a senator from the senate-house — depriving a knight of his public horse if he did not take proper care of it ; — and of publishing, in various ways, those who did not cultivate ihei f grounds properly — those who lived too long unmarried — and those who were of dissolute moi- als. They had charge, also, of the public works, and of letting out the public lands. The office of censor was esteemed highly honorable. In allusion to the severity with which Cato the Elder discharged its duties, he is commonly styled, at the present day, “ Cato the Censm.* Chap. V. I HOMAN HISTORY. 143 repeatedly defeated by the Roman legions, and the people of Veil were finally compelled to shut themselves up in their city, which was taken by the Roman dictator, Camillus, after a blockade and siege of nearly ten years. (396 B. C.) The spoil taken from the con- quered city was given to the army, the captives were sold for the benefit of the State, and the ornaments and images of the gods were transferred to Rome. The conquerors also wreaked their vengeance on the towns which had aided Veii in the war, and the Roman territory was extended farther north of the Tiber than at any previous period. ‘26. But while the Romans were enjoying the imaginary security which these successful wars had given them, they were suddenly as- sailed by a new enemy, which threatened the extinction of the Ro- man name. During the recent Etruscan wars, a vast horde of barba- rians of the Gallic or Celtic race had crossed the Alps x . GALLI0 from the unknown regions of the north, and had sat down invasion. in the plains of Northern Italy, in the country known as Cisalpine Gaul. 1 2 Tradition relates that an injured citizen of Clusium, an Etruscan city, went over the mountains to these Gauls, taking with him a quantity of the fruits and wines of Italy, and promised these rude people that if they would leave their own inhospitable country and follow him, the land which produced all these good things should be theirs, for it was inhabited by an unwarlike race ; where- upon the whole Gallic'people, with their women and children, crossed the Alps, and marched direct to Clusium. (391 B. C.) 27. Certain it is that the people of Clusium sought aid from the Ro- mans, who sent three of the nobility to remonstrate with the Brennus, or chieftain of the Gauls, but as the latter treated them with derision, they forgot their sacred character as- ambassadors, and joined the Clusians in a sally against the besiegers. Immediately Brennus ordered a retreat, that he might not be guilty of shedding the blood of ambassadors, and forthwith demanded satisfaction of the Roman senate ; and when this was refused he broke up his camp before Clusium and took up his march for Rome at the head of seventy thousand of his people. 28. Eleven miles from the city, on the banks of the AJ' ia, 1 a battle 1. Cisalpine Qanl , meaning “ Gaul this side of the Alps,” tc distinguish it from ‘ Gaul be- yond the Alps,” embraced all that portion of Northern Italy that was watered by the river Po and its numerous tributaries, extending south on the Adriatic coast to the river Rubicon, and on tha Tuscan coast to the river Macra. (Map No. IX.) 2. The JU' ia , now the Aia, was a small stream that flowed into tha Tiber from 'he ena* about ten miles north-east from Rome. (Map No. X.1 £ 44 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pakt I. was fought, and the Homans, forty thousand in number, were defeat- ed. (390 B. C.) Brennus meditated a sudden march to Borne to con- summate his victory, but his troops, abandoning themselves to pillage, rioting, and drunkenness, refused to obey the voice of their leader, and thus, the attack being delayed, the existence of the Boman na- tion was saved. The defeat on the Al' ia had rendered it impossible to defend the city, but a thousand armed Bomans took possession of the capitol and the citadel, and laying in a store of provisions deter- mined to maintain their post to the last extremity, while the- mass of the population sought refuge in the neighboring towns, bearing with them their riches, and the principal objects of their religious venera- tion. But while the rest of the people quitted their homes, eighty priests and patricians of the highest rank, deeming it intolerable to survive the republic and the worship of the gods, sat down in the Forum, 1 in their festal robes, awaiting death. 29. Onward came the Gauls in battle array, with horns and trumpets blowing, but finding the walls deserted, they burst open the gates and entered the city, which they found desolate and death-like. They marched cautiously on till they came to the Forum, where, in solemn stillness, sat the aged priests, and chiefs of the senate, look- ing like beings of another world. The wild barbarians, seized with awe at such a spectacle, doubted whether the gods had not corns down to save the city or to avenge it. At length a Gaul went up to one of the priests and gently stroked his white beard, but the old man indignantly repelled the insolence by a stroke of his ivory sceptre. He was cut down on the spot, and his death was the signal of a general massacre. Then the plundering commenced : fires broke out in several quarters ; and in a few days the whole city, with the ex ception of a few houses on the Pal' atine, was burnt to the ground." (390 B. C.) 30. The Gauls made repeated attempts to storm the citadel, but in vain. They attempted to climb up the rocks in the night, but the cackling of the sacred geese in the temple of J lino awoke Mar- cus Man' lius, who hurled the foremost Gaul headlong down the 1. The Roman Forum was a large open space between the Capitoline and Pal' atine hills, sur rounded by porticos, shops, &c., where assemblies of the people were generally held, justice administered, and public business transacted. It is now a mere open space strewed for the most part with ruins, which, in the course of centuries, have accumulated to such an extent as to raise the surface from fifteen to twenty feet above its ancient level. Seep. 582. a. Different writers have given the date of the taking of Rome by the Gauls, ft "«*» 388 to Chat, Y.J ROMAN HISTORY. 145 precipice, and prevented tlie ascent of those who were mounting after him. At length famine began to be felt by the garrison. But the host of the besiegers was gradually melting away by sickness and want, and Brennus agreed, for a thousand pounds of gold, to quit Borne and its territory. According to the old Boman legend, Ca- mil'lus entered the city with an army while the gold was being weighed, and rudely accosting Brennus, and saying, “ It is the custom of us Bomans to ransom our country, not with gold, but with iron,'’ ordered the gold to be carried back to the temple, whereupon a bat- tle ensued, and the Gauls were driven from the city. A more proba- ble account, however, relates that the Gauls were suddenly called home to protect their own country from an invasion of the Venetians. 1 4 ccording to Polybius this great Gktllic invasion took place in the same year that the “ peace of Antalcidas” was concluded between the Greeks and Persians. (See p. 89.) 31. The walls and houses of Borne had now to be built anew, and so great did the task appear that the citizens clamored for a removal to Veii; but the persuasion of Camil'lus, and a lucky omen, in- duced them to remain in their ancient situation. Yet they were not allowed to rebuild their dwellings in peace, for the surrounding na- tions, the Sabines only excepted, made war upon them ; but their attacks were repelled, and one after another they were made to yield to the sway of Borne, which ultimately became the sovereign city of Italy. 32. Soon after the rebuilding of the city the old contests between the patricians and plebeians were renewed, with all their former vio lence. The cruelties exercised towards helpless credit- xi. plebeian ors appear to have aroused the sympathies of the patrician Man' lius, the brave defender of the capitol, for he sold tests. the most valuable part of his inheritance, and declared that so long as a single pound remained no Boman should be carried into bondage for debt. Henceforward he was regarded as the patron of the poor but for some hasty words was thrown into prison for slandering th government, and for sedition. Beleased by the clamors of the mul- titude, he was afterwards accused of aspiring to kingly authority ; and the more common account states that he was convicted of +reason, and sentenced to be thrown headlong from the Tarpeian r^ck, the scene of his former glory. But another account states that, being t. The Vomtiant were a people of ancient Italy who dwelt north of the mouth3 ol the Pa, i/p^d 4 tba head-whjwrs of the Adriatic. (Map No. VIII.) G 10 ANCIEJNT HISTORY. 146 [Part L in insurrection, and in possession of the capitol, a treacherous slave hurled him down the precipice. 3 - (384 B. C.) 33. The plebeians mourned the fate of Man' lius, but his death was a patrician triumph. The oppression of the plebeians now in- creased, until universal distress prevailed : debtors were every day consigned to slavery, and dragged to private dungeons ; the number of free citizens was visibly decreasing ; those who remained were re duced to' a state of dependence by their debts, and Borne was on the point of degenerating into a miserable oligarchy, when her decline was arrested by the appearance of two men who changed the fate of their country and of the world. 34. The authors of the great reform in the constitution were Li cinius Stolo and Lucius Sextius*. Confining themselves strictly to the paths permitted by the laws, they succeeded, after a struggle of five years against every species of fraud and violence, in obtaining for the plebeians an acknowledgment of their rights, and all possible guarantees for their preservation. (376 to 371 B. C.) The history of the struggle would be too long for insertion here. As on a former occasion, it was only in the last extremity, when the people had taken up arms, and gathered together upon the Aventine, that the patrician senate yielded its sanction to the three bills brought forward by Licinius. The first abolished the military tribuneship, and gained for the plebeians a share in the consulship : the second regulated the shares, divisions, and rents, of the public lands : the third regulated the rate of interest, gave present relief to unfortunate debtors, and secured personal freedom against the rapacity of creditors. To sav* xii. office something, from the general wreck of their power, the of prjEtob,. patricians stipulated that the judicial functions of tin. consul should be exercised by a new officer with the title of Prato? ,* chosen from the patrician order ; yet within thirty -five years after the passage of the laws of Licinius, not only the praetorship, but the dictatorship also, was opened to the plebeians. 35. The legislation of Licinius freed Borne from internal dissen gions, and gave new development to her strength and warlike ener 1. The vr actors were judicial magistrates,— officers -answering to the modern chief-justice o chancellor. The modern English forms of judicial proceedings in the trial of causes are mostlj taken from those observed by the Roman praetors. At first but one praetor was chosen ; after wards, when foreigners became numerous at Rome, another praetor was added to administer justice to them, or between them and the citizens. In later times subordinate judges, calles provincia praetors, were appointed-to administer justice in the provinces. a. See Niebuhr, i. 275. Chap. Y.] ROMAN HISTORY. !4T gies. Occasionally the Gauls came down from the north and made inroads upon the Roman territories, but they were invariably driven back with loss ; while the Etrus' cans, almost constantly at war with Rome, grew less and less formidable, from repeated defeats. On the south, however, a new and dangerous enemy appeared in the Sam- nite 1 confederacy, now in the fulness of its strength, and in extent of territory and population far superior to Rome and her allies. 36. Cap' ua, 2 a wealthy city of Campania, having obtained from Rome the promise of protection against the Samnites, xm F1RS1 the latter haughtily engaged in the war, and with a larger samnite army than Rome could muster invaded the territory of WAR * Campania, but in two desperate battles were defeated by the Rj mans. Two years later the Samnites proffered terms of peace, which were accepted. (341 B. C.) A league with the Samnites ap- pears to have broken the connection that had long existed between Rome and Latium, and although the latter was willing to submit to a common government, and a complete union as one nation, yet the Romans, rejecting all compromise, haughtily determined either that their city must be a Latin town, or the Latins be subject to Rome. The result of the Latin war was the annexation of all Latium, and of Campania also, to the territory of the Republic. (338 B. C.) 37. The Samnites were alarmed at these successes, and Roman encroachments soon involved the two people in another war. Tho Samnites lost several battles, but under their able general Pontius they effectually humbled the pride of Rome. The armies of the two Roman consuls, amounting to twenty thousand men, x[v SEC0ND while passing through a narrow defile call the Caudine samnite Forks, 3 were surrounded by. the enemy, and in this situa- WAR * tion, unable either to fight or to retreat, were obliged to surrender. (321 B. C.) The terms of Pontius were that the Roman soldiers should be allowed to return to their homes, after passing under the 1. The Samnites dwelt at the distance of about ninety miles south-east from Rome, theii territory lying between Apulia on the east and Camp&nia and Latium on the west. (Mupt Nos. VIII. and X.) 2. Cap' ua. the capital of Campania, was about three miles from the left bank of the river Vultur' nus, (now Vultumo,) about one hundred and five miles south-east from Rone. Tho remains of its ancient amphitheatre, said to have been capable of containing one hundred thousand spectators, and some of its tombs, &c., attest its ancient splendor and magnificence. Two and a half miles from the site of the ancient city, is the modem city of Cap' ua, on the ’eft bank of the Vultumo. (Map No. VIII.) 3. The Caudine Forks were a narrow pass in the Samnite territory, about thirty-five mi lea north-east from the Cap ua. The present valley of Arpaia, (or Forchia di Arpaia,) not far fro»B benevento, is thought to answer to this pass. .48 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 yoke ; that there shou.d be a renewal of the ancient equal alliance between Rome and Samnium, and a restoration of all places that had been dependent upon Samnium before the war. For the fulfil ment of these stipulations the consuls gave their oaths in the name of the republic, and Pontius retained six hundred Roman knights as hostages. 38. But notwithstanding the recent disaster, and the hard fate that might be anticipated for the hostages, the Roman senate imme diately declared the peace null and void, and decreed that those who had sworn to it should be given up to the Samnites, as persons who had deceived them. In vain did Pontius demand either that the whole army should be again placed in his power, or that the terms of capitulation should be strictly fulfilled ; but he showed magna- nimity of soul in refusing to accept the consuls and other officers whom the Romans would have given up to his vengeance. Not long after, the six hundred hostages were restored, but on what conditions is unknown. 39. The war, being again renewed, was continued with brief inter- vals of truce, during a period of thirty years ; and although the Sam- xv third n ^ es were at fi* 0613 aided by Umbrians, 1 Etrus' cans, samnite and Gaul«, the desperate valor of the Romans repeatedly WAB " triumphed over all opposition. The last great battle, which occurred fifty-one years from the commencement of the first Samnite war, and which decided the contest between Rome and Samnium, has no name in history, and the place where it was fought is unknown, but its importance is gathered from the common statement that twenty thousand Samnites were left dead on the field and four thousand taken prisoners, and that among the latter was Pontius himself. (B. C. 292.) He was led in chains to grace the triumph of the Roman general, but the senate tarnished its honor by ordering the old man to execution. (291 B. C.) One year after the defeat of Pontius, the Samnites submitted to the terms dictated by the conquerors. (290 B. C.) 40. The Samnite wars had made the Romans acquainted with the Grecian cities on the eastern coast, and it was not long before they xvi war f° un( i a pretext for war with Taren' turn, the wealthiest with the of the Greek towns of Italy. The Tarentines, abandoned tarentines. ease an( j i uxur ^ h a( j 0 ft e n employed mercenary Gre- i. Um' bria , the territory of the Umbrians, was eaf t of Etruria on the left bank of the Tiber and nirth of the Sabine territory. (Maps Nos. VIII. and X.) Chap. Y.] ROMAN HISTORY 149 cian troops in their wars with the rude tribes by which they were surrounded, and now, when pressed by the Romans, they again had recourse to foreign aid, and applied for protection to Pyr' rlius, king of Epirus, who has previously been brought under our notice in con- nection with events in Grecian history. (See p. 10b.; 4 1 . Pyr' rhus, ambitious of military fame, accepted the invitation of the Tarentines, and passed over to Taren' turn at the head of an army of nearly thirty thousand men, having among his forces twenty elephants, the first of those animals that had been seen in Italy. In the first battle, which was fought with the consul Laevlnus, seven times was Pyr' rhus beaten back, and to his elephants he was finally indebted for his victory. (280 B. C.) The valor and military skill of the Romans astonished Pyr' rhus, who had expected to encounter only a horde of barbarians. As he passed over the field of battle after the fight, and marked the bodies of the Romans who had fallen in their ranks without turning their backs, and observed their counte- nances, stern even in death, he is said to have exclaimed in admira- tion : “ With what ease I could conquer the world had I the Ro- mans for soldiers, or had they me for their king.” 42. Pyr' rhus now tried the arts of negotiation, and for this pur- pose sent to Rome his friend Cineas, the orator, who is said to have won more towns by his eloquence than Pyr' rhus by his arms ; but all his proposals of peace were rejected, and Cineas returned filled with admiration of the Romans, whose city he said, was a temple, and their senate an assembly of kings. The war was renewed, and in a second battle Pyr' rhus gained a dearly-bought victory, for he left the flower of his troops on the field. “ One more such victory,” he replied to those who congratulated him, “ and I am undone ” 279 B. C.) 43. It is related that while the armies were facing each other the third time, a letter was brought to Fabricius, the Roman consul and commander, from the physician of Pyr' rhus, offering, for a suitable reward, to poison the king, and that Fabricius thereupon nobly in- formed Pyr' rhus of the treachery that was plotted against him. When the message was brought to Pyr' rhus, he was astonished at the generosity of his enemy, and exclaimed, “ It would be easier to turn, the sun from his course than Fabricius from the path of honor.” Not to be outdone in magnanimity he released all his prisoners without ransom, and soon after, withdrawing his forces, passed over into Sicily, where his aid had been requested by the 150 ANCIENT HISTORY. fPARl I Greek cities against the Carthaginians. (276 B. C. Seep 121.) Re- turning to Italy after an absence of three years, he renewed hostili- ties with the Romans, hut was defeated in a great battle by the consul Curius Dentatus, after which he left Italy with precipitation, and sought to renew his broken fortunes in the Grecian wars. The de- parture of Pyr' rhus was soon followed by the fall of Taren' turn and the establishment of Roman supremacy over all Italy, from the Rubicon 1 and the Arnus, 2 on the northern frontier of Umbria and Etruria, to the Sicilian straits, and from the Tuscan 3 sea to the Adriat' ic. 44. Sovereigns of all Italy, the Romans now began to extend their influence abroad. Two years after the defeat of Pyr' rhus, Ptol' emy Philadelphus, king of Egypt, sought the friendship and alliance of Rome by embassy, and the Roman senate honored the proposal by sending ambassadors in return, with rich presents, to Alexandria. An interference with the affairs of Sicily, soon after, brought on a war with Carthage, at this time a powerful republic, superior in strength and resources to the Roman. From this period the Roman annals begin to embrace the histories of surrounding nations, and the circle rapidly enlarges until all the then known world is drawn within the vortex of Roman ambition. SECTION III. THE ROMAN REPUBLIC, FROM THE BEGINNING OF 'iuE CARTHAGINIAN WARS, 263 B. C, TO THE REDUCTION OF GREECE AND CARTHAGE TO THE CONDITION OF ROMAN PROVINCES: 146 B. C. = 117 TEARS. ANALYSIS. 1. Geographical account of Carthage. [Tunis.]— 2. African dominions ctt Carthage. Foreign possessions. Trade. [Sardinia. Corsica. Balearic Isles. Malta.] — 3. Circumstances of Roman interference in the affairs of Sicily. — 4. Commencement of the First Punic War. The Carthaginians driven from Sicily. The Romans take Agrigentum. — 5. The Carthaginians ravage Italy. Building of the first Roman fleet. First naval encounter with the 1. The Rubicon , which formed in part the boundary between Italy proper and Cisalpine Gaul, is a small stream which falls into the Adriat’ ic, eighteen or twenty miles south of Rav- enna. (Jlap No. VIII.) 9. The river Arnus (now the Arno) was the boundary of Etruria on the north until the time df Augustus. On both its banks stood Florentia, the modern Florence ; and eight l-iles from Hs mouth, on its right bank, stood Piste, the modern Pisa. ( Map No. VIII.) 3. The Tuscan Sea was that part of the Mediterranean which extended along the coaM <»* Etruria, >r Tuscany. ( Map No. VIII.) 5hap V J ROMAN HISTORY. 151 Carthagin_ans.— 6. Roman i ;sign of carrying the war into Africa. Second defeat of the Car- thaginians. — 7. Regulus invades the Carthaginian territory. His first successes, and final de- feat. [Hermaean promontory. Clypea.] — 8. Roman disasters on the sea. Reduction of ths Roman fleet. Roman victory in Sicily . — 9. Regulus is sent to Rome with proposals of peace. His return to Carthage, and subsequent fate. — 10. Subsequent events of the war. Conditions of the peace, and extension of the Roman dominion. 11. General peace. Circumstances that led to the Illyr’ian War. [Illyr’ ians.] — 12. Re- sults of the war. Gratitude of the Greeks. Was with the Gauls. [Clastidium.] — 13. Ham'- licar’s designs upon Spain. His enmity to the Romans. [Spain.] — 14. Progress of the Cartha- ginians in Spain. Hannibal’s conquests there. Roman embassy to Carthage. [Saguntum, Iberus. Catalonia.] 15. Opening of the Second Punic War. Plans of the opposing generals. Hannibal’s march to Italy. Battles on the Ticinus and the Trebia. [Gaul. Marseilles. Turin. Ticinus. Nu- rnidia. R. Po. Trebia.] — 16. Battles of Trasimenus and Cannae. [Trasimenus. Cannae.] — 17, Defection from the cause of Rome. Courage, and renewed efforts, of the Romans. — 18. Hanni- bal at Capua. Successful tactics of Fabius Maximus. Hasdrubal. Fall of Syracuse. [Metaunis. Archimedes.] — 19. Scipio carries the war into Africa. His successes. Recall of Hannibal, Irom Italy. [Utica.] — 20. Confidence of the Carthaginians in Hannibal. Battle of Zama. The ^rms of peace. Triumph of Scipio. [Zama.] 21. The distresses which the war had brought upon the Romans. Their unconquerable spirit, and renewed prosperity. — 22. State of the world — favorable to the advancement of the Roman republic.— 23. A Grecian War.— 24. Syrian War. Terms of the peace. Disposal of the conquered provinces. [Magnesia. Pergamus.] — 25. The fate of Hannibal and Scipio.— 26 Reduction of Greece. The Third Punic War. Relations of the Carthaginians and Romans since the battle 6f Zama. — 27. Condition of Carthage. Roman armament. Demands of the Romans.— 28. The exasperated Carthaginians prepare for war.— 29. Events and results of the contest. Destruction of Carthage, 146 B. C. 1. Carthage, believed to have been founded by a Phoenician colony from Tyre in the ninth century before the Christian era, was situated on a peninsula of the northern coast of Africa, about , .. * , „ . I. CARTHAGE. twelve miles, according to Livy, north-east from the modern city of Tunis, 1 but, according to some modern writers, only three or four mil^s. Probably the city extended over a great part of the space between Tunis and Cape Carthage. Its harbor was southward from the city, and was entered from what is now ths G ulf of Tunis. 2. The Carthaginians early assumed and maintained a dominion over the surrounding Libyan tribes. Their territory was bounded on the east by the Grecian Cyrenaica ; their trading posts ex- tended westward along the coast to the pillars of Hercules ; and among their foreign possessions may be enumerated their depen Tunis is about four miles from the sea, and three miles south-west from the ruins of ancient Carthage. Among thi se ruin3 have been discovered numerous reservoirs or largo cisterns, and the remains of a grand aqueduct which brought water to the city from a distanca of at least fifty miles. According to Strabo, Tunis, or Tunes , existed before the foundation of Carthage The chief events in the history of Tunis are its numerous seiges and capturea [See pp. 335-510. Map No. VIII.) 152 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I dencies in south-western Spain, in Sicily, and in Sardinia, 1 2 Corsica,* the Balearic Isles, 3 and Malta. 4 It is believed that they carried on an extensive caravan trade with the African nations as far as the Niger ; and it is known that they entered into a commercial treaty with Rome in the latter part of the sixth century ; yet few details of their history are known to us previous to the beginning of tho first Carthaginian war with Syracuse, about 480 B. C. 3. At the time to which we have brought down the details of Ro= man history, the Mamertines, a band of Campanian mercenaries, who had been employed in Sicily by a former king, having estab* lislied themselves in the island, and obtained possession of Messana, by fraud and injustice, quarrelled among themselves, one party seek- ing the protection of Carthage, and the other that of Rome. The Greek towns of Sicily were for the most part already in friendly al- liance with the Carthaginians, who had long been aiming at the com- plete possession of the island ; and the Romans did not hesitate to avail themselves of the most trifling pretexts to defeat the ambitious designs of their rivals. 4. The first Punic a war commenced 263 years B. C., eight years n. first after the surrender of Taren'tum, when the Romans punic war. ma( j e a descent upon Sicily with a large army under the 1. Sardinia is a hilly but fertile island of the Mediterranean, about one hundred and thirty miles south-west from the nearest Italian coast. At- an early period the Carthaginians formed settlements there, but the shores of the island fell into the hands of the Romans in the interval between the first and second Punic wars, 237 B. C. The inhabitants of the interior bravely de- fended themselves, and were never completely subdued by the Roman arms. ( Map No. VIII.) 2. Corsica lies directly north*of Sardinia, from which it is separated by the strait of Bonifacio, ien miles in width in the narrowest part. Some Greeks from Phocis settled here at an early period, but were driven out by the Carthaginians. The Romans took the island from the .siter 231 B. C. {Map No. VIII.) 3. The Balearic Isles were those now known as Majorca and Minorca , the former of which ts one hundred and ten miles east from the coast of Spain. By some the ancient Ebusus, now /ijtca, is ranked among the Baleares. The term Balearic is derived from the Greek word kallein , “ to throw,” — alluding to the remarkable skill of the inhabitants in using the sling. At an early date the Phoenicians formed settlements in the Baleares. They wrnre succeeded by he Carthaginians, from whom the Romans, under Q. Metellus, conquered these islands 123 B. C. {Map No. IX.) 4. Malta, whose ancient name was Melita , is an island of the Mediterranean, sixty miles south from Sicily. The Phoenicians early planted a colony here. It fell into the hands of the Carthaginians about four hundred years before the Christian era, and in the second Punic war it was conquered by the Romans, who made it an appendage of their province of Sicily. See also p. 469. {Map No. VIII.) a. The term Punic means simply “Carthaginian.” It is a word of Greek origin, phoinikes, In its sense of purple, which the Greeks applied to Phoenicians and Carthaginians, in allusion to the famous purple or crimson of Tyre, the parent city of Carthage. The Romans, adapting the word to the analogy of the Latin tongue, changed it to Punicus, whence the English wota Punic. Chap. V.] ROMAN HISTORY. 153 command of the consul Claudius. After they had gained possessir n of Messana, in the second year of the war, Hiero, king of Syracuse, the second of the name, deserted his former allies and joined the Romans, and ere long the Carthaginians were driven from their most important stations in the island, although their superior naval power still enabled them to retain the command of the surrounding seas, and the possession of all the harbors in Sicily. The Carthaginians fortified Agrigentum, a place of great natural strength ; yet the Ro- mans besieged the city, which they took by storm, after defeating an immense army that had been sent to its relief. (262 B. C.) 5. But while the Sicilian towns submitted to the Roman arms, a Carthaginian fleet of sixty ships ravaged the coast of Italy ; and the Romans saw the necessity of being able to meet the enemy on their own element. Unacquainted with the building of large ships, they must have been obliged to renounce their design had not a Cartha- ginian ship of war been thrown upon the Italian coast by a storm From the model thus furnished a hundred and thirty ships were built within sixty days after the trees had been felled. The Cartha- ginians ridiculed the awkwardness and clumsiness of their structure, and thought to destroy the whole fleet in a single encounter ; but the Roman commander, having invented an elevated draw-bridge, with grappling irons, for the purpose of close encounter and boarding, boldly attacked the enemy, and took or destroyed forty -five of the Carthaginian vessels in the first battle, while not a single Roman ship was lost. (260 B. C.) 6. After the war had continued eight years with varied success, in volving in its ravages not only Sicily, but Sardinia and Corsica also, a Roman armament of three hundred and thirty ships, intrusted to the command of the consuls Regulus and Manlius, was prepared for the great enterprise of carrying the war into Africa. But the Car- thaginians met these preparations with equal efforts, and under their two greatest commanders, Hanno and Hamil' car, went out to meet the enemy with three hundred and fifty ships, which carried no less than a hundred and fifty thousand men. In the engagement that followed, the rude force of the Romans, aided by their boarding bridges, overcame all the advantages of naval art and practice. Again the Carthaginians were defeated, — more than thirty of their ship 3 being sunk, and sixty four, with all their crews, taken. (256 B C.) 7. Regulus proceeded tc Africa, and landing on the eastern coast 154 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pabt L of thj Heimaean promontory 1 took Clyp'ea 5 by storm, conquered Tunis, received the submission of seventy-four towns, and laid waste the country to the very gates of Carthage. An embassy sued for peace in the Roman camp ; but the terms offered by Regulus were little better than destruction itself, and Carthage would probably have perished thus early, had not foreign aid unexpectedly come to her assistance. All of a sudden we find Xanthip' pus, a Spartan general,' with a small body of Grecian troops, among the Carthagi- nians, promising them victory if they would give him the conduct of the war. A presentiment of deliverance pervaded the people, and Xanthip' pus, after having arranged and exercised the Carthaginian army before the city, went out to meet the greatly superior forces of the Romans, and gained a complete victory over them. (255 B. C.) Regulus himself was taken prisoner, and, out of the whole Roman army, only two thousand escaped, and shut themselves up in Clyp'ea. Of Xanthip' pus nothing is known beyond the events connected with this Carthaginian victory. 8. A Roman fleet, sent to bring off the garrison of Clyp' ea, gained a signal success over the Carthaginians near the Hermasan promon- tory, but on the return voyage, while off the southern coast of Sicily, was nearly destroyed by a tempest. Another fleet that had laid waste the Libyan coast experienced a similar fate on its return, — a hundred and fifty ships, and the whole booty, being swallowed up in the waves. The Romans were discouraged by these disasters, and for a time abandoned the sea to their enemies, the senate having at one time decreed that the fleet should not be restored, but limited to sixty ships for the defence of the Italian coast and the protection of transports. Still the war was continued on the land, and in Sicily the Roman consul Metellus gained a gretft victory over the Cartha- ginians near Panor'mus, killing twenty thousand of the enemy, and taking more than a hundred of their elephants. (250 B. C.) This was the last great battle of the first Punic war, although the contest was continued in Sicily, mostly by a series of slowly-conducted sieges, eight years longer. 9, Soon after the defeat at Panor' mus, the Carthaginians sent an embassy to Rome with proposals of peace. Regulus was taken from 1. The Hermann promontory , or “ promontory of Mercury, is the same as the modern Cape Bon , usually called the northern cape of Africa, at a distance of about fort^-five miles north- east from the site of Carthage. ( Map No. VIII.) ft. Clyp' ea, now Jlklib' ia, was situated on the peninsula which terminates ii? Cape Bon, a anort distance south from the cape. (Map No. VIII.) Chap. V.] ROMAN HISTORY. 155 his dungeon to accompany the embassy, the Carthaginians trusting that, weary :f his long captivity, he would urge the senate to accept the proffered terms ; but the inflexible Roman persuaded the senate to reject the proposal and Continue the war, assuring his countrymen that the resources of Carthage were already nearly exhausted. Bound by his oath to return as a prisoner if peace were not con- cluded, he voluntarily went back to his dungeon. It is generally stated that after his return to Carthage he was tortured to death by the exasperated Carthaginians. But although his martyrdom has been sung by Roman poets, and his self-sacrifice extolled by orators, there are strong reasons for believing that he died a natural death. 8 - 10. The subsequent events of the first Punic war, down to within a year of its termination, were generally unfortunate to the Romans; but eventually the Carthaginian admiral lost nearly his whole fleet in a naval battle. (241 B. C.) Again the Carthaginians, having exhausted the resources of their treasury, and unable to equip another fleet, sought peace, which was finally concluded on the con- ditions that Carthage should evacuate Sicily, and the small islands lying between it and Italy, pay three thousand two hundred talents of silver, and restore the Roman prisoners without ransom. (B. C. 240.) Sicily now became a Roman province ; Corsica and Sardinia were added two years later ; and the sway of Rome was extended over all the important islands which Carthage had possessed in the Mediterranean. 1 1. Soon after the termination of the first Punic war, Rome found herself at peace with all the world, and the temple of Janus was shut for the second time since the foundation of the city. IIL ILLYE '_ But the interval of repose was brief. A war soon broke IAN WAR - out with the Illyr' ians, 1 which led the Roman legions, for the first time, across the Adriat' ic. (229 B. C.) The Illyr' ians had com- mitted numerous piracies on the Italian coasts, and when ambassa- dors were sent to demand reparation, Teu' ta, the Illyr' ian queen, told them that piracy was the national custom of her subjects, and she could not forbid them what was their right and privilege. One of the ambassadors thereupon told her that it was the custom of the 1. The Illyr' ians were inhabitants of Illyr' ia or Illyr' icum , a country bordering on the - (\driaf ic sea, opposite Italy, and bordered cn the south-east by Epiius and Macedonia. (Jllap Ho. VIII.) a. Niebuhr, B. iii. p. 275, and iv. 70. 156 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 Romans to do away with had customs ; and so incensed was the queen at his boldness that she procured his assassination. 12. The Illyr'ians, after successive defeats, were glad to conclude a peace with the Romans, and to abandon their piracies, both on the Italian and Grecian coasts. (228 B. C.) Several Greek communi- ties showed themselves grateful for the favor ; a copy of the treaty was read in the assembly of the Achsean league ; and the Corinthians conferred upon the Romans the right of taking part in the Isthmian games. Roman encroachments on the territory of the Gauls next iv war brought on a war with that fierce people, and a vast swarm with the of the barbarians poured down upon Italy, and advanced gauls. irresistibly as far as Clusium, a distance of only three days’ journey from Rome. (226 B. C.) After four years continu- ance the war was ended by a great victory gained over the Gauls by Claudius Majrcellus, at Clastid' ium, 1 where the noted Gallic leader, Viridomarus, was slain. (222 B. C.) 13. While Rome was thus engaged, events were secretly ripening for another war with Carthage. Haiiiil' car, the soul of the Cartha- ginian councils, and the sworn enemy of Rome, had turned his eyes to Spain,* with the view of forming a province there, which should compensate for the loss of Sicily and Sardinia. “ I have three sons,” said this veteran warrior, u whom I shall rear like so many lion’s whelps against the Romans.” When he set out for Spain, where Carthage then had several colonies, he took his son Hannibal, then only nine years of age, to the altar, and made him swear eternal enmity to Rome. 14. In a few years the Carthaginians gained possession of all the south of Spain, and Hamil'car being dead, the youthful Hannibal, who proved himself the greatest general of antiquity, was appointed to the command of their armies. The rapid progress of his Spanish conquests alarmed the Romans. When the people of Sagun' turn, 3 1. Clastid' ium , (now Cliiasteggio ,) was in that part of Cisalpine Gaul called Liguria, south f the river Po, and a short distance south-east from the modern Pavia. (See Pavia, Mc.p No vnr.) 2. Spain, (consisting of the present Spain and Portugal,) called by the Greeks Iberia , and by the Romaiu Hispania , embraced all the great peninsula in the south-west of Europe, the divisions by which it is best known in ancient history are those of Tarraconensis , Lusitania , and Batica , which were made during the reign of Augustus, when, for the first time, the country was wholly subdued by the Romans. (Map No. XIII.) 3. Sagun turn was built on a hill of black marble in the east of Spain, about four miles from the Mediterranean, and fifteen miles north-east from the modern Valencia. Half way up the hill are still to be seen the ruins of a theatre, forming an exact semi-circle, and capable of accommodating nine thousan spectators. Other ruins are found in the vicinity The castle « Chap V.] ROMAN HISTORY. 157 a Grecian city on :k<3 eastern coast, found themselves exposed to his rage, they applied to Rome for aid ; but the ambassadors of the latter power, who had been sent to remonstrate with Hannibal, *were treated with contempt ; and Sagun' turn, after a siege of eight months, was taken. (219 B. C.) Hannibal then crossed the Iberus, 1 and invaded the tribes of Catalonia, 2 which were in alliance with Rome. A Roman embassy was then sent to Carthage with the preposterous demand that Hannibal and his army should be delivered up as satis- faction for the trespass upon Roman territory ; and when this was refused, the Roman commissioners, according to the prescribed form of their country, made the declaration of war. Both parties were already prepared for the long-anticipated contest. (218 B. C.) 15. The plan of Hannibal, at the opening of the second Punic war, was to carry the war into Italy ; while that of the Roman con suls, Publius Seipio and Sempronius, was to confine it to Spain, and to attack Carthage. Hannibal quickly passed over the v . second Pyrenees, and rapidly traversing the lower part of Gaul, 3 PUN1C WAR - though opposed by the warlike tribes through which his march lay, and avoiding the army of Seipio, which had landed at Marseilles, 4 crossed the Alps at the head of nearly thirty thousand men, and had taken Turin 6 by storm before Seipio could return to Italy to oppose citadel on the top of the hill has been successively occupied by the Sagun' tines, Carthaginians, Romans, Moors, and Spaniards. Along the foot of the hill has been built the modern town of Jllurviedro , now containing a population of about six thousand inhabitants. (Map No. XIII.) 1. Iberus , now the Ebro , rises in the north of Spain, in the country of the ancient Cantabri, and flows with a south-eastern course into the Mediterranean sea. Before the second Punic war this river formed the boundary between the Roman and Carthaginian territories ; and, in the time of Charlemagne, between the Moorish and Christian dominions. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Catalonia is the name by which the north-eastern part of Spain has long been known, and it is now a province of modern Spain. (Map No. XIII.) 3. Gaul embraced nearly the same territory as modern France. When first known it was d vided among the three great nations of the Belgae, the Celtae, and the Aquitani, but the R >mans called all the inhabitants Gauls , while the Greeks called them Celts. The Celts proper jihabited the north-western part of the country, the Belgae the north-eastern and eastern, and die Aquitani the south-western. The divisions by which Gaul is best known in ancient history are Lugdunensis, Belgica, Aquitania, and Narbonensis, — called the “Four Gauls,” which weie established by the Romans after the conquest of the country by Julius Caesar. As far back as we can penetrate into the history of western Europe, the Gallic or Celtic race occupied early *11 Gaul, together with the two great islands north-west of the country, one of which, (England and Scotland) they called Alb-in, “ White Island,” and the other (Ireland) they called Er-in “ Isle of the West.” (Map No. XIII.) 4. Marseilles, anciently called Massila , was originally settled by a Greek colony from Phocis. It is now a large commercial city, and sea port of the Mediterranean, situated in a beautiful plain on the east side of the bay of the Gulf of Lyons. (Map No. XIII.) 5. Turin, called by the Romans Augusta Taurinorum, now a large city of north-western Italy, is situated on the northern or western side of the river Po, eighty miles south-west of Milan. (Map No. VIII.) 158 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Past I his progress In a partial encounter on the Ticinus 1 the Homan cavalry was beaten by the Spanish and Numidian horsemen, 2 and Scipio, who had been severely wounded, retreated across the Po 3 to await the arrival of Sempronius and his army. Soon after, the entire Roman army was defeated on the left hank of the Trebia, when the hesitating Gauls at once espoused the cause of the victors (218 B. C.) 16. In the following year Hannibal advanced towards Rome, and Sempronius, falling into an ambuscade near Lake Trasimenus, 5 was slain, and his whole army cut to pieces. (217 B. C.) In anothei campaign, Hannibal, after passing Rome, and penetrating ink southern Italy, having increased his army to fifty thousand men, de feated the consuls HDmilius and Yarro in a great battle at Cannae. (216 B. C.) The Romans, whose numbers exceeded those of the enemy, lost, in killed alone, according to the lowest calculation, more than forty-two thousand men. Among the slain was iEmilius, on» of the consuls. 17. The calamity which had befallen Rome at Cannae shook th • allegiance of some of her Italian subjects, and the faith of he.’ allies; many of the Grecian cities, hoping to recover their inde- pendence, made terms with the victors ; Syracuse deserted the cause of Rome ; and Philip of Mac' edon sent an embassy to Italy and formed an alliance with Hannibal. (See p. 109.) But the Romans did not despond. They made the most vigorous preparations to carry on the war in Sicily, Sardinia, Spain, and Africa, as well as in Italy : they formed an alliance with the Grecian States of iEtolia, and thus found sufficient employment for Philip at home, and in the 1 . The Ticinus, now Ticino, enters the Po from the north about twenty miles south-west from Milan. Near its junction with the Po stood the ancient city of Ticinum, now called Pavia. (Map No. VIII.) 2. Numidia was a country of northern Africa, adjoining the Carthaginian territory on the west, and embracing the eastern part of the territory of modern Algiers. (Map No. IX.) 3. The river Po, the Erid' anus or Padus of the ancients, rises in the Alps, on the confine* tf France ; and, flowing eastward, receives during its long course to the Adriat’ ic, a vast num- ber of tributary streams. It divides the great plain of Lombardy into two nearly equal par.'s. (Map No. VIII.) 4. The Trebia is a southern tributary of the Po, which enters that stream near the modern city of Piaienza , (anciently called Placentia ) thirty-five miles south-east from Milan (Map So. VIA.) 5. Lake Trasimenus, (now called Perugia ,) was in Etruria, near the Tiber, eighty miles north from Rome. (Map No. VIII.) 6. Cannce, an ancient city of Apulia, was situated near the river Aufidus (now Ofanto) five or six miles from the Adriat' ic. The scene of the great battle between the Romans and Cartha- ginians is marked by the name of campo di sangue, “ field of blood and spears, heads of lances, and other pieces of armor, still continue to be turned up by the plough. (Map No. VIII.) ROMAN HISTORY. 159 Chajp. V.j end reduced him to the humilating necessity of making a separate peace. 18. From the field of Cannae Hannibal led his forces to Cap'ua, which at once opened its gates to receive him, but his veterans were enervated by the luxuries and debaucheries of that licentious city In the meantime Fabius Maximus had been appointed to the com mand cf the Roman army in Italy, and by a new and cautious system of tactics — by avoiding decisive battles — by watching the motions of the enemy, harassing their march, and intercepting their con- voys, he gradually wasted the strength of Hannibal, who at length summoned to his assistance his brother Has' drubal, who had been contending with the Scipios in Spain. Has' drubal crossed the Pyrenees and the Alps with little opposition, but on the banks of the Metaurus 1 he was entrapped by the consuls Livius and Nero, — his whole army was cut to pieces, and he himself was slain. (B. C. 207.) His gory head, thrown into the oamp of Hannibal, gave the latter the first intelligence of this great misfortune. Before this event the ancient city of Syracuse had been taken by storm by the Romans, after the siege had been a long time protracted by the mo ihanical skill of the famous Archimedes. 3 - 19. At length the youthful Cornelius Scipio, the son of Publius •Scipio, having driven the Carthaginians from Spain, and being elected consul, gained the consent of the senate to carry the war into Africa, although this bold measure was opposed by the age and expirience of the great Fabius. Soon after the landing of Scipio near Utica, 2 Massinis' sa, king of the Numidians, who had previously 1. The Metaurus , now the Metro , was a river of Umbria, which flowed into the Adriat' ic. The battle was fought on the left bank of the river, at a place now occupied by the village of Fossombrone. ( Map No. VIII.) 2. The city of Utica stood on the banks of the river Bagrada, (now the Mejerdah ,) a few miles north-west from Carthage. Its ruins are to be seen at the present lay near the port of Farina. (Map No. VIII.) a. drehimedes , the most celebrated mathematician among the ancients, was a native cf »yr&- guse. He was highly skilled in astronomy, mechanics, geometry, hydrostatics, and optics, in all of which he produced many extraordinary inventions. His knowledge of the principle of specific gravities enabled him to detect the fraudulent mixture of silver in the golden crown of Hiero, king of Syracuse, by comparing the quantity of water displaced by equal weights of gold and silver. The thought occurred to him upon observing, while he was in the bath, that he displaced a bulk of water equal to his own body. He was so highly excited by the dis- covery, that he is said to have run naked out of the bath into the street, exclaiming eureka / “ I have found it.” His acquaintance with the power of the lever is evinced by his famous declaration to Hiero : “Give me where I ma--- itand, and I will move the world.” At the tima of the siege of Syracuse he is said to have fired the Roman fleet by means of immense reflect- ing mirrors. 160 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 been in alliance with the Carthaginians, went over to the Romans, and aided in surprising and burning the Carthaginian camp of Has'- drubal, still another general of that name. Both Tunis and Utica were next besieged ; the former soon opened its gates to the Romans, and the Carthaginian senate, in despair, recalled Hannibal from Italy, for the defence of the city. (202 B. C.) 20, Peace, which Hannibal himself advised, might even now have been made on terms honorable to Carthage, had not the Carthagi- nians, elated by the presence of their favorite hero, and confident of his success, obstinately resisted any concession. Both generals made preparations for a decisive engagement, and the two armies met on the plains of Zama; 1 but the forces of Hannibal were mostly raw troops, while those of Scipio were the disciplined legions that had so often conquered in Spain. Hannibal showed himself worthy of his former fame ; but after a hard-fought battle the Romans pre- vailed, and Carthage lost the army which was her only reliance. Peace was then concluded on terms dictated by the conqueror. Car- thage consented to confine herself to her African possessions, to keep no elephants in future for purposes of war, to give up all prisoners and deserters, to reduce her navy to ten small vessels, to undertake no war without the consent of the Romans, and to pay ten thousand talents of silver. (202 B. C.) Scipio, on his return home, received the title of Africanus, and was honored with the most magnificent triumph that had ever been exhibited at Rome. 21. The second Punic war had brought even greater distress upon the Roman people than upon the Carthaginians, for during the six- teen years of Hannibal’s occupation of Italy the greater part of the Roman territory had lain waste, and was plundered of its wealth, and deserted by its people ; and famine had often threatened Rome itself ; while the number of the Roman militia on the rolls had been reduced by desertion, and the sword of the enemy, from two hundred and seventy thousand nearly to the half of that number. Yet in their greatest adversity the Roman people had never given way to despair, nor shown the smallest humiliation at defeat, nor manifeste 1 the least design of concession ; and when the pressure of war was removed, this same unconquerable spirit rapidly raised Rome to a state of prosperity and greatness which she hid never at- tained before. 1. The city of Zama , the site of which is occupied by the modem village ol Zowirin, was about a hundred miles southwest from Carthage. {Map No. VIII.) ROMAN HISTORY. 161 Chap. V.] 22. The si ate of the world was now highly favorable for the ad vancement of a great military republic, like that of Rome, to univer- sal dominion. In the East, the kingdoms formed from the fragments of Alexander’s mighty empire were either still engaged in mutual wars ; or had sunk into the weakness of exhausted energies; tho Grecian States were divided among themselves, each being ready to throw itself upon foreign protection to promote its own immediate interests; while in the West the Romans were masters of Spain; their colonies were rapidly encroaching on the Gallic provinces ; and they had tributaries among the nations of Northern Africa. 23. The war with Carthage had scarcely ended when an embassy from Athens solicited the protection of the Romans against the power of Philip II. of Mac' edon ; and war being unhesitatingly V i. a gre- declared against Philip, Roman diplomacy was at once C,AN WAR * plunged into the maze of Grecian politics. (B. C. 201.) After a war of four years Philip was defeated in the decisive battle of Cynoceph' alae, (B. C. 197,) and forced to submit to such terms as the conquerors pleased to dictate ; and at the Isthmian games the Greeks received with gratitude the declaration of their freedom under the protection of Rome. When, therefore, a few years later, the iEtolians, dissatisfied with the Roman policy, invited Antiochus of Syria into Europe, and that monarch had made himself master of Eubce' a, a plausible pretext was again offered for Roman inter- ference: and when the JEtolians had been reduced, Antiochus driven back, and Greece tranquillized upon Roman terms, an Asiatic war was open to the cupidity of the Romans. 24. After a brief struggle, Antiochus, completely overthrown in the general battle of Magnesia, 1 (B. C. 191,) purchased a peace b} surrendering to the Romans all those portions of Asia V1I . Syrian Minor bounded on the east by Bithyn' ia, Galatia, Cap- WAR - padocia, and Cilic'ia, a pledging himself not to interfere in the affairs of the Roman allies in Europe — giving up his ships of war and paying fifteen thousand talents of silver. The Romans now erected tne conquered provinces, with the exception of a few Greek maritime towns, into a kingdom which they conferred upon Eumenes, their 1. Magnesia , (now Manisa ,) a city of Lydia, was situated on the southern side of the river llermus, (now Kodus,) twenty-eight miles north-east from Smyrna. The modern Manisa if one of the neatest towns of Asia Minor, and contains a population of about thirty thousand inhabitants. Thel e was another Magnesia, now in -uins, fifty miles south-east from Smyrna ' Map No. IV.) a. See Map of Asia Minor, No. VI. 11 162 ANCIENT HISTORY. [ Part 1 ally, a petty prince of Per' gamus, 1 * * * * while to the Rhodians, also their al ies, the} gave the provinces of Lyc' ia and Caria. a 25. Soon after the close of the second Pnnic war, Hannibal, having incurred the enmity of some of his countrymen, retired to Syria, where he joined Antiochus in the war against Rome. A clause in the treaty with the Syrian monarch stipulated that Hannibal should be delivered up to the Romans ; but he avoided the danger by seeking refuge at the court of Prusias, king of Bithyn' ia, where he remained about five years. An embassy was finally sent to de- mand him of Prusias, who, afraid of giving offence to the Romans, agreed to give him up, but the aged veteran, to avoid falling into the hands of his ungenerous enemies, destroyed himself by poison, in the sixty-fifth year of his age. The same year witnessed the death of his great rival and conqueror Scipio. (B. C. 1 83.) b The latter, on his return from carrying on the war against Antiochus, was charged with secreting part of the treasure received from the Syrian king. Scorning to answer the unjust accusation, he went as an exile into a country village of Italy, where he soon after died. 26. The events that led to the overthrow of the Macedonian monarchy, and the reduction of Greece to a Roman province, have viii. third been related in a former chapter. 6 Already the third punic war. Punic war was drawing to a close, and the same year that Greece lost her liberties under Roman dominion, witnessed the destruction of the miserable remains of the once proud republic of Carthage. During the fifty years that had elapsed since the battle of Zama, the conduct of the Carthaginians had not afforded the Ro- mans any cause whatever for complaint, and amicable relations be- tween the two people might still have continued ; but the expediency of a war with Carthage was a favorite topic of debate in the Roman senate, and it is said that, of the many speeches which the elder Cato made on this subject, all ended with the sentence, delenda est Car- thago “ Carthage must be destroyed.” 27 Carthage, still a wealthy, but feeble city, had long been bar aased by the encroachments of Massinis' sa, king of Numid' ia, who 1. The f ir' gamus here mentioned, the most important city of Mysia, was situated in the southern part of that country, in a plain watered by two small rivers which united to form the Caicus. {Map No. IV.) a. See Map of Asia Minor, No. VI. b. Some of the ancients placed the death >f Hannibal one or two years later, rhe dates of Scipio’s death vary fror 183 t 187 c. See p. 1 10. Chap. V.j ROMAN HISTORY. 163 appears to have been instigated to hostile acts by the Romans ; and although Massinis' sa had wrested from Carthage a large portion of her territory, yet the Romans, seeking a pretext for war, called Car- thage to account for her conduct, and without waiting to listen to expostulation or submission, sent an army of more than eighty thousand men to Sicily, to be there got in readiness for a descent upon the African coast. (149 B. C.) At Sicily the Carthaginan ambassadors were received by the consuls in command of the army, and required to give up three hundred children of the noblest Carthaginian families as hostages ; and when this demand had been complied with the army crossed over and landed near Carthage. The Carthagi nians were now told that they must deliver up all their arms and munitions of war ; and, hard as this command was, it was obeyed.** The perfidious Romans next demanded that the Carthaginians should abandon their city, allow its walls to be demolished, and remove to a place ten miles inland, where they might build a new city, but without walls or fortifications? 28. When these terms were made known to the Carthaginian senate, the people, exasperated to madness, immediately put to death all the Romans who were in the city, closed the gates, and, for want of other weapons, collected stones on the battlements to repel the first attacks of the enemy. Hasdrubal, who had been banished be- cause he was an enemy of the Romans, was recalled, and unexampled exertions made for defence : the brass and iron of domestic utensils were manufactured into weapons of war, and the women cut off their long hair to be converted into strings for the bowmen and cordage for the shipping. 29. The Romans had not anticipated such a display of courage and patriotism, and the war was prolonged until the fourth year after its commencement. It was the struggle of despair on the part of Carthage, and could end only in her destruction. The city was finally taken by Scipio iEmilianus, the adopted son of the great Africanus, when only five thousand citizens were found within its walls, fifty thousand having previously surrendered on different occa- sions, and been carried away into slavery. Hasdrubal begged his life, which was granted only that he might adorn the triumph of the Roman general ; but his wife, reproaching him for his cowardice, threw herself with her children into the flames of the temple in a. “ Roman commissioners were sent into the citv, who carried away two thousand cat* tulta, and tw » hundred thousand suits ox armor.” 164 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part l which she had taken refuge. The walls of Carthage were levelled to the ground, the buildings of the city were burned, a part of the Carthaginian territory was given to the king of Numid'ia, and tha rest became a Roman province. (146 B. C.) Thus perished the republic of Carthage, after an existence of nearly eight hundred years, — like Greece, the victim of Roman ambition. We give below a description of Jerusalem, which was omitted by mistake in its pioper place. Jerusalem , a famous city of southern Palestine, and long the capital of the kingdom of Judah, is situated on a hill in a mountainous country, between two small valleys, in one of which, on the west, the brook Gihon runs with a south-eastern course, to join the brook Kedron in the narrow valley of Jehoshaphat, east of the city. The modern city, built about three hundred years ago, is entirely surrounded by walls, barely two and a-half miles in circuit, and flanked here and there with square towers. The boundaries of the old city varied greatly at different times ; and they are so imperfectly marked, the walls having been wholly destroyed, that few facts can be gathered respecting them. The interior of the modern city is divided by two valleys, intersecting each other at right angles, into four hills, on which history, sacred and profane, has stamped the imperishable names of Zion, Acra, Bezetha, and Moriah. Mount Zion, on the south-west, the “ City of David,” is now the Jewish and Armenian quarter : Acra, or the lower city, on the north-west, is the Christian quarter ; while the Mosque of Omar, with its sacred enclosure, occupies the hill of Moriah, which was crowned by the House of the Lord built by Suiomon. West of the Christian quarter of the city is Mount Calvary, the scene of the Saviour’s crucifixion ; and on the eastern side of the valley of Jehoshaphat is the Mount of Olives, on whose western slope are the gardens of Gethsemane, enclosed by a wall, and still in a sort of ruined cultivation. A little west of Mount Zion, and near the base of Mount Cal- vary, is the pool of Gihon, near which ‘‘Zadok the priest and Nathan the prophet anointed Solomon king over Israel.” South of Mount Zion is the valley of Hinnom, watered by the brook Gihon. A short distance up the valley of Jehoshaphat, and issuing from beneath tha walls of Mount Moriah, is “ Siloa’s brook, that flow’d Fast by the oracles of God.” Jerusalem and its suburbs abound with many interesting localities, well authenticated as the scenes of events connected with the history of the patriarchs, and the sufferings of Christ ; but to hundreds of others shown by the monks, minute criticism denies any claims to our respect. Considered as a modern town, the city is of very little importance : its population is about ten thousand, two-thirds of whom are Mohammedans : it has no trade— no industry whatever — nothing to give it commercial importance, except the manufacture, by the monks, of shells, beads, and relics, large quantities of which are shipped from the port of Jaffa, for Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Jerusalem is generally believed to be identical with the Salem of which Melchisedek was king in the time of Abraham. When the Israelites entered the Holy Land it was in the possession of the Jebusites; and although Joshua took the city, the citadel on Mount Zion was teld by the Jebusites until they were dislodged by David, who made Jerusalem the m< itropolia cf his kingdom . Chap. VI | ROMAN HISTORY. 165 CHAPTER VI. ROMAN HISTORY: t IOM THE CONQUEST OF GREECE AND CARTHAGE, 146 B. 0., TO THIS} COMMENCEMENT OF THE CHRISTIAN ERA. ANALYSIS. 1. Situation of Spain after the fall of Carthage. [Oeltib^rians. Last fAnians.]— 2. Character, exploits, and death of Viriathus. — 3. Subsequent history of the Lusit& nians. War with the Numan' tians. [Numan’ tia.]— 4. Servile war in Sicily. Situation oi Sicily. Events of the Servile war. — 5. Dissensions of the Gracchi. Corrupt state of society at Rome. — 6. Country and city population. — 7. Efforts of the tribunes. Character and efforts of Tiberius Gracchus. Condition of the public lands. — 8. The agrarian laws proposed by Tiberius. — 9. Opposed by the nobles, but finally passed. Triumvirate appointed to enforce them. Disposition of the treasures of At' talus, — 10. Circumstances of the death of Tiberius. — 11. Continued opposition of the aristocracy — tribuneship of Caius Gracchus— and circumstances of his death.— 12. Condition of Rome after the fall of the Gracchi.— 13. Profligacy of the Ro- man senate, and circumstances of the first Jugurthine war. — 14. Renewal of the war with Jugurtha. Events of the war, and fate of Jugurtha. [Mauritania.] — 15. Germanic Invasion. [Cimbri and Teu' tones.] Successive Roman defeats. [Danube. Noreja.] 16. Marius, ap- pointed to the command, defeats the Teu' tones. [The Rhone. Aix.] 17. The Cimbri. Great- ness of the danger with which Rome was threatened. — 18. The social war. — 19. First Mitiiridatic war. [Pontus. Eu' menes. Per' gamus.] — 20. Causes of the Mithridatic war, and successes of Mithridates. — Civil war between Ma' rius and Sylla. — 22. Triumph of Ihe Marian faction. Death and character of Marius. — 23. Continuance of the civil war. Events in the East. Sylla master of Rome. — 23. Proscription and massacres. Death of Sylla. —25. The M&rian faction in Spain. Servile war in Italy. 26. Second and third Mithridatic wars. Lucullus. Manil' ius, and the Manil ian taw. — 27. Pompey’s successes in the East. Reduction of Palestine. Death of Mithridates.— 28 Conspiracy of Catiline. Situation of Rome at this period. Character and designs of Catiline. Circumstances that favored his schemes. By whom opposed. — 29. Cicero elected consul, llight, defeat, and death of Catiline.— 30. The First Triumvirate. Division of power.— 31. Caesar’s conquests in Gaul, Germany, and Britain. Death of Crassus. Rivalry between Caesar and Pompey. [The Rhine. Parthia.] — 32. Commencement of the Civil war between Cjesar andPompey. Flight of the latter. [Raven' na.J— 33. Caesar’s successes. Sole dictator. His defeat at Dyrrach' ium. — 34. Battle of Pharsalia. Flight, and death of Pompey. [Pharshlia. Peleu’ sium.] — 35. Cleopatra. Alexandrine war. Reduction of Pontus. [Pharos.]— 36. Caesar’s clemency. Servility of the senate. The war in Africa, and death of Cato. [Thapsus.] — 37 Honors bestowed upon Caesar. Useful changes — reformation of the calendar. — 38. The war in Spain. [Munda.] — 39. Caesar, dictator for life. His gigantic projects. He is suspected of Aiming at sovereign power. — 40. Conspiracy against him. His death. — 41. Conduct of Brutus. Mark Antony’s oration. Its effects. — 42. Ambition of Antony. Civil war. Second Triumvi- rate. The proscription that followed. — 43. Brutus and Cassius. Their defeat at Philippi. [Philippi.] — 44. Antony in Asia Minor, — at the court of Cleopatra. [Tarsus.] Civil war in Italy. — 45. Antony’s return. Reconciliation of the rivals, and division of the empire among them. [Brundusium.]— 46. The peace is soon broken. Sextius Pompey. Lep’idus. Antony — 47. The war between Octavius and Antony. Battle of Actium, and disgraceful flight of Antony. — 48. Death of Antony and Cleopatra. — 49. Octa' vius sole master of the Roman world. Honors and offices conferred upon him. Character of his government. — 50. Success* ful wars,— followed by a general peace. Extent of the Reman empire. Birth of the Saviour. 166 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Pabt 1 1. After the fall of Carthage and the Grecian republics, which were the closing events of the preceding chapter, the attention of the Roman people was for a time principally directed to Spain. When, near the close of the second Punic war, the Car- 1. SPAIN . . . . . . * a tier the thaginian dominion m Spam ended, that country was re- kall of garded as being under Roman jurisdiction ; although, beyond the immediate vicinity of the Roman garrisons, the native tribes, the most prominent of which were the Celtibel iaIiS , and Lusitanians, 2 long maintained their independence. 2. At the close of the third Punic war, Viriathus, a Lusitanian prince, whose character resembles that of the Wallace of Scotland, had triumphed over the Roman legions in several engagements, and had already deprived the republic of nearly half of her possessions in the peninsula. During eight years he bade defiance to the most for- midable hosts, and foiled the ablest generals of Rome, when the Roman governor Cse' pio, unable to cope with so great a general treacherously procured his assassination. 3 - (B. C. 140.) 3. Soon after the death of Viriathus the Lusitanians submitted tc a peace, and many of them were removed from their mountain fast nesses to the mild district of Valen'cia, 3 where they completely lost their warlike character ; but the Numan' tians 4 rejected with scorn the insidious overtures of their invaders, and continued the war. Two Roman generals, at the head of large armies, were conquered by them, and on both occasions treaties of peace were concluded with the vanquished, in the name of the Roman people, but after- 1. The Celtiberians , whose country was sometimes called Celtiberia , occupied the greatest part of the interior of Spain around the head waters of the Tagus. 2. The Lusithnians , whose country was called Lusitania, dwelt on the Atlantic coast, and when first known, principally between the rivers Douro and Tagus. 3. The modern district or province of Valencia extends about two hundred miles along the south-eastern coast of Spain. The city of Valencia, situated near the mouth of the river Guadalaviar, (the ancient Tusia,) is its capital. ( Map No. XIII.) 4. Numan' tia, a celebrated town of the Celtiberians, was situated near the source of the •ver Douro, and near the site of the modern village of Chavaler , and about one hundred aud wenly-five miles north-east from Madrid. a. Vir&thus, at first a shepherd, called by the Romans a robber, then a guerilla chk< and finally an eminent military hero, aroused the Lusitanians to avenge the wrongs and injuries in- flicted upon them by Roman ambition. He was unrivalled in fertility of resources under defeat, skill .n the conduct of his troops, and courage in the hour of battle. Accustomed to’ a free life in the mountains, he never indulged himself with the luxury of a ned : bread and meat were his only fo ad, and water his only beverage; and being robust, hardy, adroit, always cheerful, and dreading no danger, he knew how to avail himself of the wild chivalry of his countrymen, and to keep alive in them the spirit of freedom. During eight years he constantly Harassed the Roman armies, and defeated many Roman generals, sereral of whom lost theif lives in battle. His name still lives in the songs and legends of early Spain. ROMAN HISTORY. 167 Chap. VI] ward 3 rejected by the Roman senate. Scip' io JEmilianus, at the head of sixty thousand men, was then sent to conduct the war, and laying siege to Numan' tia, garrisoned by less than ten thousand men, he finally reduced the city, but not until the Numan' tians, worn out by toil and famine, and finally yielding to despair, had de- stroyed all their women and children, and then, setting fire to their city, had perished, almost to a man, on their own swords, or in the Sanies. (B. C. 133.) The destruction of Numan' tia was followed by the submission of nearly all the tribes of the peninsula, and Spain henceforth became a Roman province. 4. Two years before the fall of Numan' tia, Sicily had become the theatre of a servile war, which merits attention principally on .ac- count of the view it gives of the state of the conquered countries then under the jurisdiction of Rome. The calamities which usually follow in the train of long-continued war had swept away n> gEtlvILE most of the original population of Sicily, and a large ^ AR - portion of the cultivated lands in the island had been added, by col quest, to the Roman public domain, which had been formed int" large estates, and let out to speculators, who paid rents for the same into the Roman treasury. In the wars of the Romans, and indeed of most nations at this period, large numbers of the captives taker in war were sold as slaves ; and it was by slave labor the estates in Sicily were cultivated. The slaves in Sicily were cruelly treated, and as most of them had once been free, and some of high rank, it is not surprising that they should seek every favorable opportunity to rise against their masters. When once, therefore, a revolt had broken out, it spread rapidly over the whole island. Seventy thou sand of the slaves were at one time under arms, and in four success- ive campaigns four Roman praetorian armies were defeated. The most frightful atrocities were perpetrated on both sides, but the re- bellion was finally quelled by the destruction of most of those who had taken part in it. (B. C. 133.) 5. While these events were occuring in the Roman provinces, af- fairs in the capital, generally known in history as the u dissensions of the Gracchi,” were fast ripening for civil war. More than two hundred years had elapsed since the animosi- BIONS OF ties of patricians and plebeians were extinguished by an THE equal participation in public honors ; but the wealth of conquered provinces, and the numerous lucrative and honorable offices, both civil and military, that had been created, had produced 168 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I corruption at home, by giving rise to factions which contended for the greatest share of the spoils, while, apart from these new dis- tinctions had arisen, and the rich and the poor, or the illustrious and the obscure, now formed the great parties in the State. G. As the nobles availed themselves of the advantages of their station to accumulate wealth and additional honors, the large slave plantations increased in the country to the disparagement of free labor, and the detriment of small landholders, whose numbers were constantly diminishing, while the city gradually became crowded with an idle, indigent, and turbulent populace, attracted thither bj 1 the frequent cheap or gratuitous distributions of corn, and by the frequency of the public shows, and made up, in part, of emancipated slaves, who were kept as retainers in the families of their former masters So long as large portions of Italy remained unsettled, there was an outlet for the redundancy of this growing populace ; but the entire Italian territory being now occupied, the indigent could no longer be provided for in the country, and the practice of colo- nizing distant provinces had not yet been adopted. 7. The evils of such a state of society were numerous and for- midable, and such as to threaten the stability of the republic. Against the increasing political influence of the aristocracy, the tribunes of the people had long struggled, but rather as factious demagogues than as honest defenders of popular rights. At length Tiberius Grac' chus, a tribune, and grandson of Scipio Africanus one of the noblest and most virtuous among the young men of his time, commenced the work of reform by proposing to enforce the Licinian law, which declared that no individual should possess more than five hundred jugers, a (about two hundred and seventy-five acres) of the public domain. This law had been long neglected, so that numbers of the aristocracy now cultivated vast estates, the occupancy of which had perhaps been transmitted from father to son as an in- heritance, or disposed of by purchase and sale ; and although the republic still retained the fee simple in such lands, and could at any time legally turn out the occupants, it had long ceased to be thought probable that its rights would ever be exercised. 8. The law of Tiberius Grac' chus went even beyond strict legal jus- tice, bj proposing that buildings and improvements on the public lands should be paid for out of the public treasury. The impression has generally previiled that the Agrarian laws proposed by Tiberius a. A juger was nearly five-ninths of our acre. Chap. VI] ROMAN HISTORY. 169 Grac' elms were a diiect and violent infringement of the rights of private property; but the genius and learning of Niebuhr have shown that they effected the distribution of public lands only, and not those of private citizens ; although there were doubtless instances where, incidentally, they violated private rights. 9 When the senators and nobles, who were the principal land’ holders, perceived that their interests were attacked, their exaspera tion was extreme ; and Tiberius, whose virtues had hitherto been ac- knowledged by all, was denounced as a factious demagogue, a distur her of the public tranquillity, and a traitor to the conservative interests of the republic. When the law of Tiberius was about to be put to the vote in the assemblies of the people, the corrupt nobles engaged Octavius, one of the tribune’s colleagues, to forbid the proceedings ; but the people deposed him from the tribuneship, and the agrarian law was passed. A permanent triumvirate, or committee of three, consisting of Tiberius Grac' chus, his brother Caius, and Ap' pius Clau' dius, was then appointed to enforce the law. About the same time a law was passed, providing that the treasures which At' talus, king of Per' gamus, had recently bequeathed to the Roman people, should be distributed among the poorer citizens, to whom lands were to be assigned, in order to afford them the means of purchasing the necessary implements of husbandry. 1 10. At the expiration of the year of his tribuneship, Tiberius offered himself for reelection, conscious that unless shielded by the sacredness of the office of' tribune, his person would no longer be safe from the resentment of his enemies. After two of the tribes had voted in his favor, the opposing party declared the votes illegal, and the disputes which followed occupied the day. On the following morning the people again assembled to the election, when a rumor was circulated that some of the nobles, accompanied by bands of armed retainers, designed to attack the crowd and take the life of Tiberius. A tumult ensued, and a false report was carried to the senate, then in session, that Tiberius had demanded a crown of the people. The senate seized upon this pretext for violent interference , but when the consul refused to disturb the people in their legal as sembly, the senators rose in a body, and, headed by Scip' io Naslca, a. In 133 B. C. At’ talus Philomdter bequeathed his kingdom and all liis treasures to the Ho- man people. At'talu3 was one of the worst specimens oi Eastern despots, and took gieal delight in dispatching his nearest relatives by poison. The Romans bad long looked ujob his kingdom as their property, and his will was probably drawn up by Roman dictation. H 170 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part I and accompanied by a crowd of armed dependants, proceeded to the assembly, where a conflict ensued, in which Tiberius and about three hundred of his adherents were slain. (B. C. 132.) 11. Notwithstanding this disgraceful victory, and the persecutions that followed it, the ruling party could not abolish the triumvirate which had been appointed to execute the law of Tiberius. During ten years, however, little was accomplished by the popular party, owing tc the powerful opposition of the aristocracy ; but after Caiua Grac' chus, a younger brother of Tiberius, had been elected tribuns, the cause of the people received a new impulse ; an equitable division of the public lands was commenced, and many salutary reforms were made in the administration of the government. But, at length, Caius being deprived of the tribuneship by false returns and bribery, and his bitter enemy Opim' ius having been elected consul by the aristocratic faction, and afterwards appointed dictator by the senate, the followers of Caius were driven from the city by armed violence, and three thousand of their number slain. (B. C. 120.) The head of Caius was thrown at the feet of Opim' ius, who had offered for it a reward of its weight in gold. a 12. Thus ended what has been termed the “ dissensions of the Gracchi;” and with that noble family perished the freedom of the republic. An odious aristocracy, which derived its authority from wealth, now ruled the State : the tribunes, becoming rich themselves, no longer interposed their authority between the people and their oppressors ; while the lower orders, reduced to a state of hopeless subjection, and despairing of liberty, became factious and turbulent, and ere long prepared the way, first for the tyranny of a perpetual dictatorship, and lastly for the establishment of a monarchy on the ruins of the commonwealth. 13 The profligacy and corruption of the senate were manifest in the events that led to the Jugur' thine war, which began to embroil a. Tiberius and Caius Grac chus, though of the noblest origin, and of superior natural en- dowments, are said to have been indebted more to the judicious care of their widowed mothea Cornelia, than to nature, for the excellence of their characters. This distinguished Roman matron, the daughter of Scip' io Africanus the Elder, occupies a high rank for the purity and excellence of her private character, as well as for her noble and elevated sentiments. The fol- lowing anecdote of Cornelia is often cited. A Campanian lady who was at the time on a v^sit to her, having displayed to Cornelia some very beautiful ornaments which she possessed, de- sired the latter, in return, to exhibit her own. The Roman mother purposely detained her in conversation until her children returned from school, when, pointing to them, she exclaimed, « There are my ornaments.” She bore the untimely aeatn of her sons with great magnanimity, ana in honor of her a statue was afterwards erected by the Roman people, bearing for an in scription the words,, “ Cornelia , mother of the Gracchi? ROMAN HISTORY. 17 » CHAr VI J the republic soon after the fall of the Grac' chi. The Numid' iar king Micip' sa, the son of Massinis' sa, had divided IV . jugur'- his kingdom, on his death-bed, between his two sons thine war. Hiemp' sal and Adher' bal, and his nephew Jugur'tha; but the latter, resolving to obtain possession of the whole inheritance, soon murdered Hiemp' sal, and compelled Adher' bal to take refuge in Rome. The senate, won by the bribes of the usurper, decreed a division of the kingdom between the two claimants, giving to J ugur' tha the better portion ; but the latter soon declared war against his cousin, and, having gained possession of his person, put him to death. The senate could no longer avoid a declaration of war against Jugur'tha; but he would have escaped by an easy peace, after coming to Rome to plead his own cause, had he not there murdered another relative, whom he suspected of aspiring to the throne of Numid' ia. (B. G 109.) 14. Jugur'tha was allowed to return to Africa; but his briberies of the Roman senators were exposed, and the war against him was begun anew. After he had defeated several armies, Metel' lus drove him from his kingdom, when the Numid' ian formed an alliance with Bac' chus, king of Mauritania, 1 but their united forces were success- ively routed by the consul Marius, formerly a lieutenant in the army of Metel' lus, but who, after obtaining the consulship, had been sent to terminate the war. Eventually the Moorish king betrayed Jugur'- tha into the hands of the Romans, as the price of his own peace and security, (B. C. 106,) and the captive monarch, after gracing the triumph of Marius, was condemned to be starved to death in prison. 15. Soon after the fall of Jugur'tha, Marius was recalled from his command in Africa to defend the northern provinces of Italy against a threatened invasion from immense hordes of the Cim'bri and Teu' tones, a German nations, who, about the year v . germanio 113, had crossed the Danube 2 and appeared on the east- invasion 1. Mauritania was an extensive country of Northern Africa, west of Numid’ ia, embracing the present Morocco and part of Algiers. (Map No. IX.) 2. The Danube , the largest river in Europe, except the Volga, rises in the south-western part of Germany, in the Duchy of lladen, only about thirty miles from the Rhine, and after a general ■outh-eastem course of nearly eighteen hundred miles, falls into the Black Sea. (Map No. VIII.) a. The barbarian torrent of the Cim'bri and Teu' tones appears to have originated beyond the Elbe. The original seat of the Cim' bri was probably the Cimbrian peninsula, so called by the Romans, — the same as the modern Jutland, or Denmark. Opinions differ concerning the Ten' tones, some believing them to have been the collective wanderers of many tribes between the Vistula and the Elbe, while others fix their original seats in northern Scandinavia — t/ t ia in the north of Sweden and Norway. 172 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Past I ern declivities of tlie Afps, where the Romans guarded the passes into Italy. The first year of the appearance of these unknown tribes, from which is dated the beginning of German history, a they defeated the Roman consul Papir' ius Car' bo, near Noreja, 1 in the mountains of the present Styr' ia. Proceeding thence towards south- ern Gaul they demanded a country from the Romans, for which they promised military assistance in war ; but when their request was re- fused they determined to obtain by the sword what was denied them by treaty. Four more Roman armies were successively vanquished by them, the last under the consuls Man' lius and Cae' pio in the year 105, with the prodigious loss of 80,000 Roman soldiers slain, and 40,000 of their slaves. 16. Fortunately for the Romans, the enemy, after this great vic- tory, turned aside towards the south of France and Spain, while Marius, who had been appointed to the command of the northern army, marching over the Alps towards Gaul, formed a defensive camp on the Rhone. 2 The Germans,* returning, in vain tempted Marius to battle, after which they divided into two bands, the Cim'- bri taking up their march for Italy, while the Teu' tones remained opposed to Marius. But when the Teu' tones saw that their chal- lenge for battle was not accepted, they also broke up, and marching past the Romans, jeeringly asked them “ if they had any commissions to send to their wives.” Marius followed at their side, keeping upon the heights, but when he had arrived at the present town of Aix, 3 in the south of France, some accidental skirmishing at the outposts of the two armies brought on a general battle, which continued two days, and in which the nation of the Teu' tones was nearly annihilated, (B. C. 102,) — two hundred thousand of them being either killed or taken prisoners. 1 7. In the meantime the consul Catul' lus had been repulsed by the Cim' bri in northern Italy, and driven south of the Po. Mariu? hastened to his assistance, and their united forces now advanced across the Po, and defeated the Cim' bri in a great battle on the Rau- 1. JYortja, or JVoreia , was the capital of the Roman province of JVoricum. The site of this eity is in the present Austrian province of Styria , about sixty miles north-east from Laybach. {Map No. VIII.) 2. The Rhone rises in Switzerland, passes through the Lake of Geneva, and after uniting with the Saone flows south through the south-eastern part of France, and discharges its waters by four mouths into the Mediterranean. {Map No. XIII.) Aix , called by the Romans Aquce Sextce , is situated in a plain sixteen miles north of Mar •e-lles. (Map No. XIII.) a. Kohlrausch’s Germany, p. 43 Chap. VI.] ROMAN HISTORY 173 dian plains. 3 - (B. C. 101.) Thus ended the war with the German nations. The danger with which it for a time threatened Borne was compared to that of the great Gallic invasion, nearly three hundred years before. The Bomans, in gratitude to their deliverer, now styled Marius the third founder of the city. 1 8. A still more dangerous war, called the social war, soon after broke out between the Bomans and their Italian allies, caused VI THE by the unjust treatment of the latter, who, forming part of social war. the commonwealth, and sharing its burdens, had long in vain de- manded for themselves the civil and political privileges that were enjoyed by citizens of the metropolis. The war continued three years, and Borne would doubtless have fallen, had she not, soon after the commencement of the struggle, granted the Latin towns, more than fifty in number, all the rights of Boman citizens, and thus se- cured their fidelity. (90 B. C.) b The details of this war are little known, but it is supposed that, during its continuance, more than three hundred thousand Italians lost their lives, and that many flourishing towns were reduced to heaps of ruins. The Boman? were eventually compelled to offer the rights of citizenship to alls that should lay down their arms ; and tranquillity was thus restored to most of Italy, although the Samnites continued to resist until they were destroyed as a nation. 19. While these domestic dangers were threatening Borne, an im- portant African war had broken out with Mithridates, king of Pontus. 1 It has been related that in the time of Antiochus the „„ Great, king of Syria, the Bomans obtained, by conquest mithridatio and treaty, the western provinces of Asia ‘Minor, most WAR ‘ of which they conferred upon one of their allies, Enmenes, king of Per'gamus, and that At' talus, a subsequent prince of Per'gamus, gave back these same provinces, by will, to the Boman people. (Se^s p. 161 and p. 169.) 20. The Bomans, thus firmly established in Asia Minor, saw with jealousy the increasing power of Mithridates, who, after reducing the nations on the eastern coasts of the Black Sea, had added to his 1. Pontus was a country of Asia Minor, on the south-eastern coast of the Euxine^ haring Colchis on the east, and Paphlagonia and Galatia on the west. a. The exact locality is unknown, but it was on a northern branch of the Po, between Ver- celli and Verona, probably near the present Milan. Some say near Vercelli, on the west bank of the Sessites. b. This was done by the celebrated Lex Julia, or Julian law, proposed by L. Julius Caesar. I7i ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part 1 dominions on the west, Paphlagonia and Cappadocia, a which he claimed by inheritance. Nicomedes, king of Bithyn' ia, disputing with him the right to the latter provinces, appealed to the Roman senate, which declared that the disputed districts should be free States, subject to neither Nicomedes nor Mithridates. The latter then entered into an alliance with Tigranes, king of Armenia,— seized the disputed provinces — drove Nicomedes from his kingdom — defeated two large Roman armies, and, in the year 88, before the end of the social war, had gained possession of all Asia Minor. All the Greek islands of the iEgean, except Rhodes, voluntarily sub- mitted to him, and nearly all the Grecian States, with Athens, throwing off the Roman yoke, placed themselves under his protection Mithridates had received a Greek education, and was looked upon as a Grecian, which accounts for the readiness with which the Greeks espoused his cause. 21. The Roman senate gave the command of the Mithridatic war to Sylla, a man of great intellectual superiority, but of profligate morals, who had served under Marius against Jugur' tha and the viu. civil Cim' bri, and had rendered himself eminent by his ser- war be- ^ vices in the social war. The ambitious Marius, though rius and m ore than twenty years the senior of Sylla, had long sylla. regarded the latter as a formidable rival, and now he succeeded in obtaining a decree of the people, by which the com- mand was transferred from Sylla to himself. Sylla, then at the head of an army in the Samnite territory, immediately marched against Rome, and entering the city, broke up the faction of Marius, who, after a series of romantic adventures, escaped to Africa. b (88 B. C.) 22. Scarcely had Sylla departed with his army for Greece, to carry on the war against Mithridates, when a fierce contest arose within a. See Map of Asia Minor, Nt IV. b. Marius fled first to Ostia, and thence along the sea-coast to Mintur' nae, where he was pm ?n shore, at the mouth of the Liris, and abandoned by the crew of the vessel that carried him. After in vain seeking shelter in the cottage of an old peasant, he was forced 4 j hide himself in the mud of the Pontine marshes ; but he was discovered by his vigilant pu suers, dragged out, and thrown into a dungeon at Mintur' nae. No one, however, had the courage to put him to death ; and the magistrates of Mintur' nae therefore sent a public slave into the prison to kip him ; lut as the barbarian approached the hoary warrior his courage failed him, and the Min- tur' nians, moved by compassion, put M trims on board a boat and transported him to Africa. Being set down at Carthage, the Roman governor of the district sent to inform him that unless he left Africa he should treat, him as a public enemy. “ Go and tell him,” replied the wanderer “that you have seen the exile Mirius sitting on the ruins of Carthage.” In the following year during the absence of Sylla, he e'uined to Italy. For localities of Pontine Marshes , Liris and Mintur' nee, see Map No. X. Chai-. VI.] ROMAN HISTORY. 175 the city between the partisans of Sylla and Marins ; one of the con- suls, Cinna, espousing the cause of the latter, and the other, Octa- vius, that of the former. Cinna recalled the aged Marius ; both parties flew to arms ; and all Italy became a prey to the horrors of civil war. (B. C. 87.) The senate and the nobles adhered to Octa- vius ; but Borne was besieged, and compelled to surrender to the adverse faction. Then commenced a general massacre of all the op- ponents of Marius, which was continued five days and nights, until the streets ran with blood. Having gratified his revenge by this bloody victory, Marius declared himself consul, without going through the formality of an election, and chose Cinna to be his colleague , but sixteen days later his life was terminated by a sudden fever, at the age of seventy-one years. Marius has the character of having been one of the most successful generals of Borne ; but after having borne away many honorable offices, and performed many noble ex- ploits, he tarnished his glory by a savage and infamous old age. 23. During three years after the death of Marius, Sylla was con ducting the war in Greece and Asia, while Italy was completely in the hands of the party of Cinna. The latter even sent an army to Asia to attack Sylla, and was preparing to embark himself, when he was slain in a mutiny of his soldiers. In the meantime Sylla, hav- ing taken Athens by storm, and defeated two armies of Mithridates, concluded a peace with that monarch ; (84 B. C.,) and having induced the soldiers sent against him to join his standard, he returned to Italy at the head of thirty thousand men to take vengeance upon his ene- mies, who had collected an army of four hundred and fifty cohorts, numbering one hundred and eighty thousand men, a to oppose him. (B. c. 83.) But none of the generals of this vast army were equal, in military talents, to Sylla; their forces gradually deserted them, and after a short but severe struggle, Sylla became master of Borne, 24. A dreadful proscription of his enemies followed, far exceed- ing the atrocities of Marius ; for Sylla filled not only Borne, but all Italy, with massacres, which, in the language of the old -writers, had neither numbers nor bounds. He caused himself to be appointed dictator for an unlimited time, (B. C. 81,) reestablished the govern- ment on an aristocraticai basis, and after having ruled nearly three years, to the astonishment of every one he resigned his power, and retired to private life. He died soon after, of a loathsome disease, a. u From the time of M&rius, the Roman military forces are always counted by cohorts or battalions, each containing four hundred and twenty men.” — Niebuhr, iv. 195. ] 76 ANCIENT HISTORY [Part l at the age of sixty years, leaving, by his own direction, the following characteristic inscription to be engraved on his tomb. “ Here lies Sylla, who was never gutdone in good offices by his friend, nor in acts of hostility by his enemy.” (B. C. 77.) 25. A Marian faction, headed by Sertorius, a man of great mili tary talents, still existed in Spain, threatening to sever that province from Rome, and establish a new kingdom there. After Sertorins had defeated several Roman armies, the youthful Pompey, after* wards surnamed the Great, was sent against him ; but he too was vanquished, and it was not until the insurgents had been deprived of their able leader by treachery, that the rebellion was quelled, and Spain tranquillized. (B. C. 70.) During the continuance of the Spanish war, a formidable revolt of the slaves, headed by Spar'tacus, ix. servile a ce l e k ra ted gladiator, had broken out in Italy. At first war in Spar' tacus and his companions formed a desperate band Italy. . of robbers and murderers, but their numbers eventually increased to a hundred and twenty thousand men, and three praeto- rian and two consular armies were completely defeated by them. The war lasted upwards of two years, and at one time Rome itself was in danger ; but the rebels, divided among themselves, were finally overcome, and nearly all exterminated, by the praetor Cras' sus, the growing rival of Pompey. (B. C. 70.) 26. During the progress of these events in Italy, a second war had broken out with Mithridates, (83 B. C.,) but after a continuance of two years it had been terminated by treaty. (81 B. C., X. SECOND u 11-11 \ and third seven years later, Mithridates, who had long been pre- mithridatic paring for hostilities, broke the second treaty between WARS. . " him and the Romans by the invasion of Bythyn' ia, and thus commenced the third Mithridatic war. At first Lucullus, who was sent against him, was successful, and amassed immense treasures ; but eventually he was defeated, and Mithridates gained possession of l early all Asia Minor. Manil' ius, the tribune, then proposed that Pompey, who had recently gained great honor by a successful war against the pirates in the Mediterranean, should be placed over all the other generals in the Asiatic provinces, retaining at the same time the command by sea. This was a greater accumulation of power than had ever been intrusted to any Roman citizen, but the law was adopted. It was on this ocasion that the orator Cicero pronounced his famous oration Pro lege Manilla , (“ for the Manilian law.”) Caesar also, who was just then rising into eminence, approved Chai. VI.] ROMAN HISTORY. 17 ? the measure; while the friends of Cras' sus in vain attempted to de feat it. 27. Pompey, then passing with a large army into Asia, (B. C. 66 , \ in one campaign defeated Mithridates on the banks of the Euphrates and drove the monarch from his kingdom ; and in the following year after reducing Syria, thus putting an end to the empire of the Seleu'- eidse he found an opportunity of extending Roman interference to the affairs of Palestine. Each of the two claimants to the throne, the brothers Hyreanus and Aristobulus, sought his assistance, and as ha decided in favor of the former, the latter prepared to resist the Roman, and shut himself up in Jerusalem. After a siege of three months the city was taken ; its .walls and fortifications were thrown down ; Hyreanus was appointed to be high-priest, and governor of the country, but was required to pay tribute to the Romans ; while Aristobulus, with his sons and daughters, was taken to Rome to grace the triumph of Pompey. From this time the situation of Judea differed little from that of a Roman province, although for a while later it was governed by native princes ; but all of them were more or less subject to Roman authority. About the time of Pom- pey’s conquest of Jerusalem, Mithridates, driven from one province to another, and finding no protection even among his own relatives, terminated his life by poison. (B. C. 63.) His dominions and vast wealth were variously disposed of by Pompey in the name of the Roman people. 28. While Pompey was winning laurels in Asia, the republic was brought near the brink of destruction by a conspiracy headed by the infamous Catiline. Rome was at this time in a state of complete anarchy ; the republic was a mere name ; the laws had xJ CONSP1 lost their power ; the elections were carried by bribery ; racy of and the city populace was a tool in the hands of the CAT1LINE - nobles in their feuds against one another. In this corrupt state of things Sergius Catiline, a man of patrician rank, and of great abili- ties, but a monster of wickedness, who had acted a distinguished part in the bloody scenes of Sylla’s tyranny, placed himself at the head of a confederacy of profligate young nobles, who hoped, by elevating their leader to the consulship, or by murdering those who opposed them, to make themselves masters of Rome, and to gain possession of the public treasures, and the property of the citizens Many circumstances, favored the audacious schemes of the conspira- tors. Pompey was abroad — Cras' sus, striving with mad eagerness H* 12 i/8 ANCIENT HISTORY [Part 1 for pover and riches, countenanced the growing influence of Catiline, as a means of his own aggrandizement — Caesar, laboring to revive the party of Marius, and courting the favor of the people by public shows and splendid entertainments, spared Catiline, and perhaps se- cretly encouraged him, while the only two eminent Romans who boldly determined to uphold their falling country were Cato the younger, and the orator Cicero. 29. While the storm which Catiline had been raising was threat- ening to burst upon Rome, and every one dreaded the arch-conspira- tor, but no one had the courage to come forward against him, Cicero offered himself a candidate for the consulship, in opposition to Catiline, and was elected. An attempt of the conspiratQrs to murder Cicero in his own house was frustrated by the watchful vigilance of the consul ; and a fortunate accident disclosed to him all their plans, which lie laid be- fore the senate. Even in the senate-house Catiline boldly confronted Cicero, who there pronounced against him that famous oration which saved Rome by driving Catiline from the city. Catiline then fled to Etruria, where he had a large force already under arms, while seve- ral of his confederates remained in the city to open the gates to him on his approach ; but they were apprehended, and brought to punish- ment. An army was then sent against the insurgents, who were completely defeated ; and most of them, imitating Catiline, fought to the last, and died sword in hand. (B. C. 63.) Cicero, to whom the Romans were indebted for the overthrow of the conspiracy, was now hailed as the -Father and Deliverer of his country. 30. Soon after the return of Pompey from Asia, the jealousies between him and Cras' sus were renewed ; but Julius Caesar succeeded xir the reconc ding the rivals, and in uniting them with him* first tri- self in a secret partnership of power, called the First Tri- hmvirate. umv i ra t e (00 ;g C.) These men, by their united in- fluence, were now able to carry all their measures ; and they virtually usurped the powers of the senate, as well as the command of tha legions. Caesar first obtained the office of consul, (B. C. 59,) and, when the year of his consulship had expired, was made commander of all Gaul, (B. C. 58,) although but a small portion of that country was then under the Roman dominion. Cras' sus, whose avarice was unbounded, soor. after obtained the command of Syria, famed for its luxury and wealth ; while to Pompey were given Africa and Spain, although he loft the care of his provinces to other*, and still remained «n Italy. Cm p. VI J ROMAN HISTORY. 179 31. In the course of eight years Casar conquered all Gaul, which consisted of a great number of separate nations — twice passed the .Rhine 1 into Germany — and twice passed over into Britain, and sub- dued the southern part of the island. Hitherto Britain had been known only by name to the Greeks and Romans ; and its first inva- sion by Caesar, in the year 55 B. C., is the beginning of its authentic history The disembarkation of the Romans, somewhere on the eastern coast of Kent, a was firmly disputed by the natives ; but stern discipline and steady valor overawed them, and they proffered sub- mission, A second invasion in the ensuing spring was also resisted ; but genius and science asserted their usual superiority; and peace, and the withdrawal of the invaders, were purchased by the payment of tribute. In the meantime Cras' sus had fallen in Partliia, 2 (B. C. 52,) thus leaving but two masters of the Roman world; but Pompey had already become jealous of the greatness of Caesar’s fame, and on the death of Julia, the wife of Pompey and daughter of Caesar, the last tie that bound these friends was broken, and they became rivals, and enemies. Pompey had secured most of the senate to his inter- ests ; but Caesar, though absent, had obtained, by the most lavish bribes, numerous and powerful adherents in the very heart of Rome. Among others, Mark Antony and Quintus Cassius, tritunes of the people, favored his interests. 32. When Caesar requested that he might stand for the consulship in his absence, the senate denied the request. When or xm. civil dered to disband his legions and resign his provinces, he WAR BE " immediately promised compliance, if Pompey would do and pompey. the same ; but the senate peremptorily ordered him to disband his 1. The Rhine rises in Switzerland, only a few miles from the source of the Rhone — passes through Lake Constance — then flows west to the town of Basle, near the borders of France, thence generally north-west to the North Sea or German Ocean. It formed the ancient boundary between Gaul and the German tribes, and was first passed by Julius Caesar in hia invasion of the German nation of the Sicambri. 2. Parthia was originally a small extent of country, south-east of the Caspian Sea. After the death of Alexander the Great a separate kingdom was formed there, which gradually ex- tended to the Indus on the east and the Tigris on the west, until it embraced the fairest prov- inces of the old Persian monarchy. By the victory over Crassus the Parthians obtained a great increase of power, and during a long time after this event they were almost constantly at war with the Romans. The Parthian empire was overthrown by the southern Persians 226 years after the Christian era, when the later Persian empire of the Sassanidee was established. “The mode of fighting adopted by the Parthian cavalry was peculiar, and well calculated to annoy \\ hen apparently in full retreat, they would turn round on their steeds and discharge their arrows with the most unerring accuracy ; and hence, to borrow the language of an ancient v riter it was victory to them if a counterfeit flight threw their pursuers into disordei.” a. The place where Caesar is believed to have landed is at the towD of Deal, near what is sailed the South Foreland, sixty-six miles sou'h-east from London. 180 ANCIENT HISTORY. 1 PaBT i army before a specified day, under the penalty of being declared a public enemy. (B. C. 49.) The tribunes Antony and Cassius fled to the army of Cmsar then at Raven' na, 1 bearing with them the bos- tile mandate of the senate, and by their harangues inflaming the sol- diers against the measures of the senatorial party. Caesar, confident of the support of his troops, now passed the Rubicon in hostile array, an act deemed equivalent to an open declaration of war against his country, The senate and Pompey, alarmed at the rapidity of his movements, and finding their forces daily deserting them, fled across the Adriat' ic into Greece ; and in sixty days from the passage of the Rubicon, Caesar was master of all Italy. 33. Caesar soon obtained the surrender of Sicily and Sardinia after which he passed over to Spain, where Pompey’s lieutenants commanded, — rapidly reduced the whole Peninsula, took Marseilles by siege on his return through Gaul, and, on his arrival at Rome, was declared by the remnant of the senate sole dictator ; but after eleven days he laid aside the office, and took that of consul. Pompey had already collected a numerous army in the eastern provinces, and thither Csesar followed him. Near Dyrrach' ium, 2 in Illyr' i- cum, he assaulted the intrenched camp of Pompey, but was re- pulsed with the loss of many standards, and his own camp would have been taken had not Pompey called off his troops, in apprehen- sion of an ambuscade ; on which Caesar remarked that “ the war would have been at an end, if Pompey had known how to profit by victory.” 34. Caesar then boldly advanced into Thes' saly, followed by Pompey at the head, of a superior force. The two armies met on the plains of Pharsalia, 3 where was fought the battle which decided the fate of the Roman world. (B. C. 48.) Caesar was completely victorious, 1 Raven' na was originally built on the shore of the Adriat' ic, near the most south in aaouth of the river Po. Augustus constructed a new harbor three miles from the old town, nd henceforward the new harbor became the principal station of the Roman Adriat' ic fleet: lit such was the accumulation of mud brought down by the streams, that, as Gibbon relates, © early as the fifth or sixth century after Christ, “the port of Augustus was converted into oleasant orchards ; and a lonely grove of pines covered the ground where the Roman fleet f/'.ce rode at anchor.” Raven' na was the capital of Italy during the last years of the Western empire of the Romans, and it still contains numerous interesting specimens of the architecture of that period. 2. Dyrrach' ium , which was a Grecian city, at first called Epidamnus , was situated on the Illyrian coast of Macedonia, north of Apollonia. Its modern name is Durazzo, an unhealthy village of Turkish Albania. 3. Pharsalia was a city situated in the central portion of Thessaly, on a southern tributary of the Peneus. Tne name of Pharsa, applied to a few ruins about fifteen ra les south-weal from Larissa, marks the site of the ancient city Chap. VI.] ROMAN HISTORY. 181 and Pompey, fleeing in disguise from the field of battle, attended only by his son Sextus, and a few followers of rank, pursued his way to Mytilene, where he took on board his wife Cornelia and sailed to Egypt, intending to claim the hospitality of the young king Ptol' emy, whose father he had befriended. Ptol' emy, then at war with his sister Cleopatra, was encamped with his army near Pelusi- um, 1 whither Pompey directed his course, after sending to inform the king of his approach. In the army of Ptol' emy there was a Homan, named Septim' ius, who advised the young prince to put Pompey to death, in order to secure the favor of Caesar ; and just as Pompey was stepping on shore from a boat that had been sent to receive him, he was stabbed, in the sight of his wife and son. Soon after Caesar arrived at Alexandria in Egypt in pursuit of the fugi- tives, when the ring and head of Pompey, which were presented to him, gave_ him the first information of the fate of his rival. He shed tears at the sight, and turned away with horror from the spec- tacle. He afterwards ordered the head to be burned with perfumes 5 in .the Homan method, and loaded with favors those who had adhered to Pompey to the last. 35. Caesar, in his eager pursuit of Pompey, had taken with him to Alexandria only a small body of troops, and when, captivated by the charms and beauty of Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen, who ap plied to him for protection, he decided against the claims of hei brother, the party of the latter conceived the plan of overwhelming him in Alexandria, so that his situation there was similar to that of Cortez in Mexico. The royal palace, in which Caesar had fortified himself, was set on fire, and the celebrated library established there by Ptol' emy Philadelphus was burnt to ashes. With difficulty Caesar escaped from the city to the island of Pharos, 2 where he maintained himself until reenforcements arrived. He then over- threw the power of Ptol' emy, who lost his life by drowning, and after having established Cleopatra on the throne he marched against Pharnaces, king of Pontus, son of Mithridates, whose dominions he reduced with such rapidity that he announced the result to the Ro- ±. Pdeiisium wis a frontier city of Egypt, at the entrance of the eastern mouth of the Nile. 2. Pharos was a sinal island in the bay of Alexandria, at the entrance of the principal bar- Dor, one mile from the shore, with which it was connected by a causeway. The celebrated “Tower of Pharos” was built on the island in the reign of Ptol’ emy Philadelphus, to serve as a lighthouse. The modem lighthouse tower, which stands on the island, has nothing of tlw beauty and erandeur of the old cne. 132 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Past i man sen>t j in the well known words, vem , vidi , vict, “ I came, I saw I conquer 3 d.” 36. On Caesar’s return to Rome, (B. C. 47,) after an absence of nearly two years, he granted a general amnesty to all the followers of Pompey, and by his clemency gained a strong hold on the affec- tions of the people. The servility of the senate knew no bounds, and the whole republic was placed in his hands. Still there was a args and powerful party in Africa and Spain opposed to him, headed by €ato, the sons of Pompey, and other generals. Caesar, passing over to Africa, defeated his enemies there in the decisive battle of Thapsus, 1 after which the inflexible Cato, who commanded the garrison of Utica, having advised his followers not to continue their resistance, commit- ted suicide. (46 B. C.) He had seen, he said, the republic passing away, and he could live no longer. Caesar expressed his regret that Cato had deprived him of the pleasure of pardoning him. 37. The war in Africa had been finished in five months. Fresh honors awaited Caesar at Rome. He enjoyed four triumphs in one month ; the senate created him dictator for ten years ; he was ap- pointed censor of the public morals, and his statue was placed oppo- site that of Jupiter, in the capitol, and inscribed, “ To Caesar, the demigod.” He made many useful changes in the laws, corrected many abuses in the administration of justice, extended the privileges of Roman citizens to whole cities and provinces in different parts of the empire, and reformed the calendar upon principles established by the Egyptian astronomers, by making an intercalation of sixty- seven days between the months of November and December, so that the name of the December month was transferred from the time of the autumnal equinox to that of the winter solstice, where it still re- mains. 38. From the cares of civil government Caesar was called to Spain, where Cneus and Sextus, the two sons of Pompey, had raised a large army against him. In the spring of the year 45 he defeated them in a hard-fought battle in the plains of Munda, 2 after having been obliged, in order to encourage, his men, to fight in the foremost ranks as a common soldier. Caesar said that he had often fought for victory, but that in this battle he fought for his life. The elder o.f Pompey’a 1. Thapsus , now Demsas , was a town of little importance on the sea-coast, about one hundred miles south-east from Carthage. 2. Munda was a town a short distance from the Mediterranean in the southern part of Spain. The little village of Monda in Grenada, twenty-five mi’es west from Malaga, is supposed to be near the site of the ancient city. Chap. VIJ ROMAN HISTORY. 183 sons was s lain in the pursuit after the battle, but Sextus the younger escaped. After a campaign of nine months Caesar returned to Rome, and enjoyed a triumph for the reduction of Spain, which had termi- nated the civil war in the Roman provinces. 39, Caesar was next made dictator for life, with the title of impera- tor and the powers of sovereignty, although the outward form of the republic was allowed to remain. His ever active mind now planned a series of foreign conquests, and formed vast designs for the im provement of the empire which he had gained. He ordered the laws to be digested into a code, he undertook to drain the great marshes in the vicinity of Rome, to form a capacious harbor at the mouth of the Tiber, to cut across the isthmus of Corinth, to make roads across the Apennines, dig canals, collect public libraries, erect a new theatre, and build a magnificent temple to Mars. But while he was occupied with these gigantic projects the people became suspicious that he courted the title of king ; and at his suggestion, as is sup posed, Mark Antony offered him a royal dia iem during the celebra tion of the feast of the Lupercalia ; but no shout of approbation fol- lowed the act, and he was obliged to decline the bauble. 3 - 40. A large number of senators, headed by the praetors Cassius and Brutus, regarding Caesar as an usurper, soon after formed a con spiracy to take his life, and fixed on the fifteenth (the Ides) of March, a day appointed for the meeting of the senate, for the execution of iheir plot. As soon as Caesar had taken his seat in the senate-house, the conspirators crowded around him, and as one of them, pretending to urge some request, laid hold of his robe as if in the act of sup- plication, the others rushed upon him with drawn daggers, and he fell pierced with twenty -three wounds, at the base of Pompey’s statue, rfhich was sprinkled with his blood. b (B. C. 44.) 41 As soon as the deed of death was consummated, Brutus raised a. “You all did see, that on the Lupercal, I thrice presented him a kingly crown, Which he did thrice refuse. Was this ambition V Yet Brutus says, he was ambitious ; And sure, he is an honorable man.” Antony's Oration. Shakspcare's Julius Cctsar. b. “ For when the noble Caesar saw him stab, Ingratitude, more strong than traitors arms, Quite vanquished him : then burst his mighty heart ; And, in his mantle muffling up his face, Even at the base of Pompey’s statue, Which all the while ran blood, great Caesar fell.” Antony's Oration 184 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Part L his bloody dagger, and congratulated the senate, and Cictro in par- ticular, on the recovery of liberty ; but the greater part of the sena- tors fled in dismay from Rome, or shut themselves up in their houses; and as the conspirators had formed no plans of future action, the minds of the citizens were in the utmost suspense ; but tranquillity prevailed until the day appointed by the senate for the funeral Then Mark Antony, who had hitherto urged conciliation, ascended he rostrum to deliver the funeral oration. After he had wrought upon the minds of the people in a most artful manner by enumerating the great exploits and noble deeds of the murdered Caesar, he lifted up the bloody robe, and showed them the body itself, 1 all marred by traitors.’ The multitude were seized with such indignation and rage, that while some, tearing up the benches of the senate-house, formed of them a funeral pile and burnt the body of Caesar, others ran through the streets with drawn weapons and flaming torches, de- nouncing vengeance against the conspirators. Brutus and Cassius, and their adherents, fled from Rome, and prepared to defend them- selves by force of arms. 42. Antony, assisted by Lep' idus, now sought to place himself at the head of the State ; but he found a rival in the young Octavius Caesar, the grandson of Caesar’s sister Julia, and principal heir of the murdered dictator. The senate adhered to the interests of Octavius, and declared Antony a public enemy, and several battles had already been fought between the opposing parties in the north of Italy and Gaul, when the three leaders, Antony, Lep' idus, and Octavius, hav- xiy the met P r i va ^ e conference on a small island of the second tri- Rhine, agreed to settle their differences, and take upon umvirate. themselves the government of the republic for five ye ars — thus forming the Second Triumvirate. (B. C. 43.) A cold-blooded proscription of the enemies of the several parties to the compact fol lowed. Antony yielded his own uncle, and Lep' idus his own brother, while Octavius, to his eternal infamy, consented to the sac- rifice of the virtuous Cicero to satisfy the vengeance of his colleagues, Cicero was betrayed to the assassins sent to dispatch him, by one of his own domestics ; but, tired of life, he forbade his servants to de- fend him, and yielded himself to his fate without a struggle. 43. Brutus and Cassius, at the head of the republican party had by this time made themselves masters of Macedonia, Greece, and the Asiatic provhnes; and Octavius and Anton}, as soon as ihey had settled the government at Rome, set out to meet them. At Chat. VI.] Roman history 165 Philip' pi, 1 a town in Thrace, two battles were fought, and fortune, rather than talent, gave the victory to the triumvirs. (B. C. 42.) Both Oassius and Brutus, giving way to despair, destroyed them- selves ; their army was dispersed, and most of the soldiers after- wards entered the service of the victors. Octavius returned with his legions to Italy, while Antony remained as the master of the Eastern provinces. 44 From Greece Antony paosed over into Asia Minor, where he caused great distress by the heavy tribute he exacted of the inhab- itants. While at Tarsus, 2 in Cilicia, the celebrated Cleopatra came to pay him a visit ; and so captivated was the Roman with the charms and beauty of the Egyptian queen, that he accompanied her on her return to Alexandria, where he lived for a time in indolence, dissipation, and luxury, neglectful of the calls of interest, honor, and ambition. In the meantime a civil war had broken out in Italy ; for the brother of Antony, aided by Fulvia, the wife of the latter, had taken up arms against Octavius ; but it was not until the rebellion had been quelled, and Octavius was everywhere triumphant, that An- tony saw the necessity of returning to Italy. 45. On his way he met at Athens his wife Fulvia, whom he blamed as the cause of the recent disasters, treated her with the utmost con- tempt, and leaving her on her death-bed hastened to fight Augustus. All thought that another fierce struggle for the empire was at hand ; but the rivals had a personal interview at Brundusium, 3 where a re- conciliation was effected. To secure the permanence of the peace, Antony married Octavia, the half-sister of Octavius. A new division of the empire was made ; Antony was to have the eastern provinces beyond the Ionian sea ; Octavius the western, and Lep' idus Africa ; 1. Philip' pi , a city in the western part of Thrace, afterwards included in Macedonia, wag about seventy-five miles north-east from the present Saloniki. In addition to the victory gained here by Antony and Octavius, it is rendered more interesting from the circumstance of its being the first place where the Gospel was preached by St. Paul, (see Acts, xvi.,) and also from the Epistle addressed by him to the Philippians. The ruins of the city still retain the name of Filibah, pronounced nearly the 3ame as Philippi. (Map No. I.) 2. Tarsus , the capital of Cilicia, was situated on the river Cydnus, about twelve miles from the Mediterranean. It was the birth-place of St. Paul, of Antip' ater the stoic, and of Alhc a- odorus the philosopher. It is still a village of some six or seven thousand inhabitants, and some remains of its ancient magnificence are still visible. The visit of Cleopatra to Antony — herself attired like Venus, and her attendants like cupids, in a galley covered with gold, wh jso Bails were of purple, the oars of silver, and cordage of silk — is finely described in Shakspeare's play of Antony and Cleopatra, Act II. scene 2. (Map No. IV.) 3. Bruvdusium, now Brindisi , one of the most important cities of ancient Italy, and the port whence the intercourse between Italy and Greece and the East was usually carried on, was sitvated on the coa3tof Apulia, about three hundred miles south-east from Rome. I once bid an excellent harbor, which is now neaW.y filled up. (Map No. VIL) 186 ANCIENT HISTORY. [Past I and soon after, Sextius Pompey, who had long maintained himself in Sicily against the triumvirs, was admitted into the partnership, and assignel Sicily, Sardinia, Corsica, and Achaia. 46. The peace thus concluded was of short duration. Octavius, without any reasonable pretext for hostilities, quarrelled with Sextiua Pompey and drove him from his dominions. Pompey fled to Phrygia, where he was slain by one of Antony’s lieutenants. Lep' idus and Octavius next quarrelled about the possession of Sicily ; but Octavius corrupted the soldiers of Lep' idus, and induced them to desert their general, who was compelled to surrender his province to his rival. Antony, in the meantime, had been engaged in an unsuccessful expe dition against the Parthians; after which, returning to Egypt, he once more became enslaved by the charms of Cleopatra, upon whom he conferred several Roman provinces in Asia. When his wife Oc tavia set out from Rome to visit him he ordered her to return, and aftet • wards repudiated her, pretending a previous marriage with Cleopatra 47. After this insult Octavius could no longer keep peace with him, and as the war had long been anticipated, the most formidable prepa- rations were made on both sides, and both parties were soon in readiness. Their fleets met off the promontory of Ac' tium, 1 in the Ionian sea, while the hostile armies, drawn up on opposite sides of the strait which enters the Ambracian Grulf, were spectators of the battle (B. C. 31.) While the victory was yet undecided, Cleopatra, who had accompanied Antony with a large force, overcome with anxiety and fear, ordered her galley to remove from the scene of action. A large number of the Egyptian ships, witnessing her flight, withdrew from the battle ; and the infatuated Antony, as soon as he saw that Cleopatra had fled, apparently losing his self-possession, hastily fol- lowed her in a quick-sailing vessel, and being taken on board the galley of Cleopatra, became the companion of her flight. The fleet of Antony was annihilated, and his land forces, soon after, made terms with the conqueror. 48 Octavius, after first returning to Italy to tranquillize some dis- turbances there, pursued the fugitives to Egypt. Antony endeavored to impede the march of the victor to Alexandria, but seeing all his efforts fruitless, in a paroxysm of rage he reproached Cleopatra with being the author of his misfortunes, and resolving never to fall alive into the hands of his enemy, he put an end to his own life. When 1. The promontoiy of Ac' tium was a small neck of land at the north-western extremity OJ Acarnania, at the entrance of the Arnbracian Gulf % now Gulf of Arta. Chap. VI.] ROMAN HISTORY. 187 Cleopatra, who had shut herself up in her palace, found that Octa vius designed to spare her only to adorn his triumph, she caused a poisonous viper to be applied to her arm, and thus followed Antony m death. (B. C. 30.) Egypt immediately submitted to the sway of Octavius, and became a province of the Roman empire. 49. The death of Antony had put an on 1 to the Triumvirate ; and Octavius was now left sole master of the Roman world. While taking the most effectual measures to secure his power, X r. octa- he dissembled his real purposes, and talked of restoring VIUS SOLE . 1 .. MASTER OF the republic ; but it was evident that a free constitution THE ROMAN could no longer be maintained ; — the most eminent citi- ^orld. ztns besought him to take the government into his own hands, and at the beginning of the 28th year before the Christian era, the history of the Roman Republic ends. All the armies had sworn allegiance to Octavius ; he was made pro-consul over the whole Roman empire — he gave the administration of the provinces to whomsoever he pleased — and appointed and removed senators at his will. In the 27th year B. C. the senate conferred upon him the title of Augustus, or “ The Divine,” and of Imperratoi *, or “ chief governor,” for ten years, and gave his name to the sixth month of the Roman year, (August) as that of Julius Caesar had been given to the fifth, and four years later he was made perpetual tribune of the people, which rendered his person sacred. Although without the title of a mon- arch, and discarding the insignia of royalty, his exalted station con ferred upon him all the powers of sovereignty, which he exercised, nevertheless, with moderation, — seemingly desirous that the triumvir Octavius should be forgotten in the mild reign of the emperor Augustus. 50. After a series of successful wars in Asia, Africa, and in Spain, and the subjugation of Aquitania, Pannonia, Dalmatia, and Illy' ria, by the Roman arms, a general peace, with the exception of some trifling disturbances in the frontier provinces, was established throughout the vast dominions of the empire, which now extended on the east from the cataracts of the Nile to the plains of Scythia, and on the west from the Libyan deserts and the pillars of Hercules to the German ocean. 3 - The temple of Janus was now closed b for the third time since the foundation of Rome. It was at this auspi cious period that Jesus Christ, the promised Messiah, was born, and thus, literally, was his advent the herald of “peace on eartii, and good will toward men.” a. (B. C. 10. Seo Map No. IX.) b. (B. C. 11.) PART II MODERN HISTORY CHAPTER, I. ROMAN HISTORY CONTINUED, FROM THE COMMENCEMENT ( * THE CHRISTIAN ERA, TO THE OVERTHROW OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE OF THE ROMANS, A. D. 1, TO A. D. 476 SECTION I. ROMAN HISTORY FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE CHRISTIAN ERA TO THE DEATH OF DOMITIAN, THE LAST OF THE TWELVE C/ESARS, A. D. 96. ANALYSIS. 1. Earlier and later history of the empire compared. — 2. The empire at the end of the first century of the Christian era. The feeling with which we hurry over the closing scenes of Roman history. Importance of the history of the “ decline and fall ” of the empire. Subjects of the present chapter. 3. Julius Caisar. Commencement of the Roman empire. — 4. The reign of Augustus. Rebellion of the Germans. — 5. Grief of Augustus at the loss of his legions. The danger of inva- sion averted. — G. The accession of Tibe’ rius. The selection of future sovereigns. — 7. Charactej of Tiberius, and commencement of his reign. — 8. German wars — German' icus. — 9. Sejanus, the minister of Tib6rius. [C&preae.] — 10. The death of Sejanus. Death of Tib6rius. Cruci- fixion of the Saviour. — 11. Calig’ ula. His character, and wicked actions. — 12. His follies. His extravagance. His death. — 13. Claudius proclaimed emperor. His character. — 14. His two wives. His death. — 15. Foreign events of the reign of Claudius. — 16. Nero. The first five years of his reign. Death of Agrippina, and of Burrhus, Seneca, and Lucan. Conflagration of Rome. — 17. Persecution" of the Christians. Nero’s extravagances. — 18. The provinces pil- laged by him. His popularity with the rabble. Revolts against him. His death.— 19. Foreign events of the reign of Nero. [Druids. The Ic6ni London.] 20. End of the reign of the Julian family. Brief reign of Galba. — 21. Character, and reign of Otho.— 22. Character, and reign of Vitel’ lius. Revolt in Syria.— 23. Viter lius, forced to resist, is finally put to death by the populace. — 24. Temporary rule of Domitian. Character, and reign of Vespasian. — 25. Beginning, and causes of the Jewish war. — 26. Situation of Jeru- salem, and commencement of the siege by the Roman army. Expectations of Titus, — 27. Prom- ises made to the Jews. Their strange infatuation. — 28. The horrors of the siege. — 29. Dreadful mortality in the city. The fall of Jerusalem. — 30. The number of those who perished, and oi those made prisoners. Fate of the prisoners. Destruction of the Jewish nation— 31. Comple- tion of the conquest of Britain. The enlightened policy of Agric' ola. [Caledonia.] — 32. Titus succeeds Vespasian. His character. Events of his brief reign. [Vesuvius. Herculaneum. PomDeii.I - 13. Domitian. His character, and the character of his reign, Persecut'ons. — 34. Chap. L] ROMAN HISTORY. 189 Provincial aTairs. The triumphs of Domitian. [Mcesia. Dacia. Germany.] — 35. IVrth of Domitian.— 36. Close of the reign of the “ Twelve Caesars.” Their several deaths. Character of the history of the Roman emperors thus far.— 37. The city of Rome, and the Roman empire, nw beginning of national decay. 1. As we enter upon tlie time of the Roman emperors, Roman his- fcory, so highly pleasing and attractive in its early stages, and during the eventful period of the Republic, gradually declines in interest to the general reader ; for the Roman people, whose many j. earlier virtues and sufferings awakened our warmest sympathies, AND LATER HISTORY OP had now become corrupt and degenerate ; the liberal m- THE empire fluences of their popular assemblies, and the freedom of compared. the Rom»n senate, had given place to arbitrary force ; and although the splendors of the empire continue to dazzle for awhile, hencefor- ward the political history of the Romans is little more than the biographies of individual rulers, and their few advisers and asso- ciated in power, who controlled the political destinies of more than a hun dred millions of people. 2. We shall find that, at the end of the first century of the Christian era, the empire, having already attained its full strength and maturity, began to verge towards its decline ; and we are apt to hurry over the closing scenes of Roman history with an instinctive feeling that shrinks from the contemplation of waning glories and national degeneracy. But while the history of the Republican era may exceed in interest that of the “ decline and fall ” of the empire, yet the latter is of far greater political importance than the former ; for, including the early history of many important sects, and codes, and systems, whose influences still exist, it is the link that connects the past with the present — the Ancient with the Modern world The theologian and jurist must be familiar with it in order to under stand much of the learning and history of their respective depart ments ; and it deserves the careful preparatory study of every reader of modern European history ; as nearly all the kingdoms of modern Europe have arisen from the fragments into which the empire of the Caesars was broken. We proceed then, in the present chapter to a brief survey, which is all that our limited space will allow, of, first, the overtowering greatness, and, second, the decline, and final overthrow, in all the west of Europe, of that mighty fabric of em pire which valor had founded, and enlightened policy had so long sustained, upon the seven hills of Rome. 3. The rule of Julius Caesar, who is called the first of the twelve 190 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II Caesars, although he was not nominally king, was that of ore who pos- il jrLius sessed all the essential attributes of sovereignty ; and CjEsar. from the battle of Pharsalia, which decided the fate of the Roman world, might with propriety be dated the commence- ment of the Roman empire, although its era is usually dated at the beginning of the twenty-eighth year before the Christian era, — the time of the general acknowledgment of the sovereignty of Augustus. 4. The reign of Augustus continued until the fourteenth year in. augus- after the birth of Christ — forty-four years in all, dating tus. from the battle of Ac' tium, which made Augustus sole sovereign of the empire. After the general peace which followed the early wars and conquests of the emperor, the great prosperity of his reign was disturbed by a rebellion of the Germans, which had been provoked by the extortions of Yarns, the Roman commander on the northern frontier. Varus was entrapped in the depths of the German forests, where nearly his whole army was annihilated, and he himself, in despair, put an end to his own life. (A. D. 9.) Awful vengeance was taken upon the Romans who became prisoners, many of them being sacrificed to the gods of the Germans. 5. The news of the defeat of his general threw Augustus into trans- ports of grief, during which he frequently exclaimed, “ Varus, restore me my legions !” It was thought that the Germans would cross the Rhine, and that all Gaul would unite with them in the revolt ; but a large Roman army under Tiberius, the son-in-law and heir of Augustus, was sent to guard the passes of the Rhine, and the danger was averted. 6. Augustus, having designed Tiberius for his successor, associated him in his counsels, and conferred upon him so large a share of present power, that on the death of the emperor, Tiberius easily took his place, so that the nation scarcely perceived the chango iv iiberius. ^ mas ters. (A. D. 14.) The policy of Augustus in selecting, and preparing the way for, the future sovereign, was suc- cessfully imitated by nearly all his successors during nearly two cen- turies, although the emperors continued to be elected, ostensibly at least, by the authority of the senate, and the consent of the soldiers. 7. Tiberius, a man of reserved character, and of great dissimula- tion, — suspicious, dark, and revengeful, but possessing a handsome figure, and in his early years exhibiting great talents and unwearied industry, having yielded with feigned reluctance to the wishes of the senate that he would undertake the government, commenced his Chap. I] ROMAN HISTORY. 19 reign with the appearance of justice and moderation f hut after nim years of dissimulation, his sensual and tyrannical character openly exhibited itself in the vicious indulgence of every base passion, ana the perpetration of the most wanton cruelties. 8. The early part of his reign is distinguished by the wars carried on in Germany by his accomplished general and nephew, the virtu- ous German' bus ; but Tiberius, jealous of the glory and fame which German' icus was winning, recalled him from his command, and then sent him as governor to the Eastern provinces, where all his under- takings were thwarted by the secret commands of the emperor, who was supposed to have caused his death to be hastened by poison. 9. The only confidant of Tiberius was his minister Sejanus, whose character bore a great resemblance to that of his sovereign. Secret- ly aspiring to the empire, he contrived to win the heart of Tiberius by exciting his mistrust towards his own family relatives, most of whom he caused to be poisoned, or condemned to death for suspected trea- son ; but his most successful project was the removal of Tiberius from Rome to the little island of Capreae,’ where the monarch re- mained during a number of years, indulging his indolence and de- baucheries, while Sejanus, ruling at Rome, perpetrated the most shocking cruelties in the name of his master, and put to death the most eminent citizens, scarcely allowing them the useless mockery of a trial. 10. But Sejanus at length fell under the suspicion of the empe ror, and the same day witnessed his arrest and execution — a mem- orable example of the instability of human grandeur. His death was followed by a general massacre of his friends and relations. At length Tiberius himself, after a long career of crime, falling sick, was smothered in bed by one of his officers, at the instigation of the base Calig' ula, the son of German' icus, and adopted heir of the emperor. It was during the reign of Tiberius that J esus Christ was crucified in Judea, under the praetorship of Pontius Pilate, the Ro- man governor of that province. 11. Calig' ula, whose real character was unknown to the people, 1. C&prece, now called Capri , is a small island, about ten mi.es in circumference, on the south side of the entrance to 1 the bay of Naples. It is surrounded on all sides but one by lofty and perpendicular cliffs; and in the centre is a secluded vale, remarkable for its beauty and salubrity. The tyrant was led to select this spot for his abode, as well fem its difficulty of ac- cess, as from the mildness and salubrity of its climate, and the unrivalled magnificence ot the prospects which it affords. He is said to have built no less than twelve villas in different part* of the island, and to have named them after the twelve celestial divinities. The ruins of on* "4 uvem — the \ ilia of Jove — are still to be seen on the summit of a cliff opposite Sorrento. 192 MODERN HISTORY. O aet II. received from them an enthusiastic welcome on his accession to the v. calig'- throne, (A. D. 37,) but they soon found him to be a ula. greater monster of wickedness and dissimilation than his predecessor. A detailed description of his wicked actions, which some have attributed to madness, would afford little pleasure to the reader. Not satisfied with mere murder, he ordered all the prisoners in Rome, and numbers of the aged and infirm, to be thrown to wild beasts ; he claimed divine honors, erected a temple, and instituted a college of priests to superintend his own worship ; and finding the senate too backward in adulation, he seriously contemplated the massacre of the entire body. 12. His follies were no less conspicuous than his vices. For his favorite horse Incitatus he claimed greater respect and rever- ence than were due to mortals : he built him a stable of marble and a manger of ivory, and frequently invited him to the imperial table ; and it is said that his death alone prevented him from con- ferring upon the animal the honors of the consulship ! A fortune of eighteen millions sterling, which had been left by Tiberius, was squandered by Calig' ula, in a most senseless manner, in little more than a year, while fresh sums, raised by confiscations, were lavished in the same way. At length, after a reign of four years, Calig' ula was murdered by his own guards, to the great joy of the senators, who suddenly awoke to the wild hope of restoring the Republic. 13. The illusion soon disappeared, for the spirit of Roman liberty no longer existed. The Praetorian guards, a who had all the power in their own hands, insisting upon being governed by a monarch, proclaimed the imbecile Claudius emperor, at a time when he expected VL nothing but death ; and their choice was sanctioned by Claudius, the senate. Claudius was an uncle of the late emperor, and brother of Herman' icus. He was SP deficient in judgment and refleetion as to be deemed intolerably stupid ; he was not destitute of a. The Prcstorian guards were gradually instituted by Augustus to protect his person, awe Pie senate, keep the veterans and legions in check, and prevent or crush the first movements ©f l ebellion. Something similar to them had existed from the earliest times in the body of armed guides who accompanied the general in his military expeditions. At first Augustus Btationed three cohorts only in the capital : but Tiberius assemble/1 all of them, to the number of ten thousand, at Rome, and assigned them a permanent and well-fortified camp close t« the walls of the city, on the broad summit of the Quirinal and Viminal hills. This measure < t Tiberius forever riveted the fetters of his country. The Praetorian bands, soon learning their own strength, and the weakness of the civil government, became eventually the real masters Rome, i. 61 ; and Niebuhr, v. 75 « Chap 1J HOMAN HISTORY. i93 good nature, tut unfortunately he was made the dupe of abandoned favorites, for whose crime history has unjustly held him responsible. 14. For a time his wife Messallna, the most dissolute and aban- doned of women, ruled him at pleasure ; and numbers of the most worthy citizens were sacrificed to her jealousy, avarice, and revenge ; but finally she was put to death by the emp'eror for her shameless in fidelity to him. Claudius then married his niece Agrippina, then & widow and the mother of the afterwards infamous Nero. She was no less cruel in disposition than Messalina ; her ambition was un- bounded, and her avarice insatiable. After having prevailed upon Claudius to adopt as his heir and successor her son Nero, to the exclusion of his own children, she caused the emperor to be poisoned by his physician. (A. D. 54.) As Agrippina had gained the captain of the Praetorian guards to her interest, the army proclaimed Nero emperor, and the senate confirmed their choice. 15. The foreign events of the reign of Claudius were of greater importance than his domestic administration. Julius Caesar had first carried the Roman arms into Britain in a brief and fruitless in- vasion ; but during the reign of Claudius the Romans began to think seriously of reducing the whole island under their dominion, At first Claudius sent over his general Plau'tus, (A. D. 43,) who gained some victories over the rude inhabitants. Claudius himself then made a journey into Britain, and received the submission of the tribes that inhabited the south-eastern parts of the island ; but the other Britons, under their king Carac' tacus, maintained an obstinate resistance until the Roman army was placed under the command of Ostorius. who defeated Carac' tacus in a great battle, and sent him prisoner to Rome. (A. D. 51.) 16. Nero, the successor of Claudius, was a youth of only seventeen when he ascended the throne. (A. D. 54.) He had been nurtured in the midst of crimes, and the Roman world looked upon him with apprehension and dread ; but during five years, while he still remained under the influence of his early instructors Seneca and Burrhus, he disappointed the fears of all by the mildness of his reign. At length his mother Agrippina fell under the sus- picion of designing to restore the crown to the still surviving son of Claudius; and the emperor caused both to be put to death. After this he abandoned himself to bloodshed, in which he took a savag6 delight. He is accused of having caused the death of his able miD T 13 194 MODERN HISTORY. I Part 11 ister Burrhus by poison ; Seneca a the philosopher, Lucan b the poet, and most of the leading nobles, were condemned on the charge of treason ; and a conflagration in Borne which lasted nine days, and destroyed the greater part of the city, (A. D. 64,) was generally be lieved to have been kindled by his orders ; and some reported that in order to enjoy the spectacle, be ascended a high tower, where he amused himself with singing the Destruction of Troy. 1 7. In order to remove the suspicions of the people, he caused & report to be circulated that the Christians were the authors of the fire ; and thousands of that innocent sect were put to death under circumstances of the greatest barbarity. Sometimes, covered by the skins of wild beasts, they were exposed to be torn in pieces by de- vouring dogs ; some were crucified : others, wrapped in combustible garments, which were set on fire, were made to serve as torches to illuminate the emperoi’s gardens by night. Nero often appeared on the Boman stage in the character of an actor, musician, or gladiator * he also visited the principal cities of Greece in succession, where lu obtained a number of victories in the public Grecian games. IS. While he was engaged in these extravagances, the provinces of the empire were pillaged to support his luxuries and maintain his almost boundless prodigalities. To the lower classes, who felt no- thing of his despotism, he made monthly distributions of corn, to the encouragement of indolence ; and he gratified the populace of Borne by occasional supplies of wine and meat, and by the magnificent shows of the circus. Nero was popular with the rabble, which ex- plains the fact that his atrocities and follies were so long endured by the Boman people. At length, however, the standard of revolt was raised in Gaul by Vindex, the Boman governor, and soon after by Galba in Spain. Yindex perished in the struggle ; and Galba a. Seneca, the moral philosopher, was bom at Cordova in Spain, in the second or third year of the Christian era; but at an early age he went to reside at Rome. Messalina, who hated him, caused him to be banished to Corsica, where he remained eight years ; but Agrippina recalled him from banishment, and appointed him, in conjunction with Burrhus, ‘utor to Nero. Burrhus, a man of stern virtue, instructed the prince in military science Seneca taught him philosophy, the fine arts, and elegant accomplishments. Althougn Seneca laid down excellent rules of morality for others, his own character is not above reproaoh. Being ordered by Nero to be his own executioner, he caused his veins to be opened in a hot bath ; but as, at his age, the blood flowed slowly, he drank a dose of hemlock to accelerate his death. b. Lucan , a nephew of Seneca, and also a native of Cordova, was an eminent Latin poet, although he died at tne early age of twenty-seven years. Of his many poems, the Pharsalia. or war between Caesa\ and Pompey, is the only one that has escaped destruction. He incurred *he enmity of Nero by vanquishing him in a poetical contest. Chap. IJ ROMAN HISTORY. I9£ would have been ruined bad not the Praetorian guards, under the in- fluence of their commander Otho, renounced their allegiance. With this latter calamity Nero abandoned all hope ; and when he learned that the senate had declared him an enemy to the country, too cow- ardly to kill himself, he sought death by the hands of one of hu freedmen, from whom he received a mortal wound. (A. D. 68.) 19. During the greater part of the reign of Nero the empire en- joyed, in general, a profound peace ; the only wars of importance bemg with the Parthians and the Britons. The former were defeated and reduced by Cor' bulo, the greatest general of his time. This virtuous Roman had kept his faith even to Nero ; but the only re- ward which he received from the emperor for his victories, was — death. In Britain, Suetonius Paulinus defeated the inhabitants in several battles, and penetrating into the heart of the country, de- stroyed the consecrated groves and altars of the druids. a After- wards the Iceni,'° under the command of their queen Boadic' ea, re- volted, burned London, 0 then a flourishing Roman colony, reduced many other settlements, and put to death, in all, seventy thousand Romans. Suetonius avenged their fate in a decisive battle, in which eighty thousand Britons are said to have perished. The heroic Boadic' ea, rather than submit to the victor, put an end to her life by poison. During the reign of Nero also occurred the famous rebel- lion in Judea, and the beginning of the war which resulted in the destruction o-f the Jewish nation. 20. With the death of Nero the reign of the Julian family, or the true line of the Caesars, ended; although six succeeding empe- rors are included in what are usually styled “ the twelve Caesars.” A series of sanguinary wars, arising from disputed succession, followed. a. The druids were the priests or ministers of religion among the ancient Gauls and Britons. Their chief seat was an island of the Irish Sea, now called Anglesey, which was taken by Suo- t6nius after a fanatical resistance. This general cut down the groves of the druids, and nearly exterminated both the priests and their religion. The druids believed in the existence of one Su- preme Being, a state of future rewards and punishments, the immortality of the soul, and its transmigration through different bodies. They possessed some knowledge of geometry, natuial philosophy, and astronomy ; they practiced astrology, magic, and sooth-saying ; they regarded the mistletoe as the holiest object in nature, and esteemed the oak sacred ; they abhorred im ages ; they worshipped fire as the emblem of the sun, and in their sacrifices often immoia ted human victims. They exercised great authority in the government of the State, appointed the highest officers in the cities, and were the chief administrators of justice. On the intro- duction of Christianity into Britain, the druidical order gradually ceased. b. The Iceni inhabited the country on the eastern coast of England. Their chief town was k place now called Caister , about three miles from Norwich. c. London, anciently Londinium was in existence, as a town of the Trinobantes, t>efore the invasion of Julius Cajsar. £96 MODERN HISTORY. [Past II A.t first Galba, then in the seventy-third year of his age, a man of un- blemished personal character, was universally acknowl- VIII. galba. _ . , . , edged emperor ; but he soon lost the attachment ot the soldiery by his parsimony, while the influence of injudicious favorites led him into unseasonable severities for the suppression of the enor- mous vices of the times. Several revolts against his authority rapidly succeeded each other, and finally,- Otho, who had been among the foremost to espouse his cause, finding that Galba refused to nominate him for his successor, procured a revolt of the Praetorian guards in his own favor. After a brief struggle in the streets of Rome, Galba was slain, after a reign of only seven months. 21. While the unworthy Otho, a passive instrument in the hands of a licentious soldiery, remained at Rome, with the title of emperor, immersed in pleasures and debaucheries, Vitel' bus, a ix. otho. , r , . . , « . , . _ man more vulgar and vicious than Otho, was proclaimed emperor by the legions under his command on the German frontier. A brief but sanguinary struggle followed, and Otho, having sustained a defeat in the north of Italy, fell by his own hand, after a reign of ninety-five days. 22. Vi tel' lius, entering Rome in triumph, ordered more than a hundred of the praetorian guards to be put to death ; but he en- x. vitel'- deavored to win the favor of the populace by large lius. donations of provisions, and expensive games and enter tainments. His personal character was cruel and contemptible. Under the most frivolous pretences the wealthy were put to death, and their property seized by the emperor ; and in less than four months, as stated by historians, this bloated and pampered ruler, ex- pended on the mere luxuries of the table a sum equal to about seven millions sterling. But while wallowing in the indulgence of the most debasing appetites, he was startled by the intelligence that the legions engaged in the Jewish war in Syria had declared their general, Vespasian, emperor, and were already on their march towards Rome. 23. As province after province submitted to Vespasian, and his generals rapidly overcame the little opposition they encountered, Vitel' lius in dismay would have abdicated his authority, but the Praetorian guards, dreading the strict discipline of Vespasian, com- pelled the wretched monarch to a farther resistance. Rome how- ever easily fell into the hands of the conquerors, and Vitel' lius, having retained the sceptre only eight months, was ignominiously Chat, I.] ROMAN HISTORY. 197 put to death, and his mangled carcass thrown into the Tiber, amid the execrations of the same fickle multitude that had so recently welcomed his accession to power. (A. D. Dec. 69.) 24. During several months, Domitian, the second son of Vespasian, ruled at Rome in the absence of his father, taking part with the contending factions, committing many acts of cruelty, and already exhibiting the passions and vices which characterized his later years ; but at length the arrival of the monarch elect restored tranquillity and diffused universal joy. (A. D. 70.) Vespasian was X i. vespa- universally known and respected for his virtues, and his SIAN - mild and happy reign restored to the distracted empire some degree of its former prosperity. He improved the discipline of the army, enlarged the senate to its former numbers, and revived its authority, reformed the courts of law, and enriched Rome with many noble buildings, of which the Colosseum still remains, in much of its ancient grandeur — the pride and glory of his reign. 25. Three years before his accession to the throne, Vespasian had been sent into Judea by Nero, (A. D. 67,) at the head of sixty thousand men, to conduct the war against the Jews, who X ii. Jewish had revolted against the Roman power. They had WAR - been driven to rebellion by the execution and tyranny of Florus the Roman governor, and having once taken up arms they were so strangely infatuated as to believe that, although without a regular army, or munitions of war of any kind, they could resist the united force of the whole Roman empire. The war thus commenced was one of extermination, in which mercy was seldom asked or shown by cither party 26. While the war raged around Jerusalem, and city after city was taken, and desolated by the massacre of its inhabitants, there were three hostile factions in Jerusalem, afterwards reduced to two, holding possession of different parts of the city, and wasting theii Btrength in cruel conflicts with each other. When A ^spasian depart- ed for Rome to assume the royal authority, he left the conduct of the war to his son Titus, who soon after commenced ti.>e siege of Je rusalem, during the time of the feast of the passover. when the city was crowded with people from all Judea. Titus expected that al- though Jerusalem was defended by six hundred thousand men, such a multitude gathered within the walls of a poorly-provision«d city, would occasion a famine that would soon make a surrender inevitable. 27. Although *he Jews were promised liberty and safety if they 198 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II would surrender the city; and Josephus, the future historian of his country, who had been taken prisoner by the Romans, was sent to expostulate with them on the folly of longer resistance ; yet they re jectcd all warnings and counsel with scorn and derision ; and although the opposing Jewish factions were embroiled in a civil war, with a strange infatuation both declared their resolution to defend the city to the very last, confident that God would not permit his temple and sity to fall before the heathen. 28. The horrors of the siege surpassed all that the pen can de- scribe. When the public granaries had become empty the people were plundered of their scanty stores, so that the famine devoured by houses and by families. At length no table was spread, nor regular meal eaten in Jerusalem. People bartered all their wealth for a meas- ure of corn, and ate it in secret, uncooked, or snatched half baked from the coals. They were often compelled, by torture, to discover their food, or were still more cruelly treated if they had eaten it. Wives would steal the last morsel from their husbands, children from parents, mothers from children ; and there were instances of dead infants being eaten by their parents ; so that the ancient prophecy, in which Moses had described the punishments of the unbelieving Jews, was fulfilled. a 29. At length the dead accumulated so fast that they were left un- ouried, and were cast off the walls by thousands down into the val- leys ; and as Titus went his rounds, and saw the putrefying masses, he wept, and, stretching his hands to heaven, called God to witness that this was not his work ! By slow degrees one wall after another was battered down ; but so desperate was the defence of the Jews that it was three months after the lower city was taken before th Romans gained possession of the temple, and, in its destruction, com- pleted the fall of Jerusalem. (A. D. 70.) Titus would have saved the noble edifice, but was unable to restrain the rage of his soldiery, and tho Temple was burnt. 30. Josephus computes the number of his countrymen who perished during the war at more than one million three hundred thousand, with a total of more than a million prisoners. Thousands of the latter were sent to toil in the Egyptian mines ; but such were their numbers that they were offered for sale “ till no man would buj them,” and then they were sent into different provinces as pro a. Deut. xxviii. 56, 57. Ca if. I.j ROMAN HISTORY. m sents, Wxierj they were consumed by the sword, or by wild beasts in the amphitheatres. With the destruction of the holy city and its famous temple Israel ceased to be a nation, and thus was inflicted the doom which the unbelieving Jews invoked when they cried out, (i His blood be on us and on our children.” 31. Britain had been only partially subdued prior to the reign of Vespasian, but during the two years after the fall of Jerusalem its conquest was completed by the Boman governor Julius Agric' ola, who was justly celebrated for his great merits as a general and a states- man. Carrying his victorious arms northward he defeated the Brit- tons in every encounter, penetrated the forests of Caledonia, 1 and established a chain of fortresses between the Friths of Clyde and Forth, which marked the utmost permanent extent of the Boman dominion in Britain. The fastnesses of the Scottish highlands were ever too formidable to be overcome by the Boman arms. By an enlightened policy Agric' ola also taught the Britons the arts of peace, introduced laws and government among them, induced them to lay aside their barbarous customs, taught them to value the con- veniencies of life, and to adopt the Boman language and manners. The life of Agric' ola has been admirably written by Tac' itus, the historian, to whom the former had given his daughter in marriage. 32. On the death of Vespasian (A. D. 79) his son Titus succeeded to the throne. Previous to his accession the general opinion of the people was unfavorable to Titus, but afterwards his conduct changed, and he is celebrated as a just and humane ruler; and so numerous were his acts of goodness, that his grateful subjects bestowed upon him the honorable title of “ benefac- tor of the human race.” During his brief reign of little more than two years, Borne and the provinces w T ere in the enjoyment of peace and prosperity, only disturbed by an eruption of Mount Vesuvius, 2 1. Ancient Caledonia comprehended that portion of Scotland which lay to the north of the Forth and the Clyde. A frith is a narrow passage of the sea, or the opening of a river into the sea. Agric' ola penetrated north as far as the river Tay. (See Map No. XVI.) 2. Mox.nt Vesuvius , teD miles south-east from the city of Naples, is the only active volcano at present existing on the European continent. Its extreme height is three thousand eight hundred and ninetj feet — ubout two-fifths of that of JEt' na. Its first known eruption occurred on the 24th of August, A D. 79, when Herculaneum and Pomp6ii were buried under showers of volcanic ashes, sand, stones, and lava, and the elder Pliny lost his life, being suffocated. by the sulphurous vapor as he approached to behold the wonderful phenomena. It is related that, Buch was the immense quantity of volcanic ashes thrown out during this eruption, the whole lountry was involved in pitchy darkness ; and that the ashes fell in Egypt, Syria, and various parts of Asia Minor. Since the destruction of Ilercul&neum and Pompbii there have been nearly fifty authenticated eruptions of Vesuvius. MODERN HISTORY. LPuirll 200 which caused the destruction of Herculaneum and Pompeii,* (A. D. 79,) and by a great fire at Home, which was followed by a pestilence. (A. D. 80.) 33. Domitian succeeded his brother without opposition, (A. D. 81,) although the perfidy and cruelty of his character were notorious. xiy. He began his reign by an affectation of extreme virtue, domitian. wag una | 3 le long to disguise his vices. There was o law but the will of the tyrant, who caused many of the most eminent senators to be put to death without even the form of trial; and when, by his infamous vices, and the openness of his debaucheries; he had sunk, in the eyes of his subjects, to the lowest stage of degradation, he caused himself to be worshipped as a god, and ad- dressed with the reverence due to Deity. Both Jews and Christians were persecuted by him, and thousands of them put to death because they would not worship his statues. This is called in ecclesiastical history the second great persecution of the Christians, that under Nero being the first. 34. It was in the early part of this reign that Agric' ola com- pleted the conquest of Britain ; but on the whole the reign of Domi tian was productive of little honor to the Homan arms, as in Moe 'sia, J and Dacia, 1 2 3 4 in Germany, 5 and Pannonia, the Romans were defeated, 1. Herculaneum was close to the sea, south of Vesuvius, and eight miles south-east from the city of Naples. Little is known of it except its destruction. It was completely buried under a shower of ashes, over which a stream of lava flowed, and afterwards hardened. So changed was the aspect of the whole country, and even the outlines of the coast, that all knowledge of the city, beyond its name, was soon lost, when, in 1713, after a concealment of more than six- teen centuries, accident led to the discovery of its ruins, seventy feet below the surface of the ground. 2. Pompeii was fifteen miles south-east from Naples, and was not buried by lava, but by ashes, sand, and stones only, and at a depth of only twelve or fifteen feet above the buildings. It has been excavated much more extensively than Herculaneum— disclosing the city walls, streets, temples, theatres, the forum, baths, monuments, private dwellings, domestic utensils, &c.,— the whole conveying the impression of the actual presence of a Roman town in all the circumstantial reality of its existence two thousand years ago. “The discovery of Pompeii has thrown a strong and steady light on many points connected with the private life and economy of the ancients, that were previously involved in the greatest obscurity.”— The small number ef skeletons discovered in Herculaneum and Pomp6ii render it quite certain that most of the inhabitants saved themselves by flight. 3. Mm' sia , extending north to the Danube and eastward to the Euxine, corresponded to the present Turkish provinces of Ser' via and Balgiiria. ( Map No. IX.) 4. Dacia was an extensive frontier province north of the Danube, extending east to the Euxine. It embraced the northern portions of the present Turkey, together with Trans) lv&nia and a part of Hungary. (Map No. IX.) 5. The word Germania was employed by the Romans to designate all the country east of the Rhine and north of the Danube as far as the German ocean and the Baltic, and eastward aa far as Sarmafc a and Dacia. The limits of Germany, as a Roman p rovince, were very indefinite, {Map No. IX.) Chap. I.J ROMAN HISTORY. 201 and -whole provinces lost. In Moe' sia, Domitian himself was several times defeated, yet he wrote to the senate boasting of extraordinary victories, and the servile body decreed him the honors of a triumph. In a similar manner other triumphs were decreed him, which caused Pliny the younger to say that the triumphs of Domitian were always evidence of some advantages gained by the enemies of Rome. 35. At length, after a reign of fifteen years, Domitian was assassi- nated at the instigation of his wife, who accidentally discovered that her own name was on the fatal list of those whom the emperor designed to put to death. The soldiers, whose pay he had increased, and with whom he often shared his plunder, lamented his fate ; but the senate ordered his name to be struck from the Roman annals, and obliter- ated from every public monument. 36. The death of Domitian closes the reign of those usually de- nominated “ the twelve Caesars,” only three of whom, Augustus, Vespasian, and Titus, died natural deaths. Julius Caesar fell under the daggers of conspirators in the very senate-house of Rome. Ti berius, at the instigation of Calig' ula, was smothered on a sick bed Calig'ula was murdered in his own palace while attending a tneatri- cal rehearsal : Claudius was poisoned, at the instigation of his own wife, by his favorite physician : Nero, by the aid of his freedman, committed suicide to avoid a public execution : the aged Galba was slain in the Roman forum, in a mutiny of his guards : Otho, on learning the success of his rival Vitek lius, committed suicide : Vi- tel' lius was dragged by the populace through the streets of Rome, put to death with tortures, and his mangled carcass thrown into the Tiber ; and Domitian was killed in his bed-chamber by those whom he had marked for execution. The heart sickens not more at the recital of these murders than of the crimes that prompted them; and thus far the history of the Roman emperors is little else than a series of constantly recurring scenes of violence and blood. 37. Rut as we pass from the city of Rome into the surrounding Roman world, we almost forget the revolting scenes of the capital in view of the still-existing power and majesty of the Roman empire — an empire the greatest the world has ever seen — and still great in he remembrance of the past, and in the influences which it has be- queathed to modern times. While the emperors were steeped in the grossest sensuality, and Rome was a hot-bed of infamy and crime the numerous provincial governments were generally administered, with ability and success ; and the glory of the Roman arms was I* 202 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II sustained in repelling the barbarous hordes that pressed upon the frontiers. But national valor cannot compensate for the want of national virtue : the soul that animated the Republic was dead ; tho spirit of freedom was gone ; and national progress was already be- ginning to give place to national decay. SECTION II. ROHAN HISTORY FROM THE DEATH OF DOMITIAN, A. D. 96, TO THE ESTAB LISHMENT OF MILITARY DESPOTISM, AFTER THE MURDER OF ALEXANDER SEVE' RUS, A. D.- 235 = 139 YEARS ANALYSIS. 1. Nerva. His character, reign, and death. [Um'bria.] — 2. Trajan. His character, and character of his reign. Remarkable words attributed to him. — 3. His wars and conquests. His death. [Ctes' iphon. Trajan’s column.] — 4. Persecutions of the Christians during the reign of Trajan. The proverbial goodness of Trajan’s character. — 5. Accession of Adrian. His peaceful policy. General administration of the government. His visit to the provinces. — 6. Revolt of the Jews. Results of the Jewish war. Defences in Britain. [Solway Frith. River Tyne.] — 7. Doubtful estimate of Adrian’s character and feign. His ruling passions. — 8. Accession of Titus Antoni' nus. — 9. His character, and the character of his reign. — 10. Marcus Aure' lius Antoni’ nus. Verus associated with him. — 11. War with the Parthians. With the Germans. Remarkable deliverance of the Roman army. — 12. Character of the five preceding reigns. The evils to which an arbitrary government is liable. Illustrated in the annals of the Roman emperors. — 13. Accession of Com’ modus. Beginning of his gov- ernment. — 14. The incident which decided his fluctuating character. His subsequent wicked- ness. — 15. His debaucheries and cruelties. His death. — 16. The brief reign of Pertinax. — 17. Disposal of the empire to Did'ius Julia’ nus. — 18. Dangerous position of the new ruler. — 19. His competitors. [Dalmatia.] Successes of Septim’ius Seve' rus, and death of • Julianus. —20. Dissimulation of Sev6rus. He defeats Niger at Issus in Asia. His continued duplicity. Overthrow and death of Albinus. [Lyons.] — 21. Subsequent reign of Sev6rus. His last illness and death. [York.]— 22. Caracal' la and G6ta. Death of the latter. Character, reign, and death of Caracal’ la. Brief reign of Macri' nus. — 23. Accession of Elagaba’ lus. — 24. His character and follies. Circumstances of his death. — 25. Alexander Seve' rus. His attempts U reform abuses. Character of his administration. His death. His successor. 1. Domitian was succeeded by Nerva, who was a native of Um’ bryi 1 but whose family orignally came from Crete. He was the first Roman emperor of foreign extraction, and was chosen I. NERVA. Jr . TT- -1 l l by the senate on account ot his virtues. His mild and equitable administration forms a striking contrast to the sanguinary rule of Domitian ; but his excessive lenity, which was his greatest fault, encouraged the profligate to persevere in their accustomed 1. Um' brin was a country of Italy east of Etruria and north of the Sabine territory The ancient L'm’ brims were one of the oldest and most numerous nations of Italy. (Map No. Till. Chap. I.J ROMAN HISTORY. 203 peculations At length the excesses of his own guards convinced him that the government of the empire required greater energy than he possessed, and he therefore wisely adopted the excellent Trajan as his successor, and made him his associate in the sovereignty. Nerva soon after died, (A. D. 98,) in the seventy-second year of his age, having reigned but little more than sixteen months. 2. Trajan, who was by birth a Spaniard, proved to be one of Rome’s best sovereigns; and it Ms been said of him that he was equally great as a ruler, a general, and a man. After ae had made a thorough reformation of abuses, he re- stored as much of the free Roman constitution as was consistent with a monarchy, and bound himself by a solemn oath to observe the laws ; yet while he ruled with equity, he held the reins of power with a strong and steady hand. No emperor but a Trajan could have used safely the remarkable words attributed to him, when, giving a sword to the prefect of the Praetorian guards, he said, “ Take this sword and use it ; if I have merit, for me ; if otherwise, against me.” 3. In his wars, Trajan, commanding in person, conquered the Dacians, after which he passed into Asia, subdued Armenia, took Seleucia and Ctes' iphon, 1 the latter the capital of the Parthian kingdom, and sailing down the Tigris displayed the Roman standards for the first time on the waters of the Persian Gulf, whence he passed into the Arabian peninsula, a great part of which he annexed to the Roman empire. But while he was thus passing from kingdom to kingdom, emulating the glory of Alexander, and dreaming of new conquests, he was seized with a lingering illness, of which he died in Cilicia, in the twentieth year of his reign. (A. D. 117.) His ashes were conveyed to Rome in a golden urn, and deposited under the famous column which he had erected to commemorate his Dacian victories. a 1. Ctes' iphon was a city of Parthia, on the eastern bank of the Tigris, opposite to and thre« Bides distant from Seleucia. a. Trajan’s column, which is still standing, is the most beautiful mausoleum ever erected to departed greatness. Its height, not including the base, which is now covered with rubbish, is cue hundred and fifteen feet ten inches ; and the entire column is composed of twenty-four great blocks of marble, so curiously cemented as to seem one entire stone. It is ascended on the inside by one hundred and eighty -five win ling steps. The noblest ornament of this pillar was a bronze statue of Trajan, twenty-five feet in height, representing him in a coat of arms, holding in the left hand a sceptre, and in the right a hollow globe of gold, in which, it has been assert- ed, the ashes of the emperor were deposited. The column is now surmounted by a statue of 8t. Peter, which Sixtus V. had the bad taste to substitute in place of that of Trajan. On the external face of the column is a series of bas-reliefs, running in a spiral course up the shaft, representing Trajan’s victories, and containing two thousand five hundred human figures- 204 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 4. The character of Trajan, otherwise just and amiable, is stained by the approval which he gave to the persecution of Christians in the eastern provinces of the empire ; for although he did not directly promote that persecution, he did little to check its progress, and al lowed the enemies of the Christians to triumph over them. Still, the goodness of his character was long proverbial, inasmuch as, in later times, the senate, in felicitating the accession of a new emperor were accustomed to wish that he might surpass the prosperity of Augustus and the virtue of Trajan. 5. Whether Trajan, in his last moments, adopted his relative Adrian as his successor, or whether the will attributed to him was forged by the empress Plotina, is a doubtful point in history; but Adrian succeeded to the throne with the unanimous dec- laration of the Asiatic armies in his favor, whose choice was' immediately ratified by the senate and people. His first care was to make peace with the surrounding nations ; and in order to preserve it he at once abandoned all the conquests made by his pre- decessor, except that of Dacia, and bounded the eastern provinces by the river Euphrates. He diminished the military establisaments, lowered the taxes, reformed the laws, and encouraged literature. He jilso passed thirteen years in visiting all the provinces of the empire inspecting the administration of government, repressing abuses, and erecting and repairing public edifices. 6. During his reign occurred another war with the Jews, who, in censed at the introduction of Roman idolatry into Jerusalem, were excited to revolt by an impostor who called himself Bar-Cochab, {the son of a star,) and who pretended to be the expected Messiah. Two hundred thousand devoted followers soon flocked to the Jewish stand- ard, and for a time gained important advantages ; but Severus, after- wards emperor, being sent against them, in a sanguinary war of three years’ duration he accomplished the almost total destruction of the Jew- ish nation. More than five hundred thousand of the misguided Jews are estimated to have fallen by the sword during this period ; and those who survived were “ scattered abroad among all the nations of the earth.” — In Britain, Adrian repaired the frontier fortresses of Agric'- ola as a bulwark against the Caledonians, and erected a second wall, from the Solway Frith 1 to the Tyne, 2 remains of which are still visible 1. Sotwesj Fri"A, the north-eastern arm of the Irish sea, divides England from Scotland. (Map No XVI.) 2. The Tyne, an important river in the north of England, enters the sea on tl e astern coaet, the southern extremity of Northumberland countj. (Map No. XVI.) Cha- I] ROMAN HISTORY 205 7. Although the general tenor of the reign of Adrian deserved praise for its oquity and moderation, yet his character had some dark stains upon it ; and the Homans of a later age doubted whether he should be reckoned among the good or the bad princes. He al- lowed a severe persecution of the Jews and Christians ; he was jealous, suspicious, superstitious, and revengeful; and although in general he was a just and able ruler, he was at times an unrelenting and cruel tyrant. His ruling passions were curiosity and vanity ; and as they were attracted by different objects, his character as sumed the most opposite phases. 8. Adrian, a short time previous to his death, (A. D. 138,) adopted for his successor, Titus Antoninus, surnamed Pius, on IV . titus condition that the latter should associate with him, in ANT0N1 ' NUS - the empire, Marcus Aurelius, and the youthful Verus. Antoninus, immediately after his accession, gave one of his daughters in mar- riage to Marcus Aurelius, afterwards called Marcus Aurelius Anto- Hinus ; but while he associated the worthy Aurelius in the labors of government, he showed no regard for the profligate Verus. 9. During twenty-two years Antoninus governed the Homan world with wisdom and virtue, exhibiting in his public life a love of re ligion, peace and justice ; and in his private character goodness, amiability, and a cheerful serenity of temper, without affectation or vanity. His regard for the future welfare of Home is manifest in the favor which he constantly showed to the virtuous Aurelius : the latter, in return, revered the character of his benefacter, loved him as a parent, obeyed him as a sovereign, and, after his death, regulated his own administration by the example and maxims of his predecessor. 1C. On the death of Antoninus, (A. D. 161,) the senate, distrust mg Verus on account of his vices, conferred the sover- ’ V. MARCUS eignty upon Marcus Aurelius alone ; but the latter im- aurelius mediately took Verus as his colleague, and gave him his antoni' nus. daughter in marriage ; and notwithstanding the great dissimilarity in the characters of the two emperors, they reigned jointly ten years, until the death of Verus, (A. D. 171,) without any disagree ment, for Verus, destitute of ambition, was content to leave the weightier affairs of government to his associate. 11. Although Aurelius detested war as the disgrace of humanity and its scourge, yet his reign was less peaceful than that of his pre decessor; for the Parthians overran Syria; but they were eventually repulsed, and some of their own cities captured. During five years 206 MODERN HISTORY [Part II Aurelius, in person, conducted a war against the German tribes, without once returning to Rome. During the German war occurred that remarkable deliverance of the emperor and his army from dangei , which has been related both by pagan and Christian writers. It is said that the Romans, drawn into a narrow defile, where they could neither fight Kor retreat, were on the point of perishing by thirst, when a violent thunder-storm burst upon both armies, and the lightning fired the tents of the barbarians and broke up their gamp while the rain relieved the pressing wants of the Romans. Many ancient fathers of the Church ascribed the seasonable shower to the prayers of the Christian soldiers then serving in the imperial army ; and we are told by Eusebius that the emperor immediately gave to their division the title of the “ Thundering Legion,” and henceforth relaxed his severity towards the Christians, whose perse- cution he had before tolerated. 12. The reigns of Nerva, Trajan, Adrian, and the two Atonines, comprised a happy period in the annals of the Roman empire. These monarchs observed the laws, and the ancient forms of civil administration, and probably allowed the Roman people all the free- dom they were capable of enjoying. But under an arbitrary gov- ernment there is no guarantee for the continuance of a wise and equitable administration ; for the next monarch may be a profligate sensualist, an imbecile dotard, or a jealous tyrant ; and he may abuse, to the destruction of his subjects, that absolute power which others had exerted for their welfare. The uncertain tenure by which the people held their lives and liberties under despotic rule, is fully illustrated in the dark pictures of tyranny which the annals of the Roman emperors exhibit. The golden age of Trajan and the An- fconines had been preceded by an age of iron ; and it was followed by a period of gloom, of whose public wretchedness, the shortness, .md violent termination, of most of the imperial reigns, is sufficient proof. 13. Com' modus, the unworthy son of Aurelius, succeeded to the 71 . com.'- throne on the death of his father, (A. D. 180,) amidst modus. the acclamations of the senate and the armies. Duiing three years, while he retained his father’s counsellors around him, he ruled with equity and moderation; but the weakness of his mind and the timidity of his disposition, together with his natural indo- lence, rendered him the slave of base attendants ; and sensual indul- gence and crime, which others had taught him, finally degenerated into a habit, an I became the ruling passions of his soul. Chap I] ROMAN HISTORY. 207 14. A fatal incident decided his fluctuating character, and sud- denly developed his dormant cruelty and thirst for blood. In an attempt to assassinate him, the assailant, aiming a blow at him with a dagger, exclaimed, “ the senate sends you this.” The menace pre- vented the deed ; but the words sunk deep into the mind of Com'- modus, and kindled the utmost fury of his nature. It was found that thi conspirators were men of senatorial rank, who had been in stigated by the emperor’s own sister. Suspicion and distrust, fear and hatred, were henceforth indulged by the emperor towards the whole body of senators : spies and informers were encouraged ; neither virtue nor station afforded any security; and when Com'- modus had once tasted human blood, he became incapable of pity or remorse. He sacrificed a long list of consular senators to his wanton suspicion, and took especial delight in hunting out and exterminating all who had been connected with the family of the Antohines. 15. The debaucheries of Com' modus exceeded, in extravagance and iniquity, those of any previous Roman emperor. He was averse to every rational and liberal pursuit, and all his sports were mingled with cruelty. He cultivated his physical, to the neglect of his mental powers ; and in shooting with the bow and throwing the javelin, Rome had not his superior. Delighting in exhibiting to the people his superior skill in archery, he at one time caused a hundred lions to be let loose in the amphitheatre ; and as they ran raging around the arena, they successively fell by a hundred arrows from the royal hand. He fought in the circus as a common gladiator, and, always victorious, often wantonly slew his antagonists, who were less completely armed than himself. This monster of folly and wicked- ness was finally slain, (A. D. 193,) partly by poisoning and partly by strangling, at the instigation of his favorite concubine Marcia, who accidentally learned that her own death, and that of several officers of the palace, had been resolved upon by the tyrant. 16. On the death of Com' modus the throne was offered to Per ts nax, a senator of consular rank and strict integrity, who VII> PEa / TJ accepted the office with extreme reluctance, fully aware NAX - of the dangers which he incurred, and the great weight of responsi- bility thrown upon him. The virtues of Per' tinax secured to him the love of the senate and the people ; but his zeal to correct abuses provoked the anger of the turbulent Praetorian soldiery, who pre- ferred the favor of a tyrant to the stern equality of the laws ; and 208 MODERN HISTORY. [Part H after a reign of three months, Per' tinax was slain in the imperial palace by the same guards who had placed him on the throne. 17. Amidst the wild disorder that attended the violent death of the emperor, the Praetorian guards proclaimed that they wouM dis pose of the sovereignty of the Homan world to the highest bidder , and while the body of Per' tinax remained unburied in the street* viil did' irs of Rome, the prize of the empire was purchased by a julia' nus vain and wealthy old senator, Did' ius Julianus, who, repairing to t-he Praetorian camp, outbid all competitors, and actually paid to each of the soldiers, ten thousand in number, more than two hundred pounds sterling, or nearly nine millions of dollars in all. 18. The obsequious senate, overawed by the soldiery, ratified the unworthy negotiation ; but the Praetorians themselves were ashamed of the prince whom their avarice had persuaded them to accept ; the citizens looked upon his elevation with horror, as a lasting insult to the Roman name ; and the armies in the provinces were unanimous in refusing allegiance to the new ruler, while the emperor, trembling with the dangers of his position, found himself, although on the throne of the world, scorned and despised, without a friend, and even without an adherent. 19. Three competitors soon appeared to contest the throne with Julianus, — Clodius Albinus, who commanded in Britain, — Pescen'- ix. septim'- nius .Niger in Syria, — and Septim'ius Severus in Dal- ius severus. matia 1 and Pannonia. The latter, by his nearness to Rome, and the rapidity of his marches gained the advance of his rivals, and was hailed emperor by the people : the faithless Prseto- rians submitted without a blow, and were disbanded ; and the senate pronounced a sentence of deposition and death against the terror stricken Julianus, whose anxious and precarious reign of sixty-five days was terminated by the hands of the common executioner. 20. While Severus, employing the most subtle craft and dissimil- ation, was flattering Albinus in Britain with the hope of being asso- rted with him in the empire, he rapidly passed into Asia, and after several engagements with the forces of Niger completely defeated them on the plains of Issus, where Alexander and Darius had long before contended for the sovereignty of the world. Such was the 1. Dalinbtici, anciently a part of Illyr’ icum, and now the most southern province ct the Austrian empire, comprises a long and narrow territory on the eastern shore of the Adriat' ie, After the division of the Roman provinces under Con'stantine and Thecdosius, DalmhlU oe same ^ue of the most important parts of 'he empire. Chat. I] ROMAN HISTORY. 2(ft duplicity of Severus, that even in the letter in which he announced the victory to Albinus, he addressed the latter with the most friendly salutations, and expressed the strongest regard for his welfare, while at the same time he intrusted the messengers charged with the letter to desire a private audience, and to plunge their dagger to the heart of his rival. It was only when the infamous plot was detected that Albinus awoke to the reality of his situation, and began to make vigorous preparations for open war. This second contest for empire was decided against Albinus in a most desperate battle near Lyons, 1 in Gaul, (A. D. 197,) where one hundred and fifty thousand Homans are said to have fought on each side. Albinus was overtaken in flight, and slain ; and many senators and eminent provincials suf fered death for the attachment which they had shown to his cause. 21. After Severus had obtained undisputed possession of the em pire, he governed with mildness : considering the Roman world a> his property, he bestowed his care on the cultivation and improve- ment of so valuable an acquisition, and after a reign of eighteen years he could boast, with a just pride, that he received the empiro oppressed with foreign and domestic wars, and left it established in profound, universal, and honorable peace. In his last illness, Severus deeply felt and acknowledged the littleness of human greatness. Born in an African town, fortune and merit had elevated him from an humble station to the first place among mankind ; and now, satiated with power, and oppressed with age and infirmities, all his pros- pects in life were closed. “ He had been all things,” he said, “ ana all was of little value.” Calling for the urn in which his ashes were to be inclosed, he thus moralized on his decaying greatness. “ Little urn, thou shalt soon hold all that will remain of him whom the world could not contain.” He died at York, 2 in Britain, (A. D. 211,) having been called into that country to repress an insurrection of the Caledonians. 1. Lyons , called by the Romans Lugdiinum, is situated at 'he confluence of the river* Rhone and Saone. The Roman town was at the foot of a bill on the western bank of tue Rho^e. Caesar conquered the place from the Gauls: Augustus made it the’ capital of a prov- ince; and, being enlarged by succeeding emperors, it became one of the principal cities of the Roman world. It is now the principal manufacturing town of France, containing a population of about two hundred thousand inhabitants. ( Map No. XIII ) 2. York , called by the Romans Ebor' acum, is situated on the river Ouse, one hundred and seventy miles N. N. west from London. It was the capital «f the Roman province, and next to London, the most important city in the island. It was successively the residence of Adrian, fcevtrus, G6ta and Caracal' la, Constan' tius Chlorus, Con' stantine the Great, &c The modern city can still shew many vestiges of Roman power and magnificence Constai tiu3 Chlorua, the father of Con stantine the Great, died here. (Map No. XVI.) H 210 MODERN HISTORY. [Part It 2 2. Severus had left the empire to his two sons Caracal' la and x. Cara- Geca, but the former, whose misconduct had imbittered oil la. the last days of his father, soon after his accession slew his brother in his mother’s arms. His character resembled that of Com 'modus in cruelty, but his extortions were carried to a far greater extent. After the Roman world had endured his tyranny nearly si-x years, he was assassinated while in Syria, at the instiga- xi. macri'- tion of Macrinus, the captain of the guards, (A. I). 217,) nus. who succeeded to the throne ; but after a reign of four- teen months, Macrinus lost his life in the struggle to retain his pc ver. 23. Bassianus, a youth of fourteen, and a cousin of Caracal' la, had been consecrated, according to the rites of the Syrian worship, to the ministry of high-priest of the sun ; and it was a rebellion of the Eastern troops in his favor that had overthrown the power of Macrinus. Although these events occurred in distant Syria, yet the Koman senate and the whole Koman world received with servile xii. elaga- submission the emperors whom the army successively ba' lus. offered them. As priest of the sun Bassianus adopted the title of Elagabalus, a and on his arrival at Rome established there the Syrian worship, and compelled the grandest personages of the State and the army to officiate in the temple dedicated to the Syrian god. 24. The follies, gross licentiousness, boundless prodigality, and cruelty of this pagan priest and emperor, soon disgusted even the licentious soldiery, the only support of his throne. He established a senate of women, the subject of whose deliberations were dress and etiquette ; he even copied the dress and manners of the female sex, and styling himself empress, publicly invested one of his officers with the title of husband. His grandmother Moe' sa, foreseeing that the Roman world would not long endure the yoke of so contemptible a monster, artfully persuaded him, in a favorable moment of fond ness, to adopt for his successor his cousin Alexander Severus ; yet goon after, Elagabalus, indignant that the affections of the army were bestowed upon another, meditated the destruction of Severus, but was himself massacred by the indignant Praetorians, who dragged his mutilated corpse through the city, and threw it into the Tiber, while the senate publicly branded his name with infamy. (A. D. 222.) a. A name derived from two Syrian words, ela a god, and gabal to form : — signifying the forming, or plastic god, — a proper and even happy epithet for the sun.— Gibbon, i. 83. ROMAN HISTORY. 211 Chap. I] 25. A t th/i ag& of seventeen Alexander Severus was raised to the throne by the Praetorian guards. He proved to be a xm ALEX _ wise, energetic, and virtuous prince : he relieved the ander se- provinces of the oppressive taxes imposed by his prede- VERUS ' cessors, and restored the dignity, freedom, and authority of th® senate; but his attempted reformation of the military order served only to inflame the. ills it was meant to cure. His administration of the government was an unavailing struggle against the corruptions of the age ; and after many mutinies of his troops his life was at length sacrificed, after a reign of fourteen years, to the fierce discon- tents of the army, whose power had now increased to a height so dangerous as to obliterate the faint image of laws and liberty, and introduce the sway of military despotism. Max' imin, the instigator of the revolt, was proclaimed emperor. SECTION III. ROMAN HISTORY FROM THE ESTABLISHMENT OF MILITARY DESPOTISM, AFTER THE MURDER OF ALEXANDER SEVE' RUS, A. D. 235, TO THE SUBVERSION OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE OF THE ROMANS, A. D. 47 6 = 241 YEARS. ANALYSIS. 1. Earliest account of the Thracian Max' imin. — 2. His origin. His history down to the death of Alexander Sev6rus. [The Goths. Alani.]— 3. Max' imin proclaimed emperor by the army. Commencement of his reign. — 4. Gor’ dian. Pupie' nus and Balbi'- nus. Death of Max’ imin. The Second Gor' dian. — 5. German and Persian wars. — 6. Sapor, the Persian king. Death of Gor' dian, and accession of Philip the Arabian. — 7. Insurrections and rebellions. De' cius proclaimed emperor, and death of Philip. [Verona.] — 8. War with the Goths, and death of D6cius. Reign of Gallus AEmilia' nus. Accession of Vale' rian. — 9. Worthy character of Valerian. Ravages of the barbarians. Spain, Gaul, and Britain. The Persians. [Tbe Franks. The Aleman' ni. Lombardy.] — 10. Valerian taken prisoner. His treatment. Gallie nus. — 11. Odenatus, prince of Palmyra. He routs the Persians. [Palmyra.] — 12. Numerous competitors for the throne. — 13. Death of Gallie nus, and accession of Claudius. [Milan.] — 14. Character, reign, and death of Claudius. [Sir’mium.] — 15. Quin- iiliis. — 16. Th6 reign of Aure' lian. His wa-s. Zenobia. Character of Aurelian. Ilia death. [Tibur. Byzan' tium.] — 17. An interregnum. Election of Tacitus. His reign and death. [Bos porus.] — 18. Flo’ rian. The reign, and death, of Probus. [Sarmatia. Van'- dais ] — 19. Reign of Ca' rus. His character, and death. Numb’ rian and Cari’ nus. — 20. Su- perstit on, and retreat, of the Roman army in Persia. Character of Carinus, and death of Numerian.~21. Carinus marches against Diocletian. His death. Diocle' tian acknowledged emperor. His treatment of the vanquished. 22. The reign of Diocletian, an important epoch. [Copts and Abyssmians.] — 23. Division of the imperial authority. — 24. The rule of Maxim' ian. [Nicomedia.] Of his colleague Constan’ tius. Countries ruled by Diocletian, and his colleague Galerius. — 25. Important events of the re,gn of DioclHian. The insurrection in Britain. — 26. Revolt in Egypt and northern Africa. [Bukins and Cop' tos. The Moors._ -27. The war with Persia. [Antioch, 212 MODERN HISTORY. [PARf II Kurdistan. ]--23. Persecut sn of the Christians. Diocletian’s edict against thtan. — 29. Results, and effects of this persecution. — 30. Diocletian and Maxim' ian lay down the sceptre, and retire to private life. Gale' rius and Constan’ tius acknowledged sovereigns. Discord and con- fusion. — 31. Death of Constan’ tius. Con' stantine proclaimed emperor. Six competitors for the throne. Death of Gal6rius. — 32. Conversion of Con' stantine, and triumph of Christianity. — 33. Most important events in the reign of Con' stantine. The choice of a new capital. — 34. Removal of the seat of government to Byzan' tium, and the changes that followed. Con’ stan- tine divides the empire among his three sons and two nephews. His death. — 35. Sixteen years of Civil wars. Constan' tius II. becomes sole emperor. His reign of twenty-four years. Hig death. [The Saxons.] — 36. Julian the Apostate. His character. Hostility to the Christiana. —37. His efforts against Christianity. The result. — 38. His attempt to rebuild Jerusalem. — 39. Causes of the suspension of the work. — 40. Julian’s invasion of Persia. His death. — 31. The rief reign of Jo' vian. — 42. Valentin’ ian elected emperor. Associates his brother Va’ len3 with him. Final division of the empire. The two capitals. Rome. 43. Barbarian inroads. Piets and Scots. — 44. Death of Valentin' ian, and westward pro- gress of the Huns. The Vis' igoths are allowed to settle in Thrace. — 45. The Os' trogoths cross the Danube in arms. The two divisions raise the standard of war. Death of Valens. [Adrianople.] — 46. Gra' tian emperor of the West. Theodo’ sius emperor of the East. The Goths. Many of them settle in Thrace, Phrygia, &c. — 47. Death of Gratian. Valentin' ian II. His death. Theodosius sole emperor. Death of Theodosius. Division of the empire be- tween Hono' rius and Arca' dius. — 48. Civil wars. Al' aric the Goth ravages Greece, and then passes into Italy. [Julian Alps.] — 49. Honorius is relieved by Stil’ icho. [As' ta Pollen', tia.] Rome saved by Stil' icho. — 50. Raven' na becomes the capital of Italy. Deluge of bar barians. [Raven' na. Van' dais. Subvi. Burgun' dians.] — 51. Italy delivered by Stil' icho. [Florence.] — 52. Stil' icho put to death. Massacre of tho Goths, and revolt of the Gothic soldiers.— 53. Rome besieged by Al' aric. His terms of ransom. — 54. The terms finally agreed upon. Rejected by Honorius. [Tuscany.] Al' aric returns and reduces Rome.— 55. Pillage of Rome. Al'aric abandons Rome. His death and burial. — 56. The Goths withdraw from Italy. The Vis' igoths in Spain and Gaul. Saxons establish themselves in England. — 57. The Van' dais in Spain and Africa. Valentin’ ian III. Conquests of At'tila. [Andalusia. The Huns. Chalons. Venetian Republic.]— 58. Extinction of the empire of the Huns. Situ- ation of the Roman world at this period. Rome pillaged by the Van'dals, A. D. 455. — 59 Avi’tus. Majo' rian. — 60. Seve' rus. Van' dal invasions. Expedition against Carthage. — 61. Revolutionary changes. Demands of the barbarians, and subversion of the Western Empire. [Her' uli.] 1. ‘ Thirty-two years before the murder of Alexander Severus, the emperor Septim' ius Severus, returning from his Asiatic expe dition, halted in Thrace to celebrate with military games the birth- day of his younger son Greta. Among the crowd that flocked to behold their sovereign was a young barbarian of gigantic stature, who earnestly solicited, in his rude dialect, that he might be allowed to contend for the prize of wrestling. As the pride of i, max imin. ( j- gc -pj* Iie W ould h ave been disgraced in the overthrow of a Roman soldier by a Thracian peasant, he was matched with the stoutest followers of the camp, sixteen of whom he successively laid on the ground. His victory was rewarded by some trifling gifts, and a permission to enlist in the troops. The next day tLi happy bar- barian was distinguished above a crowd of recruits, dancing and ex- ulting after the fashion of his country. As soon as as he perceived that he had attracted the emperor’s notice, he ran up to his horse, Chap. LJ ROMAN HISTORY. 213 and followed Inm on foot, without the least appearance of fatigue, in a long and rapid career. “ Thracian,” said Severus, with astonish- ment, “ art thou disposed to wrestle after thy race ?” “ Most wil- lingly, sir,” replied the unwearied youth, and almost in a breadth overthrew seven of the strongest soldiers in the army. A gold collar was the pi ize of his matchless vigor and activity, and he was imme- diately appointed to serve in the horse-guards, who always attended on the person of the sovereign.’ a 2 Max'imin, for that was the name of the Thracian, was do- seen led from a mixed race of barbarians, — his father being a Goth, 1 and his mother of the nation of the Alani. 2 Under the reign of the first Severus and his son Caracal' la he held the rank of centurion ; but he declined to serve under Macrmus and Elagabalus. On the ac- cession of Alexander he returned to court, and was promoted to vari- ous military offices honorable to himself and useful to the nation, but, elated by the applause of the soldiers, who bestowed on him the Aames of Ajax and Hercules, and prompted by ambition, he con- spired agains't his benefactor, and excited that mutiny in which the latter lost his life. 3. Declaring himself the friend and advocate of the military order, 1. The Goths, a powerful northern nation, who acted an important part in the overthrow of the Roman empire, were probably a Scythian tribe, and came originally from Asia, whence they passed north into Scandinavia. When first known to the Romans, a large division of their nation lived on the northern shores of the Euxine. About the middle of the third century of our era they crossed the Dnies' ter, and devastated Dacia and Thrace. The emperor Decius lost his life in opposing them ; after which his successor Gal' lus induced them by money, to withdraw to their old seats on the Dnies’ ter. (See p. 215.) Soon after this period the Goths appear in two grand divisions ; — the Os' trogoths, or Eastern Goths, passing the Euxine into Asia Minor, and ravaging Bythin’ ia ; — and the Vis' igoths, or Western Goths, gradually pressing upon the Roman provinces along the Danube. About the year 375, the Huns, coming from the East, fell upon the Ostrogoths, and drove them upon the Vis' igoths, who were then living north of the Danube. A vast multitude of the latter were permitted by the emperor Valens to settle in Moe' sia, and on the waste lands of Thrace ; but being soon after joined by their Eastern brethren, they raised the standard of war, carried their ravages to the veiy gates of Constantinople, -and killed Valens in battle. (See p. 228.) It was Al' aric, king of the Vis’ igoths, who plundered Rome in the beginning of the fifth century. (See p. 231.) The Vie" i goths afterwards passed into Spain, where they founded a dynasty which reigned nearly thiee centuries, and was finally conquered by the Moors, A. D. 711. In the meantime the Os' trogoths had been following in the path of their brethren, and in the year 493 their great king Theod' ori' defeated Odoacer, and seated himself on the throne of Italy. (See p. 239.) The Gothic kingdom lasted only till the year 554, when it was overthrown by Nar' ses, the general of Justin' ian (See p. 241.) From this period the Goths no longer occupy a prominent place in history, except in Spain. 2. The Mhni, likewise a Scythian race, when first known occupied the country between the Volga and the Don. Being conquered, eventually, by the Huns, most of the Alans < noted with their conquerors, and proceeded with them tD invade the limits of th . Gothic empire of Italy. a. Gibbon, i. 96. 214 MODERN HISTORY. [Pakt n. Max' inin was unanimously proclaimed emperor by tlie applauding legions, who, now composed mostly of peasants and barbarians of the frontiers, knowing no country but their camp, and no science but that of war, and discarding the authority of the senate, looked upon themselves as the sole depositaries of power, as they were, in reality, the real masters of the Roman world. Max' imin commenced hi@ reign by a sanguinary butchery of the friends of the late monarch ; but his avarice and cruelty soon provoked a civil war, and raised up against him several competitors for the throne. 4. At first the aged and virtuous Gor' dian, pro-consul of Africa, was declared sovereign by the legions in -that part of the II. GOR' DIAN. ... . . , . _ . . , Roman world, but he persisted m refusing the dangerous honor until menaces compelled him to accept the imperial title. At Rome the news of his election was received with universal joy, and confirmed by the senate ; but two months after his accession he perished in a struggle with the Roman governor of Mauritania, who still adhered to Max' imin. Two senators of consular dignity, Pu- iii pupie- P^ nus > (sometimes called Max' imus) and Balbinus, were nus and then declared emperors by the senate ; and soon after, balbi nus. ]yj ax ' j m i nj -while on his march from Pannonia to Rome, was slain in his tent by his own guards. (A. D. 238.) Only a few iv. second days later both Pupienus and Balbinus were slain in gor' dian. a mutiny of the troops. The youthful Gor' dian, grand- son of the former Gor' dian, was then declared emperor. 5. During -these rapid changes in the sovereignty of the Roman world, the empire was involved in numerous foreign wars, which gradually wasted its strength and resources, and hastened its down- fall. On the north, the German nations, and other barbarian tribes, almost constantly harassed the frontier provinces ; while in the east the Persians, after overthrowing the Parthian empire', and establish- ing the second or later Persian empire under the dynasty of tha Sassan'idae, (A. D. 226,) commenced a long series of destructive wars against the Romans, with the constant object of drivhig the Latter from Asia. 6. At the time of the accession of the second Gor' dian to the sovereignty of the Roman empire, Sapor, the second prince- of the Sas' sanid dynasty, was driving the Romans from several c f their Asiatic provinces. The efforts of Gor' dian, who went in peison to protect the provinces of Syria, were partially successful but whil« Chap. I.] ROMAN HISTORY. 215 tlie youthful conqueror was pursuing his advantages, he was supplanted in the affections of his army by Philip the Arabian, the v PH1LlI> prefec !; or commander of the Praetorian guards, who caused the his monarch and benefactor to be slain, (A. D. 244.) ARABIAN - 7. It is not surprising that the generals of Philip were disposed to imitate the example of their master, and that insurrections and rebellions were frequent during his reign. At length a rebellion having broken out in Pannonia, Decius was sent to sup- press it, when he himself was proclaimed emperor by the fickle troops, and compelled, by the threat of instant death, to submit to their dictation. Philip immediately marched against De- cius, but was defeated and slain near Verona. 1 (A. D. 249.) 8. Several monarchs now succeeded each other in rapid succession. - Decius soon fell in battle with the Goths, (A. D. 251,) large num- bers of whom during his reign first crossed the Danube, and deso- lated the Roman provinces in that quarter. Gal' lus, a V ii. gal - general of Decius, being raised to the throne, concluded Lus * a dishonorable peace with the barbarians, and renewed a violent per- secution of the Christians, which had been commenced by Decius As new swarms of the barbarians crossed the Danube, the pusillani mous emperor seemed about to abandon the defence of VIIL ^ MILI the monarchy, when iEmilianus, governor of Pannonia a'nus. and Moe' sia, unexpectedly attacked the enemy and drove them back into their own territories. His troops, elated by the victory, pro- claimed their general emperor on the field of battle ; and Gal' lus was soon after slain by his own soldiers. In three months IX- V ale- a similar fate befel JEmilianus, when Valerian, governor RIAN - of Gaul, then about sixty years of age, a man of learning, wisdom, and virtue, was advanced to the sovereignty, not by the clamors of the army only, but by the unanimous’ voice of the Roman world. 9. Valerian possessed abilities that might have rendered his admin istration happy and illustrious, had he lived ; n times more peaceful, and more favorable for the display and appreciation of virtue ; but his reign had not only a most deplorable end, but was marked, through- out, with nothing but confusion and calamities. At this time tho Goths, who had already formed a powerful nation on the lower Dan- x. Verona , a large and flourishing Roman city of Cisalpine Gaul, still retains its ancient nama It is situated on both sides of the river Adige, sixty-four miles west from Venice. The great glory of Verona is its amphitheatre, one of the noblest existing monuments of the ancient Romans, and, excepting the Colosseum at Rome, the largest extant edifice of its class. U is supposed to have been capable of accommodating twenty thousand spectators. Maj No. XVIL) 216 MODERN HISTORY. [Past II ube and the northern coasts of the Black Sea, ravaged the Homan do minions on their borders, and penetrating into the interior of Greece, or Acliaia, destroyed Ar' gos, Corinth, and Athens, by fire and by the sword : the Franks, 1 who had formed a kingdom on the lower Rhine, began to be formidable : the Aleman' ni 2 broke through their boundaries, and advanced into the plains of Lorn' bardy 3 : Spain, Gaul, and Britain, were virtually torn away from the empire, and governed by independent chiefs; while in the East, the Persians, under their monarch Sapor, fell like a mountain torrent upon Syria and Cappadocia, and almost effaced the Roman power from Asia. 10. Valerian in person led the Roman army against the Persians, but, penetrating beyond the Euphrates, he was surrounded and taken prisoner by Sapor, who is accused of treating his royal captive with wanton and unrelenting cruelty, — using him as a stepping-stone when he mounted on horseback, and at last causing him, after nine years of captivity, to be flayed alive, and his skin to be stuffed in the form x. gallie- °f living emperor — dyed in scarlet _ in mockery of NUS - his imperial dignity, and preserved as a trophy in a temple of Persia. Gallienus, the unworthy son of Valerian, receiv- ing the news of his father’s captivity with secret joy and open in- difference, immediately succeeded to the throne. (A. D. 259.) 11. At the time when nearly every Roman town in Asia had sub- mitted to Sapor, Odenatus, prince of Palmyra. 4 who was attached 1. The Franks , or “ Freemen,” were a confederation of the rudest of the Germanic tribes, and were first known to the Romans as inhabiting the numerous islets formed by the mouth of the Rhine ; but they afterwards crossed into Gaul, and, in the latter part of me fifth century, under their leader Clovis, laid the foundation of the French monarchy. (See also p. 255.) 2. The Aleman ' ni , or “ all men,” that is, men of all tribes, were also a German confederacy, situated on the northern borders of Switzerland. They were finally overthrown by Clovis, aftei which they were dispersed over Gaul, Switzerland, and northern Italy. 3. Lorn' bardy embraced most of the great plain of northern- Italy watered by the Po and its tributaries. 4. Palmyra , The ancient “ Tadmor in the wilderness” built by king Solomon, (2. Chron. viii. 4,) was situated in an oasis of the Syrian desert, about one hundred and forty miles north-east from Damascus. The first notice we have of it in Roman history is at the com- mencement of the wars with the Parthians, when it was permitted to maintain a state of inde- pendence and neutrality between the contending parties. Being on the caravan route trom the coast of Syria to the regions of Mesopotamia, Persia, and India, it was long the principal em- porium of commerce between the Eastern and Western worlds — a city of merchants and fac- tors, whose wealth is still attested by the number and magnificence of its ruins. After the victories of Trajan had established the unquestionable preponderance of the Roman arms, i! became allied to the empire as a free State, and was greatly favored by Adrian and' the Anto- vines, during whose reigns it attained its greatest splendor. Odenatus maintained its glory and for his defeat of the Persians the Roman senate conferred on him the title of Augustus, and associated him with Galli6nus in the empire ; but his queen and successor, the famous Zenobia, broke the alliance with the imbecile Galli6nus, annexed Egypt t ing the present Sleswick and Holstein. (Map No. XVII.) The early Saxons were a nation of fishermen and pirates ; and it appears that after they had extended their depredations to the coasts of Britain and eastern and southern Gaul, numerous auxiliaries from the shores of the Baltic joined them, and, gradually coalescing with them into a national body, accepted the name and the laws of the Saxons. In the early part of the fifth century, the Saxons were converted .o Christianity by the Roman missionaries; and half a century later they had obtained a per- manent establishment ir Britain. Chap. I] HOMAN HISTORY. 225 provinces. While Constan' tius was sustaining a doubtful war in the East, his cousin Julian, whom he had appointed to the command of the Western provinces, with the title of Csesar, was proclaimed emperor by his victorious legions in Gaul. Preparations for civil war were made on both sides ; but the Roman world was saved from th^ calamities of the struggle by the sudden death of Constan' tius. (A. D. 361.) 36. Julian, commonly called the Apostate, on account of his relaps mg from Christianity into paganism, possessed many ami- XXIV able and shining qualities, and his application to business ju' lian thb. was intense. He reformed numerous abuses of his prede- APOSTATE * cessor, but, in the great object of his ambition, the restoration of ancient paganism, although he had issued an edict of universal toler- ation, he showed a marked hostility to the Christians, subjecting them to many disabilities and humiliations, and allowing their ene- mies to treat them with excessive rigor. 37. Trained in the most celebrated schools of Grecian philosophy at Athens, Julian was an able writer and an artful sophist, and, employ- ing the weapons of argument and ridicule against the Christians, he strenuously labored to degrade Christianity, and bring contempt upon its followers. In this effort he was partially successful ; but ere long the sophisms of the “ apostate emperor’’’ were ably refuted by St. Cyril and others, and the result of the controversy was highly favorable to the increase and spread of the new religion. 38. Not relying upon the weapons of argument and ridicule alone, Julian aimed what he thought would be a deadly blow to Christi anity, by ordering the temple of Jerusalem to be rebuilt, hoping thus to falsify the language of prophecy and the truth of Revela tion. But although the Jews were invited from all the provinces of the empire to assemble once more on the holy mountain of their fathers, and every effort was made to secure the success of the under taking, both by the emperor and the Jews themselves, the work did not prosper, and was finally abandoned in despair. 39 Most writers, both Christians and pagans, declare that the work was frustrated in consequence of balls of fire that burst from the earth and alarmed the workmen who were employed in digging the foundations. Whether these phenomena, so graveiy and abun dantly attested, were supernatural or otherwise, does not affect the authenticity of the prophecy that pronounced desolation upon Jeru ealem The most powerful monarch of the earth,, stimulated by 15 226 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL pride, passion, and interest, and aided by a zealous people, attempt- ed to erect a building in one of his cities, but found all his effortfi vain, because “ the finger of God was there.” a 40. During the same year in which J ulian attempted the re^ building of the temple, he set out with a large army for the con- quest of Persia. The Persian monarch made overtures of peace through his ambassadors ; but J ulian dismissed them with the decla- ration that he intended speedily to visit the court of Persia. II £ matched with great rapidity into the heart of the country, overcom- ing all obstacles, but being led astray in the desert' by treacherous guides, his army was reduced to great distress by want of provisions, and he was forced to commence a retreat. At length J ulian himself, in a skirmish which proved favorable to the Romans, was mortally wounded by a Persian javelin. He died the same night, spending his last moments, like Socrates, in philosophical discourse with his friends. (A. D. 363.) 41. In the death of Julian, the race of the great Con' stantine was er.cinct ; and the empire was left without a master and without an xxv . heir. In this situation of affairs, Jovian, who had held jo' vian. some important offices under Con' stantine, was pro- claimed emperor by the army, which was still surrounded by the Persian hosts. The first care of Jovian was to conclude a dishonor- able peace, by which five provinces beyond the Tigris, the whole of Mesopatamia, and several fortified cities in other districts, were sur- rendered to the Persians. On his arrival at An' tioch, Jovian re- voked the edicts of his predecessor against the Christians. Soon after, while on his way to Constantinople, he was found dead in his bed, having been accidentally suffocated, as was supposed, by the fumes of burning charcoal. (Feb. A. D. 364.) 42. After an interval of ten days, Valentin' ian, the commander of the body guard at the time of Jovian’s death, was botin' ian elected emperor. One month later he associated wit! and himself, as a colleague in the empire, his brother V alens va lens. U p 0n w R om R e conferred the government of the Eastern s. The probable explanation of the remarkable incidents attending the attempt of Julian to rebuild the temple, is, that the numerous subterranean excavations, reservoirs, &c., beneath and around the ruins of the temple, which had been neglected during a period of three hundred years, had become filled with inflammable air, which, taking fire from the torches of the work- men, repelled, by terrific explosions, those who attempted to explore the ruins. From a simi- lar cause terrible accidents sometimes occur in deeply-excavated mines . — See Oilman's Notes vn Gibbon Gibbon ^*6 1. ii. p. 447. Chap. I.J ROMAN HISTORY. 227 provinces, from the lower Danube to the coniines of Persia ; while he reserved for himself the extensive territory reaching fiom the extremity of G-reece to the wall of Scotland, and from the latter to the foot of Mount Atlas. This was the final division of the Roman world into the Eastern and Western Empire. The capital of the former was established at Constantinople, and of the latter at Milan. The city of Rome had long been falling into neglect and insignifi- cance. 43. Soon after the period at which we have now arrived, the inroads of the barbarian tribes upon the northern and u eastern frontiers of the empire became more vexatious barbarian and formidable than ever. The Piets and Scots 1 ravaged IN ^o ABS - Britain; the Saxons began their piracies in the Northern seas; the German tribes of the Aleman' ni harassed Gaul ; and the Goths crossed the Danube into Thrace ; but during the twelve years of Valentin' ian’s reign, his firmness and vigilance repulsed the barba- rians at every point, while his genius directed and sustained the feeble counsels of his brother Valens. 44. About the time of the death of Valentin' ian, (A. D. 375) Valens was informed that the power of the Goths, long the enemies of Rome, had been subverted by the Huns, a fierce and warlike race of savages, till then unknown, who coming from the East, and crossing the Don and the sea of Azof, had driven before them the European nations that dwelt north of the Danube. The Vis' igoths first solicited from the Roman government protection against their ruthless in- vaders ; and a vast multitude of these barbarians, whose numbers amounted to near a million of persons, of both sexes, and all ages, were permitted to settle on the waste lands of Thrace. 45. In the meantime the Os' trogoths, pressed forward by the un- relenting Huns, appeared on the banks of the Danube, and solicited the same indulgence that had been shown to their countrymen ; and when their request was denied they crossed the stream with arms in their hands, and established a hostile camp on the territories of th® empire. The two divisions of the Gothic nation now united their forces under their aRe general Frit' igern, and raising the standard 1. The Piets were a Caledonian rape, famed for their marauding expeditions into the country south of them. The Scots were also a Caledonian race, who are believed to have come, origin- ally, from Spain into Ireland, whence they passed over into Scotland. The genuine descend anta of the ancient Scotch are believed to be the Gads, or Highlanders, who speak the Ersa »r Gaelic language, which differs but little from the Irish. 228 MODERN HISTORY. [Piui II of war devastated Thrace, Mac' edon, and Tlies' saly, and carried their ravages to the very gates of Constantinople. In a decisive battle fought near Adrianople 1 the Romans were defeated, and Valens him- self was slain. (A. D. 378.) 46. Gratian, the son of Valentin' ian, and his successor in the Western empire, was already on his march to the aid of XXVIII ' 1 ' •' gra'tian Valens, when he heard the tidings of the defeat and AN ^ death of his unfortunate colleague. Too weak to avenge tiiEODo sics f a te, an( j conscious of his inability to sustain alcne the sinking weight of the empire, he chose as his associate Theodo eius, afterwards called the Great, assigned to him the government of the East, and then returned to his own provinces. Theodosius, bj his prudence, rather than his valor, delivered his provinces from the. xcourge of barbarian warfare. The Goths, after the death of their great leader Frit' igern, were distracted by a multiplicity of counsels ; and while some of them, falling back into their forests, carried their conquests to the unknown regions of the North, others were allowed to settle in Thrace, Phrygia, and Lydia, .where, in the bosom of des- potism, they cherished their native freedom, manners, and language, and lent to the Roman arms assistance at once precarious and dangerous. 47. Five years after the accession of Theodosius, Gratian perished xxix. val- in an attempt to quell a revolt of Max' imus, governor entin'ian it. 0 f "Britain, who had been joined by the legions of Gaul Valentin' ian Li., who succeeded Gratian, was driven from Italy by the usurper, and forced to take refuge in the court of Theodosius ; but the latter, marching into Italy, defeated and slew Max' imus, and restored the royal exile to his throne. (A. I) 388.) The murder of Valentin' ian by the Ga'ul Abrogas' tes, and the revolt which he excited, (A. I). 392,) again .called for the interference of Theodosius in the affairs of the West. His arms soon triumphed over all oppo- sition ; and the whole empire again came, for the last time, into the xxx hono'- hands one individual. (A. D. 394.) Theodosius died rius and four months after his victory, having previously bestowed arca digs. U p 0n youngest son, Honorius, the throne of Milan, and upon the oldest, Arcadius, that of Constantinople. 1. Adrianople , one of the most important cities of Thrace, stood on the left bank of the rivei Hebrus, now the Maritza, in one of the richest and finest plains of the world, one hundred and thirty-four miles north-west from Constantinople. It was founded by a»d named after tne em- peror Adrian, although in early times a small Thracian village existed ‘. v .ere. called Uskadama. It is now the second city in the Turkish empire, containing a population o not less than ona hundred thousand souls. (Map No. Vfl.) Chap. I] ROMAN HISTORY. 229 48- The civil wars ;hat followed the accession of the new empo Por were soon interrupted by the more important events of new bar- barian invasions. Scarcely had Theodosius expired, when the Gothic nation, guided by the bold and artful genius of AT aric, yYY T AL , A who had learned his lessons of war in the school of ric the Frit' igcrn, was again in arms. After nearly all Greece G0TH ' had been ravaged by the invader, Stil'icho, the able general of Honorius, came to its assistance ; but Al' aric evaded him by passing tntc Epirus, and soon after, crossing the Julian Alps, 1 advanced toward Milan. (A. D. 403.) 49. Honorius fled from his capital, but was overtaken by the speed of the Gothic cavalry, and obliged to shut himself up in the little fortified town of As' ta, 2 where he was soon surrounded and besieged by the enemy. Stil' icho hastened to the relief of his sov- ereign, and suddenly falling upon the Goths in their camp at Pollen'- tia, 3 routed them with great slaughter, released many thousand prison- ers, retook the magnificent spoils of Corinth, Athens, Argos, and Sparta ; and made captive the wife of Al' aric. The Gothic chief, undaunted by this sudden reverse, hastily collected his shattered army, and breaking through the unguarded passes of the Apennines, spread desolation nearly to the walls of Home. The city was saved by the diligence of Stil' icho ; but the withdrawal of the barbarians from Italy was purchased by a large ransom. 50. The recent danger to which Honorius had been exposed at Milan, induced the unwarlike emperor to seek a more secure retreat in the fortress of Raven' na, 4 which, from this time to the middle of 1. Augustus divided the Alpine chain, which extends from the Gulf of Genoa to the Adriat- ic, in a crescent form, into seven portions; of which the Julian range, terminating in Illyi'- Icum, is the most eastern. 2. is' ta (now Asti) was on the north side of the river Tanarus, (now Tand.ro) in Liguria, twenty-eight miles south-east from Turin. 3. “The vestiges of Pollen' tia are twenty-five miles to the south-east of Turin.” ( Gibbon , ii. 221.) “The modern village of Pollcnza stands near the site of the ancient city.” — Cramer’# Italy, .28. 4. Raven’ na was situated on the coast of the Adriat' ic, a short distance below the mouths Of the ?o. A ’.though originally founded on the sea-shore, in the midst of marshes, in the days of Strabo tin marshes had greatly increased, seaward, owing to the accumulation of mud brought dow by the Po and other rivers. In the latter times of the republic it was the great naval station of the Romans on the Adriat’ ic. Augustus constructed a new harbor three miles from the old town, but in no very long time this was filled up also, and, “ as early as the fifth or sixth century of the Christian era, the port of Augustus was converted into pleasant gardens; end a lonely grove of pines covered the ground where the Roman fleet once rode at anchor,” {Gibbon, ii. 224.) But this very circumstance, ihough it lessened the naval importance, in*- c -sasixi the strength of the place, and the shallowness of the water was a barrier against larga ships of the memy. The only means of access inland was by a long and narrow causeway 230 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL the eighth century, was considered as the seat of government and the capital of Italy. The fears of Honorius were not without founda- tion ; for scarcely had AT aric departed, when another deluge of bar- barians, consisting of Vandals, 1 Suevi, 2 Burgun' dians, 3 Goths, and Alani, and numbering not less than two hundred thousand fighting men, under the command of Radagaisus, poured down upon Italy. 51. The Roman troops were now called in from the provinces for the defence of Italy, whose safety was again intrusted to the counsels and the sword of Stil' icho. The barbarians passed, without resist- ance, the Alps, the Po, and the Apennines, and were allowed by the wary Stil' icho to lay siege to Florence, 4 when, securing all the passes, he in turn blockaded the besiegers, who, gradually wasted by famine, were finally compelled to surrender at discretion. (A. D. 406.) The triumph of the Roman arms was disgraced by the execution of Radagaisus ; and one-third of the vast host that had accompanied him into Italy were sold as slaves. several miles in extent, over an otherwise impassable morass ; and this avenue might be easily guarded or destroyed on the approach of a hostile army. Being otherwise fortified, it was a place of great strength and safety ; and during the last years of the Western empire was the capital of Italy, and successively the residence of Honorius, Valentin’ ian, Odoacer, Theod' oric, and the succeeding Gothic monarchs. It is now a place of about sixteen thousand inhabitants, and is chiefly deserving of notice for its numerous architectural remains. (Map No. VIII.) 1. Van' dais , see p. 219. 2. The Suevi were a people of eastern Germany who finally settled in and gave their name to the modern Suabia. 3. The Burgun' dians — dwellers in burgs or towns — a name given to them by the more nomade tribes of Germany, were a numerous and warlike people of the Gothic or Van' dal race, who can be traced back to the banks of the Elbe. Driven southward by the Gep' idaa, they pressed upon the Aleman’ ni, with whom they were in almost continual war. They were granted by Honorius, the Roman emperor, the territory extending from the Lake of Geneva to the junction of the Rhine with the Moselle, as a reward for having sent him the head of the usurper Jovinus. A part of Switzerland and a large portion of eastern France belonged !*o their new kingdom, which, as early as the year 470, was known by the name of Burgundy. Their seat of government was sometimes at Lyons, and sometimes at Geneva. Continually sndeavoring to extend their limits, they were at last completely subdued, in a war with the Franks, by the son of Clovis, after Clovis himself had taken Lyons. Their name was for a long time retained by the powerful dukedom, afterwards province of Burgundy, now divided into several departments. 4. Florence , (anciently Florentia ,) is a city of central Italy on the river Arno, (anciently Arnus,) one hundred and eighty-seven miles north-west from Rome. It owes its lirst distinction to Sylla, who planted in it a Roman colony. In the reign of Tibbrius it was one of the principal cities ot Italy. In 541 it was almost wholly destroyed by Totila, king of the Goths, but was restored bj Charlemagne, after which it was, for a long time, the chief city of one of the most famous of the Italian republics. It is now the capital of the grand-duchy of Tuscany , which comprises the northern part of ancient Etruria. With a population of one hundred thousand, it bears tho aspect of a city filled with nobles and their domestics — a city of bridges, churches, and palaces It has produced more celebrated men than any other city of Italy, or perhaps of Europe among whom may be specified Dan' te, Petrarch, Boccacio, Lorenzo de Medici, Galileo Michael An' gelo. Macchiavelli.— the Pones Leo X and Xl n and Clement VII., VIII., and XI L, Chap. !.]• ROMAN HISTORY. 23 . 52. Two years after the great victory of Stil' iclio, that minister, wnose genius might have delayed the fall of the empire, was treach- erously murdered by the orders of the jealous and unworthy Hono- rius. The monarch had soon reason to repent of his guilty rashness. Adopting the counsels of his new ministers, he ordered a massacre of the families of the barbarians throughout Italy. Thirty thousand Gothic soldiers in the Roman pay immediately revolted, and invited Al' aric to avenge the slaughter of his countrymen. 53. Again Al' aric entered Italy, and without attempting the hopeless siege of Raven' na marched direct to Rome, which, during a period of more than six hundred years, had not been violated by the presence of a foreign enemy. After the siege had been protracted until the rigors of famine had been experienced in all their horror, and thousands were dying daily in their houses or in the streets for want of sustenance, the Romans sought to purchase the withdrawal of their invaders. The terms of Al' aric were, at first, all the gold and silver in the city, all the rich and precious movables, and all the slaves of bar- barian origin. When the ministers of the senate asked, in a modest and suppliant tone, “ If such, 0 King, are your demands, what do you intend to leave us ?” “ Your lives,” replied the haughty conqueror. 54. The stern demands of Al' aric were, however, somewhat re- laxed, and Rome was allowed to purchase a temporary safety by pay- ing an enormous ransom of gold and silver and merchandize. Al' aric retired to winter quarters in Tuscany, 1 but as Honorius and his ministers, enjoying the security of the marshes and fortifications of Raven' na, refused to ratify the treaty that had been concluded by the Romans, the Goth turned again upon Rome, and, cutting otl the supplies, compelled the city to surrender. (A. D. 409.) He then conferred the sovereignty of the empire upon At' talus, prefect of the city, but soon deposed him and attempted to renew his nego tiations with Honorius. The latter refused to treat, when the king of the Goths, no longer dissembling his appetite for plunder arid :e- venge, appeared a third time before the walls of Rome ; treason open id the gates to him, and the city of Romulus was abandoned to the licentious fury of the tribes of Germany and Scythia. 1. Tuscany , after the fall of the Western empire, successively belonged to the Goths ana Lombards. Charlemagne added it to his dominions, but under his successors it became in- dependent. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries it was divided among the famous repub- lics of Florence, Pisa, and Sienna : in 1531 these were reunited into a duchy which, in 1737, fell into the hands of the house of Austria. In 1801 Napoleon erected it into the kingdom of Etruria : in 1808 it was incorporated with the French empire ; and in 1814 it reverted to Austria. MODERN HISTORx. [Part IL 2 52 55. The piety of the Goths spared the churches and religious houses, for Al' aric himself, and many of his countrymen, professed the name of Christians ; but Rome was pillaged of her wealth, and a terrible slaughter was made of her citizens. Still AT aric was un- willing that Rome should be totally ruined ; and at the end of six days lie abandoned the city, and took the road to southern Italy. As he was preparing to invade Sicily, with the ulterior design of subju- gating Africa, his conquests Avere terminated by a premature death. (A. D. 410.) His body was interred in the bed of a small rivulet, a and the captives who prepared his grave were murdered, that the Romans might never learn the place of his sepulture. 56 After the death of Al'aric, the Goths gradually withdrew from Italy, and, a few years later, that branch of the nation called Vis' igoths established its supremacy in Spain and the east of Gaul. Toward the middle of the same century, the Britons, finally aban- doned by the Romans, and unable to resist the barbarous inroads of the Piets and Scots, applied for assistance to the Angles 1 and Saxons, warlike tribes from the coasts of the Baltic. The latter, after driv- ing back the Piets and Scots, turned their arms against the Britons, and after a long struggle finally established themselves in the island. 57. During these events in the north and west, the Van' dais, a Gothic tribe which had aided in the reduction of Spain, and whose name, with a slight change, has been given to the fertile province of Andalusia, 3 passed the straits of Gibraltar under the guidance of their chief Gen'- yyyTT seric, and, in the course of ten years, completed, in the valentin'- capture of Carthage, the conquest of the Roman prov- ian m. j nces 0 f northern Africa. (A. D. 439.) Honorius was already dead, and had been succeeded by Valentin' ian III., a youth xxxm on ty s ^ x y ears °f a ge. In the meantime At' tila, justly conquests called the “ scourge of God ” for the chastisement of of at tila. p uman race? p a q b ecom c the leader of the Hunnish* Hordes. He rapidly extended his dominion over all the tribes of Germany and Scythia, made war upon Persia, defeated Theodosks, L Angles. From them the English have derived their name. 2. Andalusia , so called from the Van' dais , comprised the four Moorish kingdoms of Sevide, Cor' dova, Jaen, and Granada. It is the most southern division of Spain. Trajan and the Senecas W3re natives of this province. {Map No. XIII.) 3. The Huns , when first known, in the century before the Christian era, dwelt on the western borders of the Caspian sea. The power of the Huns fell with At' tila, and the nation was soon after dispersed. The present Hungarians are descended from the Huns, intermingled with Turkish, Slavonic, and German races. a. The Buscniinus , a small stream that washes the walls of Consentia, now Cos emu. «'hap. I] ROMAN HISTORY. 233 the emperor of the East, in three bloody battles, and after ravaging Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece, pursued his desolating march west- ward into Gaul, but was defeated by the Romans and their Gothic allies in the bloody battle of Chalons. 1 (A. D. 451.) The next year the Huns poured like a torrent upon Italy, and spread their ravages over all Lombardy. This visitation was the origin of the Venetian republic, 2 which was founded by the fugitives who fied at the terror of the name of At' tila. 58. The death of the Hunnic chief soon after this inroad, the civil wars among his followers, and the final extinction of the empire of the Huns, might have afforded the Romans an opportunity of escap mg from the ruin which impended over them, if they had not been lost to all feelings of national honor. But they had admitted numer- ous bands of barbarians in their midst as confederates and allies ; and these, courted by one faction, and opposed by another, became, ere long, the actual rulers of the country. The provinces were pil- laged, the throne was shaken, and often overturned by seditions ; and two years after the death of At' tila, Rome itself was XXX iv. the taken and pillaged by a horde of Van' dais from Africa, van'dals. conducted by the famous Gen' seric, who had been invited across the Mediterranean to avenge the' insults which a Roman princess* 1 had received from her own husband. (A. D. 455.) 1. Ckblons (shah-long) is a city of France, on the river Marne, a branch of the Seine, ninety- five miles east from Paris, and twenty-seven miles south-east from Rheims. It is situated in the middle of extensive meadows, which were formerly known as the Catalaunian fields, ( Gibbon , iii. 340.) In -the battle of Chalons the nations from the Caspian sea to the Atlantic, fought together ; and the number of the barbarians slain has been variously estimated at from one hundred and sixty-two thousand to three hundred thousand. {Map No. XIII.) 2. The origin of Venice dates from the invasion of Italy by the Huns, A. D. 452. The city is built on a cluster of numerous small islands in a shallow but extensive lagoon, in the north- western part of the Adriat' ic, north of the Po and the Adige, about four miles from the main la id. It is divided into two principal portions by a wide canal, crossed by the principal bridge in the city, the celebrated Rialto. Venice is traversed by narrow lanes instead of streets, sob dom more than five or six feet in width ! but the grand thoroughfares are the canals ; and gondolas, or canal boats, are the universal substitute for carriages. Venice gradually became a wealthy and powerful independent commercial city, maintaining its freedom against Charlemagne and his successors, and yielding a merely nominal a! leg' mce io the Greek emperors of Constantinople. Towards the middle of the fifteenth century the re- public was mistress of several populous provinces in Lorn' bardy, — of Crete and Cyprus— of the greater part of southern Greece, and most of the isles of the Aegean sea ; and it continued to engross the principal trade in Eastern products, till the discovery of a route to India by the Cape of Good-Hope turned this traffic into a new channel. From this period Venice rapidly declined. Stripped of independence and wealth, she now enjoys only a precarious existence, and is slowly sinking into the waves from which she arose. {Map No. VIII.) a. Eudox’ia, the widow of Valentin' ian III., had teen compelled to marry Max' imus, the murderer, and successor in the empire, of her late husband, and it was she who nvited th« Van' dal chisf to avenge her wrongs. 234 MODERN HISTORY. [Pabt IL 59. After the withdrawal of the Van' dais, which occurred the year of the death of Valentin' ian III., Av' itus, a Gaul, was installed xxxv Emperor by the influence of the gentle and humane av'itus. Theod'oric, king of the Vis' igoths ; but he was soon de- majo rian. p 0ge( j ky Ric' i merj the Gothic commander of the barba- rian allies of the Romans. (A. D. 456.) The wise and beneficent Majorian was then advanced to the throne byRic'imer; but his virtues were not appreciated by his subjects; and a sedition of the troops compelled him to lay down the sceptre after a reign of four years. (A. D. 431.) 60. Ric' imer then advanced one of his own creatures, Severus, to xxxvi. the nominal sovereignty; but he retained all the powers sev£rus. of state in his own hands. Annually the Van' dais from Africa, having now the control of the Mediterranean, sent out from Carthage, their seat of empire, piratical vessels or fleets, which spread desolation and terror over the Italian coasts, and entered at will nearly every port in the Roman dominions. At length applica- tion for assistance was made to Leo, then sovereign of the Eastern empire, and a large armament was sent from Constantinople to Car- thage. But the aged Gen' seric eluded the immediate danger by a truce with his enemies, and, in the obscurity of night, destroyed by fire almost the entire fleet of the unsuspecting Romans. 61. Amid the frequent revolutionary changes that were occurriog in the sovereignty of the Western empire, a Roman freedom and dig- nity were lost in the influence of the confederate barbarians, who formed both the defence and the terror of Italy. As the power of the Romans themselves declined, their barbarian allies augmented their demands and increased their insolence, until they finally insisted, with arms in their hands, that a third part of the lands of Italy should be divided among them. Under their leader Odoacer, a chief of the barbarian tribe of the Her' uli, 1 they overcame the little re- 1. Of all the barbarians who threw themselves on the ruins of the Roman empire, it is most difficult to trace the origin of the Her' uli. Their names, the only remains of their language, arc Gothic ; and it is believed that they came originally from Scandinavia. They were a fierce people, who disdained the use of armor: their bravery was like madness : in war they showed no pity for age, nor respect for sex or condition. Among themselves there was the samo 'crocity : the sick and the aged were put to death at their own request, during a solemn festi- val ; and the widow hung herself upon the tree which shadowed her husband’s tomb. The Her' uli, though brave and formidable, were few in number, claiming to be mostly of royal olood ; and they seem not so much a nation, as a confederacy of princes and nobles, bound by in oath to live and die together with their arms in their hands. ( Gibbon , iii. 8 ; and Note, 495-6.) a. The remaining sovereigns of the Western empire, down to the time of its subversion «rere Anthemius, Olyb' rius, Glyceius, Nepoa, and Augus’ tulus. Chat I.] ROMAN HISTORY - 235 sistance that was offered them ; and the conqueror, abolishing the im- perial titles of Caesar and Augustus, proclaimed him- A ° ' A XXXVII. SUB- self king of Italy. (A D. 476.) The Western em- version of pire of the Romans was subverted : Roman glory had THE WEST * passed away : Roman liberty existed only in the remem- ERN EMriRE * orance of the past : the rude warriors of Germany and Scythia po»' messed the city of Romulus ; and a barbarian occupied the palaea of tbs (ksaars ■wHJJJBiJttJN tllfelUtiX [Part a CHAPTER II. HISTORY OF THE MIDDLE AGES: ^EXTENDING FROM THE OVERTHROW OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE OF THE ROMANS A. D. 4*76, TO THE DISCOVERT OF AMERICA, A. D. 1492 = 1016 YEARS, SECTION I. GENERAL HISTORY, FROM THE OVERTHROW OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE OK THE ROMANS, TO THE BEGINNING OF THE TENTH CENTURY : = 424 YEARS. ANALYSIS. I. Introductory. The period embraced in the Middle Ages.— 2. Unln* structive character of its early history. At what period its useful history begins.— 3. Extent of the barbarian irruptions. The Eastern Roman empire. Remainder of the Roman vorld. — 4. The possessions of the conquerors toward the close of the sixth century. The change* wrought by them. Plan of the present chapter. 5. The Monarchy of the Her' uli. Its overthrow. — 6. Monarchy of the Os' j f.dgoths. Theod' oric. Treatment of his Roman and barbarian subjects. — 7. General prosperity of his reign. Extent of his empire. The Os' trogoth and Vis' igoth nations again divided. — 8. The successors of Theod’ oric. The emperor of the East. -9. The era of Justin' ian. State. of the kingdom, Persian war. — 10. Justin’ ian’s armies. Absence of military spirit among the people. — 11. Af- rican war. First expedition of Belisarius, and overthrow of the kingdom of the Van’ dais. Fate of Gel' imer. His Van' dal subjects. — 12. Sicily subdued. Belisarius advances into Italy. Besieged in Rome. — 13. The Gothic king Vit'iges surrenders. Final reduction of Italy by Nar' ses. — 14. Second war with Persia. Barbarian invasion repelled by Belisarius. Mournful fate of Belisarius. Death and character of Justin' ian. — 15. His reign, why memorable. Its brightest ornament. Remark of Gibbon. History of the “Pandects and Code.” — 16. Subse- quent history of the Eastern empire. Invasion of Italy by the Lombards. — 17. The Lombard monarchy. Its extent and character. — 18. Period of general repose throughout Western Europe. Events in the East. — 19. The darkness that rests upon European history at this period. Remark of Sismondi. The dawning light from Arabia. 20. The Saracen Empire. History of the Arabians. — 21. Ancient religion of the Arabs. Re- ligious toleration in Arabia. [Judaism. The Magian idolatry.] — 22. Mahomet begins to preach a new religion. — 23. The declared medium of divine communication with him. Declared origin of the Koran. — 24. The materials of the Koran. Chief points of Moslem faith. Punishment of the wicked. The Moslem paradise. Effects of the predestinarian doctrine of Mahomet. Practical part of the new religion. Miracles attributed to Mahomet. [Mecca.] — 25. Beginning of Mahomet’s preaching. The Hegira. — 26. Mahomet at Medina. [Medina.] Progress of the new religion through out. all Arabia. [Mussulman ] — 27. The apostasy that followed Mahomet’s death. Restoration of religious unity. — 28. Saracen conquests in Persia and Syria. [Saracens. Bozrah.] — 29. Con- quest of all Syria. [Ernes' sa. Baalbec. Yermouk. Aleppo.] — 30. Conquest of Persia, and expiration of the dynasty of the Sassan' idle. [Cad6siah. Review of Persian History.] — 31. Conquest of Egypt. Destruction of the Alexandrian library. — 32. Death of Omar. Caliphate of Othman.— 33. Military events of the reign of Othman. [Rhodes. Tripoli.] Othman’s suc- cessors. Conquest of Carthage, and all northern Africa — 34. Introduction of the Saracens into Spain. — 35. Defeat of Roderic, and final conquest of Spain. [Guadal6te. Guadalquiver. Meri da.] — 36 Ha~i*p>r encroachments in Gaul. Inroad of Abdelrahman. [The Pyrenees.''— 37. Over MIDDLE AGES. 237 Chap. ILJ throw of the Saracen hosts by Charles Martel. Importance of this victory. [Tours. Poictiers.J —38. The Eastern Saiacens at this period. [Hindostan.] Termination of the civil power of the central caliphate.— 39. The power that next prominently occupies the field of history. 40. Momarchy of the Franks: its origin. [Tournay. Cambray. Terouane. Colcgne.] Clovis. Extent of his monarchy. [Soissons. Paris.]— 41. Religious character of Clovis. His barbarities. — 42. The descenlants of Clovis. Royal murders. Regents Charles Martel. Pepin, the first monarch of the Carlovingian dynasty. [Papal authority.]— 43. The reign, and the character, of Pepin. His division of the kingdom. — 44. First acts of the reign of Charle- magne. [The Loire.] The Saxons. Motives that led Charlemagne to declare war against them. [The Elbe.] — 45. His first irruption into their territory. [Weser.] History of Witikind. Saxon rebellion. Changes produced by these Saxon wars. — 46. Causes of the war with the Lombards. Overthrow of the Lombard kingdom. [Geneva. Pavia.]— 47. Charlemagne’s expedition into Spain. [Catalonia. Pampeliina. Saragos’ sa. Roncesvalles.]— 48. Additional conquests. Charlemagne crowned emperor at Rome.— 49. Importance of this event. General character of the reign of Charlemagne. [Aix-ia-Chapelle.] His private life. His cruelties. Concluding estimate.— 50. Causes that led to the division of the empire of Charlemagne.— 51. Invasion of the Northmen. — 52. Ravages of the Hungarians. The Saracens on the Mediterranean coasts. Changes, and increasing confusion, in European society. The island of Britain. 53. English History. Saxon conquests. Saxon Heptarchy. — 54. Introduction and spread of Christianity. — 55. Union of the Saxon kingdoms. Reign of Egbert, and ravages of the Northmen.— 5G. The successors of Egbert. Accession of Alfred. State of the kingdom.— 57. Alfred withdraws from public life — lives as a peasant — visits the Danish camp. — 58. Defeats the Danes, and overthrows the Danish power. Defence of the kingdom. — 59. Limited sov- ereignty of Alfred. Danish invasion under Hastings. The Danes withdraw. Alfred’s power at the time of his death.— 60. Institutions, character, and laws, of Alfred. 1. The “Middle Ages,” to which it is impossible to fix accurate limits, may be considered as embracing that dark and j INTR0 . gloomy period of about a thousand years, extending from ductory. the fall of the Western empire of the Romans nearly to the close of the fifteenth century, at which point we detect the dawn of mod- ern civilization, and enter upon the clearly-marked outlines of modern history. a 2. The history of Europe during several centuries after the over- throw of the Western Roman empire offers little real instruction to repay the labor of wading through the intricate and bloody annals of a barbarous age. • The fall of the Roman empire had carried away with it ancient civilization ; and during many generations, the elements of society which had been disruptured by the surges of barbarian power, continued to be widely agitated, like the waves of the ocean, long after the fury of the storm has passed. It is only when the victors and the vanquished, inhabitants of the same country, had become fused into one people, and a new order of things, new bonds of society, and new institutions began to be developed, that the useful history of the Middle Ages begins. 3. We must bear in mind that it was not Italy alone that was a. “ The ten centuries, from the fifth to the fifteenth, seem, in a general point of view, to con- ititate the period of the Middle Ages ."—Hal lam. M3DERN HISTORY. [Part II ^38 affected by the tide of barbarian conquest ; but that the storm spread likewise over Gaul, Spain, Britain, and Northern Africa ; while the feeble empire which had Constantinople for its centre, alone escaped the general ruin. Here the majesty of Borne was still faintly rep- resented by the imaginary successors of Augustus, who continued until the time of the crusades to exercise a partial sovereignty over the East, from the Danube to the Nile and the Tigris. The remainder of the Boman world exhibited one scene of general ruin * for wherever the barbarians marched in successive hordes, their route was marked with blood : cities and villages were repeatedly plundered, and often destroyed ; fertile and populous provinces were converted into deserts ; and pestilence and famine, following in the train of war, completed the desolation. 4. When at length, toward the close of the sixth century, the frenzy of conquest was over, and a partial calm was restored, the Saxons, from the shores of the Baltic, were found to be in possession of the southern and more fertile provinces of Britain : the Franks or Freemen, a confederation of Germanic tribes, were masters of Gaul : the Huns, from the borders of the Caspian Sea, occupied Pannonia ; the Goths and the Lombards, the former originally from northern Asia, and the latter of Scandinavian origin, had established themselves in Italy and the adjacent provinces ; and the Gothic tribes, after driving the Y an' dais from Spain, had succeeded to the sovereignty of the peninsula. A total change had come over the state of Europe : scarcely any vestiges of Boman civilization re- mained ; but new nations, new manners, new languages, and new names of countries were everywhere introduced ; and new forms of government, new institutions, and new laws began to spring up out of the chaos occasioned by the general wreck of the nations of the Boman world. In the present chapter we shall pass rapidly over the history of the Middle Ages ; aiming only to present the reader such a general outline, or framework, of its annals, as will aid in the earch we shall subsequently make for the seeds of order, and the first rudiments of policy, laws, and civilization, of Modern Europe, 5. After Odoacer, the chief of the tribe of the Her'uli, had con quered Italy, he divided one third of the ample estates of the nobles ii the mon- amon & followers ; but although he retained the gov- AitcHY of ernment in his own hands, he allowed the ancient forms the her uli. «> dministration to remain ; the senate continued to sit, as usual ; and after seven years the consulship was restored ; while Chap. aL] MIDDLE AGES. 239 none of the municipal or provincial authorities were changed. Odoacer made some attempts to restore agriculture in the provinces; but still Italy presented a sad prospect of misery and desolation. After a duration of fourteen years, the feeble monarchy of the Her' uli was overthrown by the Os' trogoth king, Theod' oric, who disregarding his plighted faith, caused his royal captive, Odoacer, to be assassinated at the close of a conciliatory banquet. (A. D. 493.) 6. Theod' oric, the first of the Os' trogoth kings of Italy, had been brought up as a hostage at the court of Constantinople. At times the friend, the ally, and the enemy of the imbecile 5 . in. mon- monarchs of the Eastern empire, he restored peace to ARCHr of Italy, and a degree of prosperity unusual under the THE os'tro- sway of the barbarian conquerors. Like Odoacer, he in- dulged his Roman subjects in the retention of their ancient laws language, and magistrates ; and employed them chiefly in the ad- ministration of government ; while to his rude Gothic followers he confided the defence of the State ; and by giving them lands which they were to hold on the tenure of military service, he endeavored to unite in them the domestic habits of the cultivator, with the ex- ercises and discipline of the soldier. 7. Theod' oric encouraged improvements in agriculture, revived the spirit of commerce and manufactures, and greatly increased the population of his kingdom, which, at the close of his reign, embraced nearly a million of the barbarians, many of whom, however, were soldiers of fortune and adventurers who had flocked from all the sur- rounding barbarous nations to share the riches and glory which Theod' oric had won. Theod' oric reigned thirty-three years ; and at the time of his death his kingdom occupied not only Sicily and Italy, but also Lower Gaul, and the old Roman provinces between the head of the Adriat' ic and the Danube. If he had had a son to whom he might have transmitted his dominions, his Gothic succes- sors would probably have had the honor of restoring the empire of the West ; but on his death, (A. D. 526) the two nations of the Os' trogoths and the Vis' igoths were again divided ; and the reign of the Great Theod' oric passed like a brilliant meteor, leaving no per- manent impression of its glory. 8. Seven Os' trogoth kings succeeded Theod' oric on the throne of Italy during a period of twenty-seven years. Nearly all met with a violent death, and were constantly engaged in a war with Fustin' ian, emperor of the East, who finally succeeded in reducing 240 MODERN HISTORY. [Pari II. Italy under his dominion. The reign of that monarch is the most brilliant period in the history of the Eastern empire ; and as it fol- lows immediately after the career of Theod'oric in the West, and embraces all that is interesting in the history of the period which it occupies, we pass here to a brief survey of its annals. 9. The year after the death of Theod'oric, Justin' ian succeeded iv the ^is unc ^ c Justin on the throne of the Eastern empire. era pf His reign is often alluded to in history 4 s the “ Era 0 * jnsTiN ian. j us ' tinian.” On his accession he found the kingdom torn by domestic factions; hordes of barbarians menaced the fron- tiers, and often advanced from the Danube three hundred miles into the country ; and during the first five years of his reign he waged an expensive and unprofitable war with the Persians. The conclusion of this war, by the purchase of a peace at a costly price, enabled Justin' ian, who was extremely ambitious of military fame, to turn his arms to the conquest of distant provinces. 10. Justin' ian never led his armies in person; and his troops con- sisted chiefly of barbarian mercenaries — Scythians, Persians, Her'uli, Van' dais, and Goths, and a small number of Thracians : the citizens of the empire had long been forbidden, under preceding emperors, to carry arms, — a short-sighted policy which Justin' ian’s timidity and jealousy led him to adopt: and so little of military spirit re- mained among the people, that they were not only incapable of fight- ing in the open field, but formed a very inadequate defence for the ramparts of their cities. Under these circumstances, with but a small body of regular troops, and without an active militia from which to recruit his armies, the military successes of Justin' ian are among the difficult problems of the age. 1 1 . Africa, still ruled by the Van' dais, first attracted the military ambition of Justin' ian, although his designs of conquest were con cealed under the pretence of restoring to the Van' dal throne its legitimate successor, of the race of the renowned Gen' seric. The first expedition, under the command of Belisarius, the greatest gen- eral of his age, numbering only ten thousand foot soldiers and five thousand horsemen, landed, in September 533, about five days’ jour- ney to the south of Carthage. The Africans, who were still called Ramans, long oppressed by their Yan'dal conquerors, hailed Belisa- rius as a deliverer; and Gel' imer, the Yan'dal king, who ruled over eight or nine millions of subjects, and who could muster eighty thou Chap Hi MIDDLE AGES. 241 sand warriors 1 of his own nation, found himself suddenly alone with his Van' dais in the midst of a hostile population. Twice Gel'imer was routed in battle; and before the end of November Africa was conquered, and the kingdom of the Van' dais destroyed. Gel'imer himself, having capitulated, was removed to Galatia, where ample possessions were given him, and where he was allowed to grow old in peace, surrounded by his friends and kindred, and a few faithful fol- io wcrs. The bravest of the Van' dais enlisted in the armies of Jus tin' ian ; and ere long the remainder of the Van' dal nation in Africa, being involved in the convulsions that followed, entirely disappeared 12. Justin' ian next projected the conquest of the Gothic empire of Italy, and its dependencies ; an* in the year 535 Belisarius land- ed in Sicily at the head of a small aimy of seven thousand five hun dred men. In the first campaign he subdued that island : in the second year he advanced into southern Italy, where the old Roman population welcomed him with joy, and the Goths found themselves as unfavorably situated as the V an' dais had been in Africa ; but, deposing their weak prince, they raised Vit'iges to the throne, who was a great general and a worthy rival of Belisarius. The latter gained possession of Rome, (Dec. 536,) where for more than a year he was besieged by the Goths ; and although he made good his de- fence, almost the entire population of the city in the meantime per ished by famine. 13. Vit'iges himself was next besieged in Raven' na, and was finally forced to surrender the place, and yield himself prisoner. (Dec. 539.) He was deeply indebted to the generosity of Justin' ian, who allowed him to pass his days in affluence in Constantinople The jealousy of Justin ian, however, having recalled Belisarius from Italy, in a few years the Goths recovered their sway ; but it was over a country almost deserted of its inhabitants. At length, in the year 552, Justin' ian formed in Italy an army of thirty thousand men, which he placed under the command of the eunuch Nar' ses, wh unexpectedly proved to be an able general. In the following year the last of the Os' trogoth kings was slain in battle, and the empire of Justin' ian was extended over the deserted wastes of the once fer- tile and populous italy. (A. D. 554.) 14. In the East, Justin' ian was involved in a second war with Chosroes, or Nashirvan, the most celebrated Persian monarch of the i. Gibbon, in. 63, says one hundred and sixty thousand; and Sismondi, Fall of the Romas Rmpire, i. 221, has the same number. See the co rrection in Milman’s Notes to G 5 bbon. L 16 MODERN HISTORY. £i-2 [Part II Sassanid dynasty. Hostilities were carried on during sixteen year?. 5 A. D. 540 — 556) with unrelenting obstinacy on both sides ; but after a prodigious waste of human life, the frontiers of the two empires remained nearly the same as they were before the war. When Jus- tin' iam was nearly eighty years of age he was again obliged to have recourse to the services of his old general Belisarius, not less aged than himself, to repel an invasion of the barbarians who had ad- vanced to the very gates of Constantinople. At the head of a small band of veterans, who in happier years had shared his toils, he drove back the enemy; but the applauses of the people again excited the jealousy and fears of the ungrateful monarch, who, charging hia faithful servant with aspiring to the empire, caused his eyes to be torn out, and his whole fortune to be confiscated ; and it is said that the general who had conquered two kingdoms, was to be seen blind, and lod by a child, going about with a wooden cup in his hand to so- licit charity. Justin' ian died at the age of eighty-thrqe, after a reign of more than thirty-eight years. (Nov. 565.) The character of Justin' ian was a compound of good and bad qualities ; for al- though personally inclined to justice, he often overlooked, through weakness, the injustice of others, and was in a great measure ruled during the first half of his reign by his wife Theodora, an unprin- cipled woman, under whose orders many acts of oppression and cruelty were committed. 15. The reign of Justin' ian forms a memorable epoch in the his- tory of the world. He was the last Byzantine emperor who, by his dominion over the whole of Italy, reunited in some measure the two principal portions of the empire of the Caesars. But his exten- sive conquests were not his chief glory : the brightest ornament of liis reign, which has immortalized his memory, is his famous compi- lation of the Boman laws, known as the “ Pandects and Code of Justin' ian.” “ The vain titles of the victories of Justin' ian,” says Gibbon, “are crumbled into dust: but the name of the legislator s inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument.” To a commission of ten emiment lawyers, at the head of which was Tribonian, Jus tin' ian assigned the task of reducing into a uniform and consistent code, the vast mass of the laws of the Roman empire; and after this had been completed, to another commission of seventeen, at the head of which also was Tribonian, was assigned the more difficult work of searching out the scattered monuments of ancient jurispru deuce, — of collecting and putting in order whatever was useful in MIDDLE AGES. 243 Chap. IL] the books )f former jurisconsults, and of extracting the true spirit of the laws from questions, disputes, conjectures, and judicial de- cisions of the Roman civilians. This celebrated work, containing the immense store of the wisdom of antiquity, after being lost during several centuries of the Dark Ages, was accidentally brought to light in the middle of the twelfth century, when it contributed greatly te the revival of civilization ; and the digest which Gibbon has made of it is now received as the text book on civil Law in some of the universities of Europe. 3 - 1G. The history of the Eastern or Greek empire, during several centuries after Justin' ian, is so extremely complicated, and its an- nals so obscure and devoid of interest, that we pass them by, for sub- jects of greater importance. Three years after the death of Justin' ian, Italy underwent another revolution. In the year 568, the whole Lombard nation, comprising the fiercest and bravest of the Germanic tribes, led by their king Alboin, and aided by twenty thousand Sax- ons, descended from the eastern Alps, and at once took possession of northern Italy, which, from them, is called Lombardy. The Lombard monarchy, thus established, lasted, under twenty-one kings, during a period of little more than two centuries. 17. As the Lombards advanced into the country, the inhabitants shut themselves up in the walled cities, many of which, y the after enduring sieges, and experiencing the most dread- lombard ful calamities, were compelled to surrender ; but the MONAROHy * Lombard dominion never embraced the whole peninsula. The islands in the upper end of the Adriat' ic, embracing the Venetian League, the country immediately surrounding Raven' na, together with Rome, Naples, and a few other cities, remained under the juris- diction of the Eastern or Greek emperors, or were at times inde- pendent of foreign rule. The Lombards were ruder and fiercer than the Goths who preceded them ; and they at first proved to the Ital- ians far harder task-masters than any of the previous invaders ; but the change from a wandering life exerted an influence favorablo to their civilization ; and their laws, considered as those of a barba- rous people, exhibited a considerable degree of wisdom and equality. 18. The period at which we have now arrived, towards the close of the sixth century, exhibits the first interval of partial repose' that had fallen upon Western Europe since the downfall of the Roman empire. Some degree of quiet was now settling upon Italy under a. Notes to Gibbon, iii. 151. 244 MODERN HISTORY [Part IL the rule of the Lombard kings : the Goths were consolidating their power in Spain : a stable monarchy was gradually rising in France, from the union of the Gallic tribes ; and the Saxons had firmly es tablished themselves in the south of Britain. The only events in the East that attract our notice consist of a series of wars between the Greek emperors and the Persians, during which period, if we ara to rely upon doubtful narratives which wear the air of fables, at one time all the Asiatic provinces of the Eastern empire were conquered by the Persians; and subsequently, the whole of Persia, to the frontiers of India, was conquered by the monarchs of the Eastern empire. Eventually the two empires appear to have become equally exhausted ; and when peace was restored (A. D. 628) the ancient boundaries were recognized by both parties. 19. But while a degree of comparative repose was settling upon Europe, a night of darkness, owing to the absence of all reliable documents, rests upon its history, down to the time of Charlemagne. “ A century and a half passed away,” says Sismondi, “ during which we possess nothing concerning the whole empire of the West, except dates and conjectures.” 3 - This obscurity lasts until a new and unex- pected light breaks in from Arabia ; when a nation of shepherds and robbers appears as the depository of letters which had been allowed to escape from the guardianship of every civilized people. 20. Turning from the darkness which shrouds European history in the seventh century, we next proceed to trace the remarkable rise and establishment of the power of the Saracens. In the parched. vi the sanc ty> and, i n great part, desert Arabia, a country saracen. nearly four times the extent of France, the hardy Arab, empire. 0 £ an or jgi na ] an( j xmmixed race, had dwelt from time immemorial, in a constant struggle with nature, and enjoying all the wild fieedom of the rudest patriarchal state. The descendants of Ishmael — the “wild man of the desert” — have always been free, and such they will ever remain ; an effect, at once, of their local position, and, as many believe, the fulfilment of prophecy; and although a few of the frontier cities of Arabia have been at times temporarily subjected by the surrounding nations,' Arabia, as a country, is the only land in all antiquity that never bowed to the yoke of a foreign conqueror. 21. The ancient religion of the Arabs was Sabaism, or star -worship which assumed a great variety of forms, and was corrupted by adora ticn of a vast number of images, which were supposed to have some a. S'smondi, Fall of the Roraau Empire, i. 258. Chap. II,] MIDDLE AGES. 245 mysteriom affinity to the heavenly bodies. The Arabs had seven temples dedicated to the seven planets : some* tribes exclusively re- vered the moon, others the dog star : Judaism 51 was embraced by a few tribes, Christianity by some, and the Magian idolatry 1 of Persia oy others. So completely free was Arabia, each sect or tribe being independent, that absolute toleration necessarily existed ; and numer- ous refugee sects that fled from the persecution of the Roman empe rors, found in the wild wastes of that country a quiet asylum. 22. About the beginning of the seventh century, Mahom' et 01 Mohammed, an Arabian impostor, descended from the Sabsean priests of Mecca, where was the chief temple of the Sabsean idola- try, began to preach a new religion to his countrymen. He repre- sented to them the incoherence and grossness of their religious rites, and called upon them to abandon their frail idols, and to acknowl- edge and adore the One true God, — the invisible, all good, and all- powerful ruler of the universe. Acknowledging the authenticity both of the Jewish scriptures and the Christian revelation, he pro- fessed to restore the true and primitive faith, as it had been in the days of the patriarchs and the prophets, from Adam to the Messiah. 23. Like Numa of old, Mahom' et sought to give to the doctrines which he taught the sanction of inspired origin and miraculous ap- proval ; and as the nymph Egeria was the ministering goddess of the former, so the angel Gabriel was the declared medium of divine communication with the latter. During a period of twenty-three 1. TLa Mdgian idolatry consisted of the religious belief and worship presided over by the Magia_ priesthood, who comprised, originally, one of the six tribes into which the nation of the Meac-s was divided. The Magi, or “ wise men,” had not only religion, but tl e higher branches of all learning also, in their charge ; and they practised different sorts of divmauon, astrology, and enchantment, for the purpose of disclosing the future, influencing the present, and calling the past to their aid. So famous were they that their name has been applied to all orders of magicians and enchanters. Zoroas’ ter, who is supposed to have lived about tha seventh century before Christ, reformed the Magian religion, and remodelled the priesthood ; and by some he is considered the founder of the order. The Magian priests taught that the gods are the spiritual essences of fire, earth, and water,— that there are two antagonistic powers in nature, the one accomplishing good designs, the other evil ; — that each of these shall subdue and be subdued by turns, for six thousand years, but that, at last, through the intervention of the still higher and Supreme Being, the evil principle shall perish, and men shall live in happiness, neither needing food, nor yielding a shadow. The great influence of the Magi is well illustrated in the book of Daniel, where Nebuchad- nezzar invoked the aid of the different classes of their order— magicians, astrologers, sorcerers, Chaldeans, and soothsayers. In the time of the Saviour, the Magian system was not extinct, as we have evidence of in the allusion made to Simon Magus, who boasted himself to be “ some great one.” ( Acts, viii. 9 — xiii. 6 &c.) a. By the term Tadaism i' meant the religious rites and doctrines of the Jews, a9 enjoined In the law of M *es. 246 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL years occasional revelations, as circumstances required, are said to cave been made to the Prophet, who was consequently never at a loss for authority to justify his conduct to his followers, or for author- itative counsel in any emergency. These revelations, carefully treas- ured up in the memories of the faithfui, or committed to writing by amanuenses, (for the Moslems boast that the founder of their religion could neither read nor write,) were collected together two years after the deatli of the Prophet, and published as the Koran , or Moham'- medan Bible. 24. The materials of the Koran are borrowed chiefly from the Jewish and Christian Scriptures, and from the legends, tradition*, and fables of Arabian and Persian mythology. The two great points of Moslem faith are embraced in the declaration — “ There is but one God, and Mahom' et is his prophet.” The other prominent points of the Moslem creed are the belief in absolute predestina tion, — the existence and purity of angels, — the resurrection of the body, — a general judgment, and the final salvation of all the dis- ciples of the Prophet, whatever be their sins. Wicked Moslems are 10 expiate their crimes during different periods of suffering, not to exceed seven thousand yoars ; but infidel contemners of the Koran are to be doomed to an eternity of woe. A minute and appalling description is given of the place and mode of torment, — a vast re- ceptacle, full of smoke and darkness, dragged forward with roaring noise and fury by seventy thousand angels, through the opposite ex- tremes of heat and cold, while the unhappy objects of wrath are tor- mented by the hissing of numerous reptiles, and the scourges of hideous demons, whose pastime is cruelty and pain. The Moslem paradise is all that an Arab imagination can paint of sensual felici- ty ; — groves, rivulets, flowers, perfumes, and fruits of every variety to charm the senses ; while, to every other conceivable delight, sev- enty-two damsels of immortal youth and dazzling beauty are assigned to minister to the enjoyment of the humblest of the faithful. Tho promise to every faithful follower of the Prophet, of an unlimited indulgence of the corporeal propensities, constitutes a fundamental principle of the Moham' medan religion. The predestinarian doctrine of Mahom' et led his followers towards fatalism, and exercised a marked influence upon their lives, and especially upon their warlike character ; for as it taught them that the hour of death is determined beforehand, it inspired them with an indifference to danger, and gave a permanent security to their bravery. Mahom' et promised to those Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 247 of hid followei s who fell in battle an immediate admission to the joys of paradise. The practical part of the new religion consisted of prayer five times a day, and frequent ablutions of the whole body, alms, fastings and the pilgrimage to Mecca'. 1 Tradition asserts that Mahom' et confirmed by miracles the truth of his religion ; and a mysterious hint in the Koran has been converted, by the traditionists, into a circumstantial legend of a nocturnal journey through the seven heavens, in which Mahom' et conversed familiarly with Adam, Moses, and the prophets, and even with Deity himself. 25. It was in the year 609, when Mahom' et was already forty years old, that he began to preach his new doctrine at Mecca. His first proselytes were made in his own family ; but by the people his pretensions were long treated with ridicule ; and at the end of thir- teen years he was obliged to flee from Mecca to save his life. (A. D. 622.) This celebrated flight, called the Hegira, is the grand era of the Moham' medan religion. 26. Repairing to Yatreb, the name of which he changed to Medi- na, 2 (or Medinet el Nebbi, the city of the Prophet,) he was there re- ceived by a large band of converts with every demonstration of joy ; and soon the whole city acknowledged him as its leader and prophet. Mahomet now declared that the empire of his religion was to be es- tablished by the sword : every day added to the number of his prose- lytes, who, formed into warlike and predatory bands, scoured the desert in quest of plunder ; and after experiencing many successes and several defeats, Mahom' et, in the seventh year of the Hegira, with scarcely a shadow of opposition, made himself master of Mecca, whose inhabitants swore allegiance to him as their temporal and spiritual prince. The conquest or voluntary submission of the rest of Arabia soon followed, and at the period of Mahom' et’s last pil- grimage to Mecca, in the tenth year of the Hegira, and the year of his death, a hundred and fourteen thousand Mussulmen 3 marched under his banner. (A. D. 632.) 1. Mecca, the birth-place of Mahom' et, and the great centre of attraction to all pilgrims of the Y. ..ham' medan faith, is in western Arabia, about forty miles east from the Red Sea. Formerly the concourse of pilgrims to the “ holy city” was immense; but the taste for pil- grimages is now rapidly declining throughout the Moham' medan world. 2. Medina is situated in western Arabia, one hundred miles north-east from its port of Yembo on the Red Sea, and two hundred and sixty miles north from Mecca. It is surrounded by a wall ibout forty feet high, flanked by thirty towers. It is now chiefly important as being in posses- sion of the tomb containing the remains of the prophet. The word Mussulman , which is used to designate a follower of Mahom' et, signifies, in Turkish language, “ a true believer.” 248 MODERN HISTORY. [Part H 27. Mabom'et died without having formed any organized govern ment for the empire which he had so speedily established ; and al- though religious enthusiasm supplied, to his immediate followers, the place of legislation, the Arabs of the desert soon began to relapse into their ancient idolatries. The union of the military chiefs of the Hrophet alone saved the tottering fabric of Moslem faith from dis- solution. Abubekr, the first believer in Mahom' et’s mission, was declared lieutenant or caliph ; and the victories of his general Khaled, surnamed “ the sword of God, over the apostate tribes in a few months restored religious unity to Arabia. *28. But the spirit of the Saracens 1 needed employment ; and pre parations were made to invade the Byzantine and Persian empires, both of which, from the long and desolating wars that had raged between them, had sunk into the most deplorable weakness. Khaled advanced into Persia and conquered several cities near the ruins of Babylon, when he was recalled, and sent to join Abu Obeidah, who had marched upon Syria. Palmyra submitted : the governor of Boz- rah 2 turned both traitor and Mussulman, and opened the gates of the city to the invaders ; Damascus was attacked, besieged, and finally one part of the city was carried by storm at the moment that an- other portion had capitulated. (Aug. 3d, 634.) Abubekr died the very day the city was taken, and Omar succeeded to the Caliphate. 29. The fall of Ernes'. sa, 3 4 and Baalbee 2 or Heliop'obs, soon fob 1. The word Saracen , from sara , “ a desert,” means an Arabian. 2. Bozrah, was fifty miles south from Damascus, and eighty miles north-east from Jerusalem. Though now almost deserted, the whole town and its environs are covered with pillars and other ruins of the finest workmanship. It is frequently mentioned in Scripture. In Jeremiah, xlix. 13, we read, “For I have sworn by myself, saith the Lord, that Bozrah shall become a desolation, a reproach, a waste, and a curse.” (Map No. VI.) 3. Ernes' sa , now Hems , a city of Syria, was on the eastern bank of the Oron’tes, now the Aaszy, eighty-five miles north-east from Damascus. It was the birth-place of the Roman em- peror Elagabalus. (Map No. VI.) 4. Baalbee , or Deli op ’ olis, — the former a Syrian and the latter a Greek word- -both me* i.ag fhe “ ci'y of the sun,” was a large and splendid city of Syria, forty miles north west from Da- mascus, and about thirty-five miles from the Mediterranean. The remains of ancient arch it eo ural grandeur in Baalbee are more extensive than in any other city of Syria, Palmyra excepted. It is believed that Baal-Ath, built by Solomon in Lebanon, (2. Chron. viii. 6,) was identical with Baal-Bec. While under the Roman power it was famed for its wealth and splendor ; and the terms of its surrender to the Saracens sufficiently attest its great resources at that period : — two thousand ounces of gold, four thousand ounces of silver, two thousand silken vests, and one thousand swords, besides those of the garrison, being the price demanded and paid to pre- serve it from plunder. Although repeatedly sacked and dismantled, yet the changes that have taken place in the channels of commerce are the principal causes of its decay ; and, judging from its decline during the lasy century, — from five thousand inhabitants to less than two hun- dred, — probably the day is not far distant when, like many other Eastern eities, it 'fa V lease i# be inhabited. (Map No. VI.) Chap. ILJ MIDDLE AGES. ‘24V lowed that of Damascus. Herac' lius, the Byzantine emperor, made one great effort to save Syria, but on the banks of the Y ermouk 1 his Dest generals were defeated by Khaled with a loss of seventy thousand soldiers, who were left dead on the field. (Nov. 636.) Jerusalem, after a siege of four months, capitulated to Omar, who caused the ground on which had stood the temple of Solomon to be cleared of its rubbish, and prepared for the foundation of a mosque, which still bears the name of the Caliph. The reduction of Aleppo 2 and An tioch, six years after the first Saracen invasion, completed the com quest of Syria. (A. D. 638.) 30. In the meantime the conquest of Persia had been followed up by other Saracen generals. In the same year that witnessed the battle of Yermouk, the Persians and Saracens fought on the plains of Cadesiah 3 one of the bloodiest battles on record. Seven thousand five hundred Saracens and one hundred thousand Persians are said to have fallen. The fate of Persia was determined, although the Persian monarch kept together some time longer the wrecks of his empire, but he was finally slain in the year 65 1 , and with him ex- pired the second Persian dynasty, that of the Sassan' idae. 4 31. Soon after the battle of Cadesiah, Omar intrusted to his lieu 1. The Yermouk , the Hieromax of the Greeks, is a river that empties into the Jordan from the east, seventy-five miles south-west from Damascus. (J\Iap No. VI.) 2. Aleppo , in northern Syria, is one hundred and ninety-six miles north-east from Damascus, and fifty-iive miles east from Antioch. It is surrounded by massive walls thirty-feet high and twenty broad. It was once a place of considerable trade, communicating with Persia and India by way of Bagdad, and with Arabia and Egypt by way of Damascus ; but the discovery of a passage to India by way of the Cape of Good Hope struck a deadly blow at its greatness, and it is now little more than a shadow of its former self. 3. Cadesiah was on the borders of the Syrian desert, south-west from Babylon. 4. The overthrow of the last of the great Persian dynasties is an appropriate point for a brief re* iew of Persian history. It has been stated that, after the overthrow of the Persian monarchy by Alexander the Great, Asia continued to be a theatre of wars waged by his ambitious successors, until Selei.cus, about the year 307 before our era, established himself securely in possession of the countries between the Euphrates, the Indus, and the Oxus, and thus founded the empire of the Seleuiida,, This empire continued undisturbed until the year 250 B. C., when the Parthians, under Ars&ces, revolted, and established the Parthian empire of the Arsac' idee. The Parthian ei. 'pire at tained its highest grandeur in the reign of its sixth monarch, Mithridates I., who carried his arms e\ en farther than Alexander himself. The descendants of Arsaces ruled until A. D. 22fi, a period of 480 years, when the last prince of that family was defeated and taken prisoner b 0 Ar' deshir Bab’ igan, a revolted Persian noble of the family of Sassan, who thus became the founder of the dynasty of the Sassan' idee. The period of nearly five centuries between the death of Alexander the Great and the reign of Ar’ deshir, is nearly a blank in Eastern history ; and what little is known of it is obtained from the pages of Roman writers. No connected authentic account of this period can be given. The dynasty of the Sassan' idae continued until the overthrow of the Persian hosts on the plains of Cadesiah, when the religion of Zoroaster gave place to the triumph of the Mussulman faith. L* 250 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL tenant the conquest of Egypt, then forming a part of the Byzantine or Greek empire. Peleu'sium, 1 after a month’s siege, opened to the Saracens the entrance to the country (638) ; the Coptic inhabitants of Upper Egypt joined the invaders against the Greeks ; Memphis, after a siege of seven months, capitulated ; Alexandria made a longer and desperate resistance, but at length, at the close of the year 640, the city was surrendered, a success which had cost the be- siegers twenty-three thousand lives. When Amru asked Omar what disposition he should make of the famous Alexandrian library, the caliph replied, “ If these writings agree with the Koran, they are use- less, and need not be preserved ; if they disagree, they are pernicious, and should be destroyed.” The sentence was executed with blind obedience, and this vast store of ancient learning fell a sacrifice to the blind fanaticism of an ignorant barbarians 32. Four years after the conquest of Egypt, the dagger of an as- sassin put an end to the life and reign of Omar. (Nov. 6th, 644.) Othman, the early secretary of Mahom' et, succeeded to the caliphate; but his extreme age rendered him poorly capable of supporting the burden laid upon him. Various sects of Moslem believers began to arise among the people : contentions broke out in the armies ; ana Othman, after a reign of eleven years, was poniarded on his throne, while he covered his heart with the Koran. (June 18th, 655.) 33. The conquest of Cyprus and Bhodes, 2 and the subjugation of the African coast as far westward as Tripoli, 3 wer-e the principal 1. Peleusium, an important city of Egypt, was at the entrance of the Peleusiac, or most east ern branch of the Nile. It was surrounded by marshes ; and the name of the city was derived from a Greek word signifying mud. Near its ruins stands a dilapidated castle named Tinek, the Arabic term for mire. 2. Rhodes , a celebrated island in the Mediterranean, is off the south-west coast of Asia Minor, ten miles south from Cape Volpe, the nearest point of the main land. Its greatest length is forty-five miles ; greatest breadth eighteen. The city of Rhodes, one of the best built and most magnificent cities of the ancient world, was at the north-eastern extremity of the island. The celebrated colossus of Rhodes, — a brazen statue of Apollo, about one hundred and five feet in height, and of the most admirable proportions, — has been deservedly reckoned one of the seven wonders of the world ; but the assertion that it stood with a foot on each side ths entrance to the port, and that the largest vessels, under full sail, passed between its legs, u an absurd fiction, for which there is not the shadow of authority in any ancient writer. The story originated with one Blaise de Vigenere, in the 16th century. ( Map No. IV.) 3. Tripoli , a maritime city of northern Africa, is west of the ancient Barca and Cyrcnaica, and about two hundred and seventy miles south from Sicily. a. Sismondi, ii. p. 18, distrusts the. common account of the loss of the Alexandrian library. Gibbon, vol. iii. p. 439, says, “For my own part, I am strongly tempted to deny both the fact and the consequences.” But since Gibbon wrote, several new Moham medan authorities have been adduced to s ipport the common version of the story. See Note to Gibbon, iii. 522 ; also Crichton s Arabia, i. 355. Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 25 i military events that distinguished the reign of Othman ; but tha political feuds and civil wars that distracted the reign of his suc- cessors, Ali and Moawiyah, suspended the progress of the western conquests of the Saracens nearly twenty years. 3 - Gradually, how- ever, the Saracens extended their dominion over all northern Africa ; and in the year 689 one of their generals penetrated to the Atlantic coast ; but Carthage, repeatedly succored from Constantinople, held out nine years longer, when being taken by storm, it was finally and utterly destroyed. From this epoch northern Africa became a section of the great Moham' medan empire. All the Moorish tribes, resembling the roving Arabs in their customs, and born under a similar climate, being ultimately reduced to submission, adopted the language, name, and religion, of their conquerors ; and at the present day they can with difficulty be distinguished from the Saracens. 34. Scarcely had the conquest of Africa been completed, when a Vis'igothic noble, irritated by the treatment which he had received from his sovereign, the tyrant Roderic, secretly despatched a ’mes- senger to Musa, the governor of Africa, and invited the Saracens into Spain. A daring Saracen, named Taric, first crossed the straits in the month of July, 710, on a predatory incursion ; and in the fol- lowing spring he passed over again at the head of seven thousand men and took possession of Mount Calpe, whose modern name of Gibraltar (Gibel-al-Taric, or Hill of Taric), still preserves the name of the Saracen hero. 35. When Roderic was informed of the descent of the Saracens, he sent his lieutenant against them, with orders to bind the pre- sumptuous strangers and cast them into the sea. But his lieutenant was defeated, and soon afterward, Roderic himself also, who had collected, on the banks of the Guadalete, 1 his whole army, of a hun- dred thousand men. Roderic, a usurper and tyrant, was hated and despised by numbers of his people ; and during the battle, which continued seven days, a portion of his forces, as had been previously . The Guadalete is a stream that enters the harbor of Cadiz, about sixty miles north-west from Gibraltar. The battle appears to have been fought on the plains of the modern Xeres de ta Frontera, about ten miles north-west from Cadiz. (Map No. XIII.) a. Mahom' et had promised forgiveness of sins to the first army which should besiege the Byzantine capital ; and no sooner had Moawiyah destroyed his rivals and established his throne, than he sought to expiate the guilt of civil blood by shedding that of the infidels ; but during ever summer for seven years (668—675) a Mussulman army in vain attacked the walls of Constantinople, and the tide of conquest was turned aside to seek another channel for Its entrance into Europe. 252 MODERN HISTORY. [Part 1 / arranged, deserted to the Saracens. The Goths were finally routed with immense slaughter, and Roderic avoided a soldier’s death only to perish more ignobly in the waters of the Guadalquiver :* but the victory of the Saracens was purchased at the expense of sixteen thousand lives. Most of the Spanish towns now submitted without opposition; Mer’ida, 2 the capital, after a desperate resistance, ca- pitulated with honor ; and before the end of the year 713 the whole of Spain, except a solitary corner in the northern part of the penin- sula, was conquered. The same country, in a more savage state, had resisted, for two hundred years, the arms of the Romans ; and it re- quired nearly eight hundred years to regain it from the sway of the Moors and Saracens. 36. After the conquest of Spain, Mussulman ambition began to look beyond the Pyrenees : 3 the disunited Gallic tribes of the Southern provinces soon began to negotiate and to submit ; and in a few .years the south of Prance, from the mouth of the Garonne to that of the Rhone, 4 assumed the manners and religion of Arabia, liut these narrow limits were -scorned by the spirit of Abdelrahman, the Saracen governor of Spain, avIio, in the year 732, entered Gaul at the head of a host of Moors and Saracens, in the hope of adding to the faith of the Koran whatever yet remained unsubdued of France or of Europe. An invasion so formidable had not been witnessed since the days of At' tila ; and Abdelrahman marked his route with fire and sword ; for he spared neither the country nor the inhabit- ants. 37. Everything was swept away by the overpowering torrent, until Abdelrahman had penetrated to the very centre of France, and 1. The river Guadalquiver (in English gau-d’l-quiv'-er, in Spanish gwad-al-ke-veer’), on which stands the cities Seville and Cor' dova, enters the Atlantic about fifteen miles norLh from Cadiz. Its ancient name was Bastis : its present appellation, Wady-al-kebir , signifying “ the great river,- is Arabic. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Mer' taa, the Augusta Emcr' ita of the Romans, whence its modern name, was founded oy AuguA is Caesar 25 B. C. It is in the soulh-weslern part of Spain, on the north bank of the Guadianti, and in the province of Estremadura. It is now a decayed town ; but the architee. tural remains of the power and magnificence of its Roman masters render it an object of great interest. It remained in the hands of the Saracens from 713 to 1228, when it opened its gates to Alphonso'IX., after his signal victory over the Moors; and from this period downward, it has been attached to the kingdoms of Castile and Leon. (Map No. XIII.) 3. The Pyrenees mountains, which separate Spain from France, extend from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean, a distance of about two hundred and seventy miles, with an average breadth of about thirty-eight miles. (Map No. XIII.) 4. For the territory thus embraced under the Saracen sway, see Map No. XIII. The Garonne, rising near the Spanish border, runs a north-westerly course. From its union with the Dor- dogne, forty-five miles from its entrance into the Bay of Biscay, It is called the Girondr — frow which tlie noted “ department of the Gironde” takes its name. r Czap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 2o3 pitched his camp between Tours 1 and Poictiers. 2 His progress had not been unwatched by the confederacy of the Franks, which, torn asunder by intrigues, and the revolts of discontented chiefs, now united to oppose the common enemy of all Christendom. At the head of the confederacy was Charles Martel, who, collecting his forces, met Abddrahman on the plains, of Poictiers, and, after sis days’ skirmishing, engaged on the seventh in that fearful battle that was to decide the fate of Europe. In the light skirmishing the archers of the East maintained the advantage ; but in the close onset of the deadly strife, the Herman auxiliaries of Charles, grasp- ing their ponderous swords with “ stout hearts and iron hands” stood to the shock like walls of stone, and beat down the light armed Arabs with terrific slaughter. Abdelrahman, and, as was reported by the monkish historians of the period, three hundred and seventy- five thousand a of his followers, were slain. The Arabs never re- sumed the conquest of Gaul, although twenty-seven years elapsed before they were wholly driven beyond the Pyrenees. Europe to this day owes its civil and religious freedom to the victory gained over the Saracens before Poictiers, by Charles, the Hammer b which shattered the Saracen forces. 38. About the time of the conquest of Spain, the Saracens made a second unsuccessful attempt to reduce the Byzantine capital ; but farther east they were more successful, and extended their do- minion and their religion into Hindostan', 3 and the frozen regions 1. Tours is situated between the rivers Cher and Loire, near the point of their confluence, one hundred and twenty-seven miles south-west from Paris. Tours was anciently the capital of the Turones, conquered by Caesar 55 B. C. After many vicissitudes it fell into the hands of the Plantagenets, and formed part of the English dominions till 1204, when it was annexed «o the French crown. {Map No. XIII.) 2. Poictiers , or Poitiers , (anciently called JJmonum , and afterward Pictavi,) sivly mile? ouih-west from Tours, is the capital of the department of Vienne. It is one of the most ancient towns of Gaul ; and the vestiges of a Roman palace, an aqueduct, and an amphithe atre, are still visible. Besides the celebrated defeat of the Saracens in 732, Poictiers is mem- orable for the signal victory obtained in its vicinity Sept. 19th, 1356, by an English army commanded by Edward the Black Prince, over a vastly superior French force commanded jy king John. (See p. 300. Map No. XIII.) 3. Hindi-tan', a vast triangular country beyond the Indus, and south of the Himalaya mountains- the country of the Hindoos — has no authentic early history, although there is evi- dence 1o show that it was one of the early seats of Eastern civilization. The incursion of Al- exander (325 B. C.) first made Hindostan' known to the European world. In the early part of the 11th century it was repeatedly invaded by the Moham' medans of Affghanistan, who, in a. This was probably the whole number of the Mussulman force, not the number slain. Sc« Crichton’s A *abia, i. 409, Note. b. Charles wielded a huge mace ; and the epithet of “ le martel,” or “ the Hammer” is ex pressive of tl e resistless force with which he dealt his blows. 254 MODERN HISTORY. [Part It of Tartary. But the animosities of contending sects, domestic broils, revolts, assassinations, and civil wars, had long been weakening the. central power which held together the unwieldy Saracen empire ] and before the close of the eighth century, the civil power of the central caliphate had broken into fragments, although the spiritual power of the religion of the Prophet still maintained its ascendancy in all the- regions that had once adopted the Moslem faith. 39. We have thus briefly traced the history of the rise and es tablishment of the civil power and the religion of the Saracens, and their progress until effectually checked by the arms of the Franks and their confederates on the plains of Poictiers. The power which thus obtrudes upon our view, as the bulwark and defence of Christ- endom, is the one that next prominently occupies the field of Plistory, while that of the Saracens, weakened and distracted by its divisions, declines in historical interest and importance. 40. The origin of the monarchy of the Franks is generally traced back nearly two centuries and a half prior to the defeat monarchy of the Saracens by Charles Martel, about the era of the of the downfall of the Western empire of the Romans. It is franks. ga -j G- erman j c tribes of the Franks or Free- men, occupied, at this early period, four cities in north-eastern or Belgic Gaul, viz. : — Tournai, 1 Cambray, 2 Terouane, 3 and Cologne, 4 which were governed by four separate kings, all of whom ascribed their origin to Merovseus, a half fabulous hero, whose rule is dated back a century and a half earlier. Of the four kings of the Franks, '.193, made Delhi their capital. In 1225 the country was conquered by Baber, the fifth in de- scent from “Timour the Tartar and with him began a race of Mogul princes. Arungzebe, who died in 1707, was the greatest of the Mogul sovereigns. The discovery of a passage to India, by way of the Cape of Good Hope, opened the country to a new and more form'dable race of conquerors. The Portuguese, the Dutch, and the French, obtained possession c. f por- tions of the Indian territory ; but in the end they were overpowered by the English, who have established beyond the Indus a great Asiatic empire. 1. Tournay, a town of Belgium, on the river Scheldt, (skelt) forty-five miles south-west from Brussels, and one hundred and thirty north-east from Paris, is the Civ' itas JVerviorum taken by Julius Caesar. It has since belonged to an almost infinite number of masters. (Map No. XV.) 2. Cambray on the Scheldt, (skelt) is thirty-three miles south from Tournay. It was a city of considerable importance under the Romans, and has been the scene of many important events in modern history. It was long famous for its manufacture of fine linens and lawns , whence all similar fabrics are called, in English, cambrics. (Map No. XV.) 3. Terouane (ti r-oo-an’) appears to have been west from Brussels, near Dunkirk. 4. Cologne is in the present Prussia, on the left bank of the Rhine, one hundred and twelve miles east from Brussels. A Roman colony was planted in Cologne by Agrippina, the daughter of German' icus, who was born there. Hence it obtained the name of Agrippina Colonia : after- wards it w is called Colonia , or “the colony,” whence the term Cologne. (Map No. XVIU Crap II] MIDDLE AGES. 255 the ambitious Clovis, a who ruled over the tribe at Toimai was the most powerful. Being joined by the tribe at Cambray, he made war upon the last remains of the Roman power in Gaul ; enlarged his territory by conquest, and established his capital at Soissons. 1 (A. 1). 484.) At a later period he transferred the seat of sovereignty to Paris;' 2 (A. D. 494) and at the time of his death, in 511, nearly the half of modern France, embracing that portion north of the Loire, was comprised in the monarchy of which he is the reputed founder. 1 * 41. Clovis, like many of the barbarian chiefs of that period, was a nominal convert to Christianity ; and being the first of his nation who embraced the orthodox faith, he received from the Gaulish clergy the title of most Christian king , which has been retained by his successors to the present day. But his religion, a matter of mere form, seems to have exerted no influence in restraining the natural ferocity and blood thirstiness of his disposition, as all the rival mon- arclis or chieftains whom he could conquer or entrap were sacrificed to his jealousy and ambition. He put to death with his own hand most of his relations, and then, pretending to repent of his barbari- ty, he offered his protection to all who had escaped the massacre, hoping thus to discover if any survived, that he might rid himself of them also. 42. The descendants of Clovis, who are called Merovingians, from their supposed founder, reigned over the Franks for nearly two cen turies and a half ; but the repulsive annals of this long and barba rous period are one tissue of perfidy and crime. It was usually the first act ‘of a monarch, on ascending the throne, to put to death his brothers, uncles, and nephews ; and thus consanguinity generally led to the most deadly and fatal enmity. These murders so thinned the race of Clovis as often to produce the reign of kings under age ; 1. Soissons , (sooah-song) now a fortified town on the river Aisne, sixty-eight miles north- east from Paris, — anciently JVuviodunum . , — was a city of the Suessones , in Belgic Gaul, which tsbmitted to Julius Caesar. Here Clovis extinguished the last remains of the Western empire by his victory over the Roman general Sy&grius. The town then became the capital of the Franks, and, afterwards, of a kingdom of its own name, in the sixth and seventh centuries. {Map No. XIII.) 2. P am. the metropolis of France, is situated on the river Seine, (sane) one hundred and ten miles from its mouth, and two hundred and ten miles south-east from London. When Gaul was invaded by Julius Csesar, Paris, then called Lutelia , was the chief town of the Belgic tribe of the Paris' ii , — whence the city derives its modem name. It was at Lutbtia that Julian the Apostate was saluted emperor by his soldiers. ( Map No. Xll I.) . a. The Roman corruption of Cldodwig, or, in modern German, Ludwig: in modem French Louis. — Sismot.di, i. 175, Note. b. See NtusL -fa, Note, p. 272. 256 MODERN HISTORY. [Pai.t II and eventually the custom was established of electing regents or guardians for them, who, by exercising the royal functions during the minority of their wards, acquired a power above that of the monarch himself At the time of the Saracen invasion of France, Charles Martel the guardian of the nominal sovereign, governed France with the humble title of mayor or duke. His son Pepin succeeded him, and during the minority of his royal ward, the imbecile Childerio III., wielded the power, without assuming the name and honois of royalty; but at length, in 752, he threw off the mask, obtained a deciea of pope Zachary in his favor, dethroned the last of the Mero- vingian kings, and caused himself to be crowned in the presence of the assembled nation, the first monarch of the Carlovingian dynasty. It was upon this occasion that the popes first exercised the authority of enthroning and dethroning kings. 1 43. Of the reign and the character of Pepin we know little, ex- cept that he exhibited a profound deference for the priesthood, and was engaged in a long struggle with the former Herman allies of the Franks; and that at the time of his death, in 768, there was no portion of Gaul that was not subject to the French monarchy. He divided his kingdom between his two sons, Charles the elder, usually called Charlemagne, and Carloman the younger ; to the former of whom he bequeathed the western portion of the empire, and to the latter, the eastern ; but as Carloman died soon after, Charles stripped 1. The frequent allusions made in history to papal authority and papal supremacy, render necessary some explanation of the growth of the papal power. The word pope comes from the Greek word papa , and signifies father. In the early times of Christianity this appellation was given to all Christian priests ; but during many centuries past it has been appropriated to the Bishop of Rome, whom the Roman Catholics look upon as the common father of all Christians. Roman Catholics believe that Jesus Christ constituted St. Peter the chief pastor to watch over his whole flock here on earth — that he is to have successors to the end of time— and that the bishops of Rome, elected by the cardinals or chief of the Romish clergy, are his legitimate successors, popes, or fathers of the church, who have power and jurisdiction over all Christians, in order to preserve unity and purity of faith, doctrine, and worship. During a long period after the introduction of Christianity into Rome, the bishops of Rome were merely fathers of the Church , and possessed no temporal power. It was customary however, to consult the pope in temporal matters : and the powerful Pepin found no difficulty in obtaining a papal decision in favor of dethroning the imbecile Childeric, and inducing the pope to come to Paris to officiate at his coronation. Soon after, in 755, Pepin invested the pope with the exarchate of Raven' na ; and it is at. this point — the union of temporal and spiritual jurisdiction — that the proper history of the papacy begins. Charlemagne and suc- ceeding princes added other provinces to the papal government : but a long struggle for su- premacy followed, between the popes and the German emperors ; and under the pontificate of Gregory VII., towards the close of the eleventh century, the claims of the Roman pontiffs to supremacy over all the sovereigns of the earth, were boldly asserted as the basn of the po- litical system of the papacy. Chap. XL] MIDDLE AGES. 25? bis brother’s widow and children of their inheritance, which he added to his own dominions. 44. The first acts of the reign of Charlemagne showed the warrior eager for conquest ; for, advancing with an army beyond the Loire,' he compelled the Aquitanians, who had been subdued by Pepin, but had since revolted, to submit to his authority. His next enemies were the Saxons, who bounded his dominions on the north-east, and whose territories extended along the German ocean from the Elbe* to the Khine. While all the other German tribes had adopted Christianity, the Saxons still sacrificed to the gods of their fathers ; and it was both the desire of chastising their repeated aggressions, and the merit to be derived from their conversion to Christianity, that led Charlemagne to declare war against these fierce barbari- ans. (A. D. 772.) 45. His first irruption into the Saxon territory was successful ; for he destroyed the pagan idols, received hostages, and on the banks of the Weser 3 concluded an advantageous peace. But the free spirit of the Saxons was not quelled : again and again they rose in insurrec- tion, headed by the famotls Witikind, a hero worthy of being the rival of Charlemagne ; and the war continued, with occasional inter ruption, during a period of thirty-two years. At length, however, peace was granted to Witikind, who received baptism, Charlemagne himself acting as sponsor ; and Saxony submitted to the Frankish institutions, as well as to those of Christianity. A few years later the Saxon youth, who had taken no share in the previous con- flicts, arose in rebellion, but they were eventually subjugated, (A. D. 804,) when ten thousand of their number were transported into the country of the Franks, where they were gradually merged into the nation of their conquerors. It was in the midst of the ravages of these Saxon wars that the north of Germany passed from barbarism to civilization ; for monasteries, churches, and bishoprics, immediately sprung up in the path of the conquerors ; and although 1 The Loire , (looar) (anciently Liger ), is the principal ri ver of France, through the central par. of which it flows, in a W. direction to the Atlantic. Its basin comprises nearly one-fourth part of the kingdom. The Loire was the northern 'boundary of the country of the Jiquitiinians, The early seat of the empire of Charlemagne was therefore north *>f the Loire. (Map No. XIII.) 2. The V.lbe , (anciently M' bis,) rising in the mountains of Bohemia, flows north-west through central Europe, and enters the German ocean, or North sea, at the southern extremity of Denmark. This stream was the easternmost extent of the Germanic expeditions of the Ro- mans. (Map No. XVII.) 3. The IVeser, (anciently Visur' gis,) a river of Germany, enters the north sea between the Elbe on the east and the Ems on the west. (Map No. XVII.) 17 258 MODERN HISTORY. IPam II the religion which they planted was superficial and corrupt, they at least diffused some respect for the arts of civilized life. 46. Soon after the commencement of the Saxon wars, Charle- magne found another, but less formidable enemy, in the Lombards of Italy. The Lombard king had given protection to the widow oi Oarloman, the deceased brother of Charlemagne, and had required pope Adrian to anoint her sons as kings of the Franks ; and upon Adrian’s refusal, he threatened to carry war into his little territory of a few square miles around Rome. The pope demanded aid from Charlemagne, who, assembling his warriors at Geneva, 1 crossed the Alps into Italy and compelled the Lombard king, Desiderius, to shut himself up in his capital at Pavia, 2 which, after a siege of six months, surrendered. Desiderius became prisoner, and was sent to end his days in a monastery, while Charlemagne, placing the iron crown of the Lombards upon his head, caused himself to be pro- claimed king of Italy. (774.) 47. A few years after the overthrow of the kingdom of the Lorn bards, Charlemagne carried his conquering arms into Spain, whither he had been invited by the viceroy of Catalonia, 3 to aid him against the Moham' medans. (677-8.) Pampeluna 4 5 and Saragos' sa & were dismantled, and the Arab princes of that region swore fealty to the conqueror, but on the return of Charlemagne across the Pyrenees, his rear guard was attacked in the famous pass of Roncesvalles. 6 and 1. Geneva , described by Caesar as being “ the frontier town of the Allobrogians,” retains ha ancient name. It is on the Rhone, at the south-western extremity of the Lake of Geneva, (anciently Leman' nus ), and is the most populous city of Switzerland. In the year 42(5 it was taken by the Burgun’ dians, and became their capital. It afterwards belonged, successively, to the Os' trogoths and Franks, and also to the second kingdom of Bur' gundy. On the fall of the latter it was governed by its own bishops ; but at the time of the Reformation the bishops were expelled, and Geneva became a republic. ( Maps No. XIV. and XVII.) 2. Pavia , (anciently Ticinum ,) is situated on the Ticino (anciently Ticinus,) north of the P&, and twenty miles south from Milan. Pavia has sustained many sieges, but is principally dis- tinguished for the great battle fought in its vicinity Feb. 24th, 1525. See p. 327. ( Map No. XVII.) 3. Catalonia was the north-western province of Spain. It was successively subject to the Romans, Goths, and Moors ; but in the 8th and 9th centuries, in connection with the adjoining French province of Rous’ sillon, it became an independent State, subject to the counts or earls of Barcelona. {Map No. XIII.) 4. Pampeluna , a fortified city of Spain, supposed to have been built by Pompey after the de- feat of Sertorius, (see p. 176,) is a short distance south of the Pyrenees, and forty miles from the Bay of Biscay. It was the capital of the kingdom, now province, of Navarre. {Map No. XIII.) 5. Saragos’ sa, (anciently Cats ar Augusta) situated in a fine plain on the Fbro, (anciently Pberus ,) is eighty-seven mil is south-east from Pampeluna. It is a very ancient city, and ia said to have been founded by the Phoenicians or Carthaginians. Julius Caesar greatly enlarged It, and Augustus gave it the name of Caesar Augusta, with the privileges of a free colony. I Map No. XIII.) 6 Roncesvalles (Ron’-sa-val) is about twenty miles north-east from Pampeluua. {Map No. XIII.) Chap II.] MIDDLE AGES. 259 entirely cut to pieces. Poesy and fable have combined to render memorable a defeat of wliich history has preserved no details. 48. After Charlemagne had extended his empire over France, Germany, and Italy, minor conquests easily followed ; and many of the other surrounding nations, or rather tribes, fell under his p ^wer, or solicited his protection. Thus the dominion of the Franks pene- trated into Hungary, and advanced upon the Danube as far as the frontiers of die Greek empire. A conspiracy in Rome having forced the pope to seek the protection of Charlemagne, in the year 800 the latter visited Rome in person to punish the evil doers. While he was there attending services in St. Peter’s Church, at the Christ- mas festival, the gratified pontiff placed upon his head a crown of gold, and, in the formula observed for the Roman emperors, and amid the acclamations of the people, saluted him by the titles of Emperor and Augustus. This act was considered as indicating the revival of the Empire of the West, after an interruption of about three centuries. 49. Charlemagne, a king of the German Franks, was thus seated on the throne of the Caesars. Nor was the circumstance of his re ceiving the imperial crown unimportant, as by the act he declared himself the representative of the ancient Roman civilization, and not of the barbarism of its destroyers. In Italy, Charlemagne sought teachers for the purpose of establishing public schools throughout his dominions: he encouraged literature, and attempted to revive commerce ; and his capital of Aix-la-Chapelle 1 he so adorned with sumptuous edifices, palaces, churches, bridges, and monuments of art, as to give it the appearance of a Roman city. By the wisdom of his laws, and the energy which he displayed in executing them, he established order and regularity, and gave protection to all parts of his empire. But with all the greatness of Charlemagne, his private life was not free from the stain of licentiousness ; and where his ambition led him he was unsparing of blood. He caused four thou- sand five hundred imprisoned Saxons to be beheaded in one da;y, as a terrible example to their countrymen, and as an act of retribution for an army which he had lost ; and as a right of conquest he de- nounced the penalty of death against those who refused baptism, or who even eat flesh during Lent. Still his long reign is a brilliant l. Atx-ia-Chzpelle {a-la-shappcl') the favorite residence of Charlemagne, is an old and well-built city af Prussian Germany, west of the Rhine, and seventy-eight miles east from Brussels. (Jtfaji No, XIII. and XVII.'* 260 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II period in tlie history of the middle ages ; — the moie interesting, from the preceding chaos of disorder, and the disgraces and miseries which followed it; — resembling the course of a meteor that leaves the dark- ness still more dreary as it disappears. 50 The posterity of Charlemagne were unequal to the task of preserving the empire which he had formed, and it speedily fell asunder by its own weight. To the mutual antipathies of different races,— the German on the one side, including the Franks, knit to- gether by their old Teutonic tongue, — and the nation of mingled Gallic, Roman, and Barbarian origin, on the other, which afterwards assumed the name of Franks, and gave to their own country the appellation France, — was added the rivalry of the Carlovingian princes ; and about thirty years after the death of Charlemagne (A. D. 814), at the close of a period of anarchy and civil war, the empire was divided among his descendants, and out of it were con- stituted the separate kingdoms, — France, Germany, and Italy (A. I). 843. ) a 51. The motive that led the Carlovingian princes to put an end to their unnatural wars with each other, was the repeated invasion of the coasts of France and Germany by piratical adventurers from the north, called Northmen or Banes, a branch of the great Teutonic race, who, issuing from all the shores of the Baltic, annually ravaged the coasts of their more civilized neighbors, — and, by hasty incur- sions, even pillaged the cities far in the interior. During more than a century these Northern pirates continued to devastate the shores of Western Europe, particularly infesting the, coasts of Britain, Ireland, and France. 52. In the meantime central Europe became a prey to the Hun- garians, a warlike Tartarian tribe, whose untamed ferocity recalled the memory of At' tila. The Saracens also, masters of the Medi- terranean, kept the coasts of Italy in constant alarm, and twice in- sulted and ravaged the territory of Rome. Amid the tumult and confusion thus occasioned, European society was undergoing a change, from the absolutism of imperial authority to the establish- ment of numerous dukedoms, having little more than a nominal de- pendence upon the reigning princes. Power was transferred from the palace of the king to the castle of the baron ; and for a time European history, — that of France in particular — -is occupied with the annals of an '.ntriguing, factious, aspiring nobility, rather than a. By the treaty of Verdun, Aug. 11th, 843. Chap. II. ] MIDDLE AGES. 261 with those of monarchs and the people. From the confusion inci- dent to such a state' of society we turn to the neighboring island of Britain, where, a few years after the dissolution of the empire of Charlemagne, the immortal Alfred arose, drove back the tide of bar- barian conquest, and laid the foundation of those laws and institu- tions which have rendered England the most enlightened and most powerful of the nations of Europe. 53. We have mentioned that, towards the close of the sixth cen- tury, the Saxon tribes from the shores of the Baltic had made them- selves masters of the southern and more fertile provinces VIII of Britain. After having extirpated the ancient British English population, or driven it into Cornwall and W ales on the HISTORY - western side of the island, the kindred tribes of the Angles and Sax- ons, under the common name of Anglo Saxons, established in England seven independent kingdoms, which are known in history as the Saxon Heptarchy. The intricate details, so far as we can learn them, of the history of these kingdoms, are uninteresting and unimportant ; and from the period of the first inroads of the Saxons down to the time of the coronation of Alfred the Great in 872, the chronicles of Britain present us with the names of numerous kings, the dates of many battles, and frequent revolutions attended with unimportant results; — the history of all which is in great part conjectural, and gives us little insight into individual or national character. 54. It appears that about the year 597 Christianity was first intro duced into England by the monk Augustine, accompanied by forty missionaries, who had been sent out by pope Gregory for the con version of the Britons. The new faith, such as it pleased the church to promulgate, being received cordially by the kings, descended from them to their subjects, and was established without persecution, and without the shedding of the blood of a single martyr. The religious neal of the Anglo Saxons greatly exceeded that of the nations of the continent ; and it is recorded that, during the Heptarchy, ten kings and eleven queens laid aside the crown to devote themselves to a monastic life. 55. In the year 827 the several kingdoms of the Saxon Hep- tarchy were united in one great State by Egbert, prince of the W es£ Saxons, an ambitious warrior, who exhibits some points of compari- son with his illustrious cotemporary Charlemagne, at whose court ho had spent twelve years of his early life. The Saxon union, under the firm administration of Egbert, promised future tranquillity to the in 262 MODERN HISTORY. [Pam II habitants of Britain ; but scarcely had a regular government been es- tablished when the piratical Scandinavians, known in France under the name of Normans, and in England by that of Danes, landed in the southern part of the island, and after a bloody battle with Eg- bert at Charmouth in Dorsetshire, made good their retreat to their ships, carrying off all the portable wealth of the district. (A. D. 833.) This was the beginning of the ravages of the Northmen in England; and th.3y' continued to plunder the coasts for nearly two centuries. 56. From the death of Egbert in 838, to the accession of Alfred the Great in 871, the throne of England was occupied by four Saxon princes ; a and the whole of this period, like the corresponding one in French history, is filled with the disastrous invasions of the Danes. b In the course of a single year nine sanguinary battles were fought between the Saxons and their invaders ; and in the last of these bat- tles king Ethelred received a wound which caused his death (871-2.) His brother Alfred, then only twenty-two years of age, succeeded to the throne. He had served with distinction in the numerous bloody battles fought by his brother ; but on his accession he found nearly half the kingdom in the possession of the Danes ; and within six years the almost innumerable swarms of these in- vaders struck such terror into the English, that Alfred, who strove to assemble an army, found himself suddenly deserted by all his war riors. 57. Obliged to relinquish the ensigns of royalty, and to seek shelter from the pursuit of his enemies, he disguised himself under the habit of a peasant, and for some time lived in the cottage of a goatherd, known only to his host, and regarded by his hostess as an inferior, and occasionally intrusted by her with the menial duties of the household. It is said that, as he was one day trimming his ar- rows by the fire side, she desired him to watch some cakes that were baking, and that when, forgetting his trust, he suffered them to burn, she severely upbraided him for his neglect. Afterwards, retiring vith a few faithful followers to the marshes of Somersetshire, he built there a fortress, whence he made occasional successful sallies upon the Danes, who knew not from what quarter the blow came. While his very existence was unsuspected by the enemy, under the a. Ethelwolf, Ethelbald, Ethelbert, and Ethelred. b. As the terra Normans was at a later period exclusively appropriated to that branch of the Scandinavians which settled in Normandy, we shall follow the English writers and apply the term Danes to those barbarians of the same family who so long ravaged the English coasts. t should not be forgotten by the reader that the Saxons also were of Scandinavian origin Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 263 disguise of a harper he visited their camp, where his musical skill obtained for him a welcome reception, and an introduction to the tent of the Danish prince, Guthrum. Here he spent three days, wit- nessed the supine security of the enemy, thoroughly examined the camp and its approaches, and then went to meet his countrymen, for whom he had appointed a gathering in Selwood forest. 3 - 58. The Saxons, inspired with new life and courage at the sight of their beloved prince, whom they had supposed dead, fell upon the unsuspecting Danes, and cut nearly all of them to pieces. (A. D. 878.) Guthrum, and the small band of followers who escaped, were soon besieged in a fortress, where they accepted the terms of peace that were offered them. Guthrum embraced Christianity ; the greater part of the Danes settled peaceably on the lands that were assigned them, where they soon intermingled with the Saxons ; while the more turbulent spirits went to join new swarms of their countrymen in their ravages upon the French and German coasts. The shores of England were unvisited, during several years, by the enemy, and Alfred employed the interval of repose in organizing the future de- fence of his kingdom. In early life he had visited Italy, and seen the Greek and Roman galleys, which were greatly superior to the Danish unarmed vessels, that were fitted only for transport. Alfred now formed a navy ; and his vessels never met those of the Danes without the certain destruction of the latter. 59. The Danes, however, who had settled in England, still oceu pied the greater part of the country, so that the acknowledged sov- ereignty of Alfred did not extend over any of the countries north ward of the city of London, — and fifteen years after the defeat of Guthrum, Hastings, another celebrated Danish chief, threatened to deprive the English king of the limited possessions which he still re tained. After having plundered all the northern provinces of France, Hastings appeared on the coast of Kent with three hundred and thirty sail, and spreading his forces over the country, committed the most dreadful ravages. (A. D. 893.) The Danes in the northern pa;ts of England joined him ; but they were everywhere defeated, and eventually Hastings withdrew to his own country, taking back with him the most warlike portion of the Danish population, from the English channel to the frontiers of Scotland, after which the whole of England no longer hesitated to acknowledge the authority of Al- fred, although his power over the Danish population in the northern a. At Brixton, on the borders of the forest, in Wiltshire. Wiltshire is east of Somerset. 264 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II part of the kingdom was still little more than nominal. He died after a reign .cf twenty-nine years and a-half, having deservedly at- tained the appellation of Alfred the G-r.eat, and the title of founder of the English monarchy. (A. D. 901.) 60. To Alfred the English ascribe the origin of many of those in stitutions which lie at the foundation of their nation’s prosperity and renown. As the founder of the English navy, he planted the seeds of the maritime power of England : with him arose the grandeur tn 1 prosperity of London, the pjace of the assembling of the national parliament or body of prelates, earls, barons, and burghers, or depu- ties from the English burghs, or associations of freemen : he made a collection of the Saxon laws, to which he added others framed or sanctioned by himself; he reformed the Saxon division of the country into counties and shires ; divided the citizens into corporations of tens and hundreds, with a regular system of inspection and police, in which equals exercised a supervision over equals ; and in the mode which he adopted of settling controversies, we trace the first indica- tions of the glory of the English judiciary — the trial by jury. The cultivation of letters, which had been interrupted at the first inva- sion of the then barbarous Saxons, was revived by Alfred, who was, himself, the most learned man in the kingdom : he founded schools at Oxford — the germ of the celebrated university of that name ; and he set aside a considerable portion of his rc venues for the pay ment of the salaries of teachers. The character of Alfred is almost unrivalled in the annals of any age or nation ; and in the details of his private life we cannot discover a vice, or even a fault, to stain or sully the spotlessness of his reputation. »♦ ♦ ♦« SECTION II. GENERAL HISTORY DURING THE TENTH, ELEVENTH, TWELFTH, AND THIR- TEENTH centuries: A. D. 900 to 1300 = 400 years. I. COMPLETE DISSOLUTION OF THE BONDS OF SOCIETY. ANALYSIS. 1. Causes of the confusion of Historic materials at this period. — 2. Statr of the Saracen world. [Bagdad. Cor'dova. Khorassan'.] — 3. The Byzantine empire. Turkish invasions and conquests. [Georgia.] — 4. The divisions of the Carlovingian empire. Condition of Italy. Berenger duke of Friuli. Prince of Burgundy. Hugh count of Pro- vence. Surrender of the kingdom to Otho. [Friuli. Switzerland. Provence.] — 5. Italy unde* the German emperors- Guelfs and Ghibellines. Dukes, marquises, counts, and prelates. Chap. II] MIDDLE AGES. 265 Petty Italian republics.— 6. Condi tion or Germany. Its six dukedoms. [Saxony. Thurin' gia, Franconia. Bavaria. Suabia. Lorraine.] Encroachments of the dukes. Reign of Conrad Henry I. of Saxony. Powers of the Saxon rulers. — 7. Condition of France. Charles the Simple. Other princes. Deposition of Charles. [Transjurane Burgundy. Provence. Brit- tany.] — 8. Settlement of the Northmen in France. [Normandy.] Importance of this event — 9. The counts of Paris. Hugh Capet. [Rheima.] Situation of France for tw r o hundred and forty years after the accession of Hugh Capet. II. THE FEUDAL SYSTEM ; CHIVALRY ; AND THE CRUSADES. 1. Europe in the central period of the Middle Ages. Origin of the Feudal System, its d iraiion and importance. — 2. Partition of lands by the barbarians who overthrew he Roman empire. Conditions of the allotment. Gradations of the system. — 3. Nature of the estates thus obtained. Crown lands — how disposed of. The word feud. — 4. The feuda system in Fiance. Charlemagne’s efforts to check its progress. Effects upon the nobility. Growth of the power of the nobles after the overthrow of royal authority. Their petty sovereignties. — 5. Condition of the allodial proprietors. They are forced to become feudal tenants.- -6. Legal qualities and results that grew out of the feudal system. Reliefs, fines, escheats, ails, ward- ship and marriage. — 7. The feudal government in its best state. Its influence on the v haracter of society. General ignorance at this period. Sentiments of independence in the nobility. 8. Rise of Chivalrv. Our first notices of it. Its origin. — 9. Its rapid spread, and its good effects. — 10. Its spirit hased on noble impulses. Extract from Hallam: From James. Cus- toms and peculiarities of chivalry. Who were members of the institution. — 11. The prt fession of arms among the Germans. Education of a knight. The practice of knight-errantry. — 12 Extent of chivalry in the 11th century. Its spirit led to the crusades. Origin of the Crusades. — 13. Pilgrimages to Jerusalem. General expectation of tl e aii- proaching end of the world.~14. Extortion and outrage practiced upon the pilgrims. Horror and indignation excited thereby in Europe. The preaching of Peter the Hermit. [Amie: s.]- 15. The councils of Placentia and Clermont. [Placentia and Clermont.] Gathering o ’ the crusaders for the First Crusade. — 16. Conduct and fate of the foremost bands of the cru- saders. The genuine army of the crusade. [Bouillon.] — 17. Conduct of Alexius, empen r of Constantinople. His proposals spurned by the crusaders. — 18. Number of the crusaders col- lected in Asia Minor. First encounter with the Turks. [Nice. Bithyn’ia. Roum.] Vhe march to Syria. [D^rilas' um.] — 19. The siege and capture of Antioch. The Persian and Turkish hosts defeated 1 efore the town. — 20. Civil wars among the Turks. The caliph of Egj p ■, takes Jerusalem. Proposal to unite his forces with the Christians rejected. — 21. March of Ike crusaders to Jerusalem. [Jit. Lib' anus. Trip'oli. Tyre. Acre. Caesarea.] Transports of the Christians on the first view of the city. Attack, and repulse. — 22. Capture of Jerusalem. Acts of veneration and worship. Reception given to Peter the Hermit. His ultimate fate.- - 23, The new government of Jerusalem. Minor Christian States. Defenceless state of Jerusa- lem under Godfrey. Continued pilgrimages. Orders of knighthood established at Jerusalem., The noted valor of the knights. 24. Continued yearly emigration of pilgrim warriors to the Holy Land. Six principal cru- sades. Their general character. — 25. The Second Crusade. The leading army under Conrad. The army of French and Germans. — 26. Jerusalem taken by Saladin. The Third Crusade Fate of the German emperor. Successes of the French and English. Return of Philip, Richard concludes a truce with Saladin. [Ascalon.] — 27. The Fourth Crusade, led by Boni- face. The crusaders take Zara, and conquer Constantinople. No benefit to Pales Ine. [Mont- serrat. Zara.] — 28. The Fifth Crusade. Partial successes, and final ruin, of the expedition, [Damietta.] Expedition of the German emperor, Frederic II. Treaty with the sultan, by which Jerusalem is yielded to the Christians. Jerusalem again taken by the sultan, but re stored. 29. Cotemporary events in northern Asia. Tartar Conquests in Asia and in Eu-ope. [China. Russia. Kiev. Moscow.] Alarm of the Christian nations of Europe. Recall of the conquering hoidcs. — 30. The Corasmins. They overrun Syria and take Jerusalem, but are finally expelled by the united Turks and Christians. — 31. The Sixth Crusade, led by Louis IX., who attacks Egypt. The second crusade of Louis. Attack upon Carthage. Result of the expedition. — 32. Acre, the last stronghold of the Christians in Syria, taken ny the Turks, 1291 Results of the Crusades. M 266 MODERN DISTORT. [Part II III. ENGLISH HISTORY. 1. Our last reference to the history of England. The present continuation. .-2. Condition ot England after the death of Alfred. England during the reign of Ethelred II. Massacre of the Danes. Effects of this impolitic measure. Canute. Recall of Ethelred. Edmund Ironside. Canute sole monarch. — 3. His conciliatory policy. His vast possessions. Character of his administration of the government.— 4. Harold and Hardicanute. The reign of Edward the Confessor. Events that disturbed his reign. Accession of Harold. The Norman Conquest. [Sussex. Hastings.] — 5. Gradual conquest of ali England. William’s treatment of his conquered subjects. — 6. The feudal system in England. The Doomsday Book. Saxon* and Normans. — 7. Reigns of William Rufus, and Henry I. — 8. Usurpation and reign of Stephen, Henry II. {Plantagenet.] — 9. Henry’s extensive possessions. Reduction of Ireland. [Hia tory of Ireland.] The troubles of Henry’s reign. — 10. Reign of Richard, the Lion Hearted. — 11. Reign of John, surnamed Lackland. Loss of his continental possessions. Quarrels with the pope : — with the barons. Magna Charta. Civil war, and death of John. — 12. The long reign of Henry III. His difficulties with the barons. First germs of popular representation. 13. The reign of Edward I. Subjugation of Wales. [History of Wales.] — 14. Relations be- tween England and Scotland. The princess Margaret. — 15. Baliol and Bruce. Beginning of the Scottish wars. Submission of Baliol. [Dunbar.] — 16. William Wallace recovers Scot- land, but is defeated at Falkirk. [Stirling. Falkirk.] Fate of Wallace.— 17. Robert Bruce crowned king of Scotland. Edward II. defeated by him. [Scone. Bannockburn.] 18. Northern nations of Europe during this period. Wars between the Moors and Christians in the Spanish peninsula. Final overthrow of the Saracen power in the peninsula. 1. Complete dissolution of the bonds of society. — 1. The tenth century brings us to the central period of what has been denomi- nated the Middle Ages. The history of the known world presents a greater confusion and discordance of materials at this i. confusion o of historic than at any preceding epoch ; for at this time we have materials, ne ith er a g rea t empire, like the Grecian, the Persian, or the Roman ; nor any great simultaneous movement, like the mighty tide of the barbarian invasions, to serve as the starting and the re- turning point for our researches, and to give, by its prominence, a sort of unity to cotemporaneous history ; but on every side we see States falling into dissolution ; the masses breaking into fragments ; dukes, counts, and lords, renouncing their allegiance to kings and emperors ; cities, towns, and castles, declaring their independence , and, amid a general dissolution of the bonds of society, we find almost universal anarchy prevailing. 2. In the East, the empire of the caliphs, the mighty colossus of Mussulman dominion, was broken ; the Saracens were no longer ob- ii the j ects terror to t ^ ie ^ r neighbors, and the frequent Saracen revolutions of the throne of Bagdad, 1 the central seat world. 0 f t k e re iigi on 0 f the prophet, had ceased to have any 1. Bagdad , a famous city of Asiatic Turkey,— long the chief seat of Moslem power in Asia, —the capital of the Eastern caliphate, and of the scientific world during the “ Dark Ages,” ia situated on the river Tigris, sixty-eight miles north of the ruins of Babylon. Bagdad was founded by the caliph Al-Mansour, A. D. 763, and is said to have bsen princl Chap II j MIDDLE AGES. 267 influence on tLe rest of the world. About the middle of the eighth century, the Moors of Spain had separated themselves from theii Eastern brethren, and made Cor' dova 1 the seat of their dominion, and little more than two centuries and a half later, (A. D. 1031) the division of the Western Caliphate into a great number of small principalities, which were weakened by civil dissensions, contributed to the enlargement of the Christian kingdoms in the northern part of the peninsula. Soon after the defection of the Moors of Spain, an independent Saracen monarchy had arisen in Africa proper : this was followed by the establishment of new dynasties in Egypt, Khorassan', 2 and Persia ; and eventually, in the tenth century, we Snd the Caliphate divided into a great number of petty States, whose annals, gathered from oriental writers, furnish, amid a labyrinth of almost unknown names and countries, little more than the chronology of princes, with the civil wars, parricides, and fratricides of each reign. Such was the condition of that vast population, comprising many nations and languages, which still adhered, although under dif- ferent forms, and with many departures from the originals, to the general principles of the mpslem faith. 3. The Byzantine empire still continued to exist, but in weakness and corruption. “ From the age of Justin' ian,” says Gibbon, 11 it pally formed out of the ruins of Ctes’iphon. It was greatly enlarged and adorned by the grandson of its founder, the famous Haroun-al-Raschid. It continued to flourish, and to be the principal seat of learning and the arts till 1258, when Hoolaku, grandson of Gengis Khan, reduced the city after a siege of two months, and gave it up to plunder and massacre. It is said that the number of the slain in the city alone amounted to eight hundred thousand. Since that event Bagdad has witnessed various other sieges and revolutions. It was burnt and plundered by the ferocious Timour A. D. 1401, who erected a pyramid of human heads on its ruins. In 1637 it incurred the vengeance of Amurath IV., the Turkish sultan, who barbarously massacred a large portion of the inhabitants. Since that period the once illustrious city now numbering less than a hundred thousand inhabitants, has been degraded to the seat of a Turk ish pashalic. The rich merchants and the beautiful princesses of the Arabian lales have al! disappeared ; but it retains the tomb of the charming Zobeide, the most beloved of the wives of Haroun-al-Raschid, and can still boast of its numerous gardens and well stocked bazaars. 1. Cbr' dova, a city of Andalusia in Spain, is situated on the Guadalquiver, one hundred and eighty-five miles south-west from Madrid. It is supposed to have been founded by the Ro- mans, under whom it attained to great distinction as a rich and populous city, and a seat of learning. In 572 it was taken by the Goths, and in 711 by the Moors, under whom it after- wards became the splendid capital of the “Caliphate of the West;” but with the extinction of the Western caliphate, A. b. 1031, the power and the glory of Cor’ dova passed away. Cor 7 dova continued to be a separate Moorish kingdom until the year A. D. 1236, when was taken and almost wholly destroyed by the impolitic zeal of Ferdinand IU. of Castile, ft has never since recovered its previous prosperity ; and its population has diminished since the lltb century, from five hundred thousand to less than forty thousand. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Khorassan', (the “ region of the sun,”) is a province of Modern Persia, at the south-eastern extremity of the Caspian Sea, inhabited by Persians proper, Turkmans and Kurds. The re igion is still Moham’ medan 268 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL was sinking below its former level : the powers of destruction were m the more arrive than those of improvement ; and the calam- btzantine ities of war were imbittered by the more permanent empire. e yilg of civil and ecclesiastical tyranny. ” a It was daily becoming more and more separated from Western Europe; its re- lations, both of peace and war, being chiefly with the Sara sens, who in the period of their conquests, overran all Asia Minor, and were forming permanent establishments within sight of Constantinople Toward the close of the tenth century, however, a brief display of vigor in the Byzantine princes, Niceph' orus, Zimlsus, and Basil II. repelled the Saracens, and extended the Asiatic boundaries of the empire as far south as Antioch, and eastward to the eastern limits of Armenia; but twenty-five years after the death of Basil (102s his effeminate successors were suddenly assaulted by the Turks oi Turcomans, a new race of Tartar barbarians of the Mussulman faith, whose original seats were beyond the Caspian Sea, along the northern boundaries of China. During the first invasion of the Turks, under their leader Togrul, (1050) one hundred and thirty thousand Christians were sacrificed to the religion of the prophet. His sue cessor, Alp Arslan, the “ valiant lion,” reduced Georgia 1 and Arme- nia, and defeated and took captive the Byzantine emperor Bomanus Biog' enes ; and succeeding princes of the Turkish throne gathered the fruits of a lasting conquest of all the provinces beyond the Bos' porus and Hellespont. 4. Turning to the West, to examine the condition of the three great divisions of the empire of the Carlovingians — Italy, Germany, and Gaul, — we find there but the wrecks of former greatness. In Italy, the dukes, the governors of provinces, and the leaders of iv condi- arm i es ) were possessed of far greater power than the tion of reigning monarch. Having for a long period perpetu- italy. a £ e q ^heir dignities in their families, they had become in fact petty tyrants over their limited domains ; ever jealous of tha royal authority, and dreading the loss of their privileges, they con- 1. Georgia is between the Caspian and the Black Sea, Laving Circassia on the north and Ar- menia on the south. This country was annexed to the Roman empire by Pompey, in the year ti B. C. During the 6th and 7th centuries it was a theatre of contest, between the Greek em- pire and the Persians. In the 8th century a prince of the Jewish family of the Bagrat’ ides es- tablished there a monarchy which, with few interruptions, continued in his line down to the wr.mencemeut of the 19th century. In 1801 the emperor Paul of Russia declared himself, a! i > quest of the Georgian pnnee, sovereign of Georgia. a. Gibbon, iv. 4 . Chap. II] MIDDLE AGES. 269 spired against their sovereign as often as he showed an inelinatior to rescue the people from the oppressive exactions of their masters. In the early part of the tenth century they arose against Berenger, duke of Friuli, 1 who had been proclaimed king, and offered the crown to the prince of Bur' gundy, who during two years united the government of Italy to that of Switzerland. 2 (923-925.) Soon abandoning him, the turbulent nobles elevated to the throne Hugh, count of Provence ;* and finally Italy, exhausted by the animosities and struggles of the aristocracy, made a voluntary surrender of the kingdom to Otho the Great, the Saxon prince of Germany, who, in the year 962, was crowned at Milan with the iron crown of Lom'- bardy, and at Home with the golden crown of the empire. 5. During several succeeding centuries the German emperors were nominally recognized as sovereigns of the greater part of Italy ; but as they seldom crossed the Alps, their authority was soon reduced to a mere shadow The pretensions of the court of Rome were op- posed to those of the German princes ; and during the quarrels that arose between the Guelfs and Ghibellines, 4 — the former the adherents of Rome, and the latter of Germany — Italy was thrown into the greatest confusion. While some portions were under the immediate jurisdiction of the German emperor, a large number of the dukes, marquises, counts, and prelates, residing in their castles which they 1. Friuli is an Ilulian province at the head of the Adriat’ ic, and at the north-eastern ex tremity of Italy. 2. Switzerland , anciently called Helvetia, is an inland and mountainous country of Europe having the German States on the north and east, Italy on the south, and France on he west Julius Caesar reduced the Helvetians to submission 15 years B. C. ; after which the Rom am founded in it several flourishing cities, which were afterwards destroyed by the barbarians. In the beginning of the 5th century the Burgun' dians overran the western part of Switzerland, and fixed their seats around the lake of Geneva, and on the banks of the Rhone and the Saone. Fifty years later the Aleman' ni overran the eastern part of Switzerland, and a great part of Germany, overwhelmintr the monuments of Roman power, and blotting out the Christianity which Rome had planted. At the close of the fifth century the Aleman' ni were overthrown by Clovis ; — the first Burgun’ dian empire fell A. D. 535 ; and for a long period afterward Hel- vetia formed a part of the French monarchy. The partition of the dominions of Charlemagn® threw Switzerland into the German part of the empire. In the year 1307 the three forest Hintons, Uri, Schwytz, and Unterwalden, entered into a confederacy against the tyranny of the Austrian house of Hapuburg, then at the head of the German empire. Other cantons from time to time joined the league, or were conquered from Austria ; but it was not till the time of Napoleon that all the present existing cantons were brought into the confederacy. (Maps No. XIV. am . XVII.) 3. Provence , see p. 271. 4. These party names, o! iscure in origin, were imported from Germany. In the wars of Frederic Barbarossa, (the Fedbeard,) the Quelfs were the champions of liberty : in the erhsades which the popes o irected against that prince’s unfortunate descendants they were merely the partisans ol die Church. The name soon ceased to signify princip lee, and merely *»nr cd the same purpose as a watchword, or the color of a standard. 270 MODERN HISTOR I. [PAKril had strongly fortified against the depredating inroads of the NormanSj Saracens, and Hungarians, exercised an almost independent authority within their limited domains ; while a number of petty republics, the most important of which were Venice, Pisa, and Genoa, fortifying their cities, and electing their own magistrates, set the authority of the pope, the nobles, and the emperor, equally at defiance. Such was the confused state of Italy in the central period of the Middle Ages. . 6. Germany, at the beginning of the tenth century, under the rule of a minor, Louis IV., the last of the Carlovingian family, was bar v. con- asse d by frequent invasions of the Hungarians ; while dition of the six dukedoms into which the country was divided, Germany. y * z . g^ony^i Thurin' gia, 2 Franconia, 3 Bavaria, 4 Suabia, and Lorraine, 8 appeared like so many distinct nations, ready to de- clare war against each other. The dukes, originally regarded as ministers and representatives of their king, had long been encroach- ing on the royal prerogatives, and by degrees had arrogated to them- selves such an increase of power, that the dignities temporarily con- ferred upon them became hereditary in their families. They next seized the royal revenues, and made themselves masters of the people L raxony , the most powerful of the ancient duchies of Germany, embraced, at the period of its greatest development, the whole extent of northern Germany between the mouths of the Rhim' and the Oder. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Thurin' gia was in the central part of Germany, west of Prussian Saxony. In the 13th century it was subdivided among many petty princes, and incorporated with other States, after which the name fell gradually into disuse. It is still preserved, in a limited sense, in the Thurin' gian forest , a hilly and woody tract in the interior of Germany, on the northern con- fines of Bavaria. (Map No. XVII.) 3. Franconia was situated on both sides of the river Maine, and is now in .luded mostly within the limits of Bavaria. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Bavbria — comprising most of the Vindelicia and Nor' icum of the Romans, is a country lu the southern part of Germany. It was anciently a duchy— afterwards an electorate — and has now the rank of a kingdom. (Map No. XVII.) 5. Su&bia , of which Ulm was the capital, was in the south-western part of Germany, west of Bavaria, and north of Switzerland. It is now included in Baden, Wurtemburg, and Bavaria. (Map No. XVII.) 6. 1 orraine, (German Lotharingia,) so called from Lothaire II., to whom this part of the countiy fell in the division of the empire between him and his brothers Louis II. and Charles, In the year 854, eleven years after the treaty of Verdun, (see p. 260,) was divided into Upper and Lower Lorraine, and extended from the confines of Switzerland, westward of the Rhine, to its mouths, and the mouths of the Scheldt. (Skelt.) A part of the Lower Lorraine was af- terwards etnbraced in the French province of Lorraine, (see Map No. XIII.,) and is now com- prised in the departments of the Meuse, the Vosges, the Moselle, and the Meurthe. Lorraine was for centuries a subject of dispute between France and Germany. The relative position of the six German dukedoms was therefore as follows: — Saxony occu- pied the northern portions of Germany; Thurin' gia and Franconia the centre; Bavaria the south-eastern ; Su&bia the south-western ; and Lorraine the north-western. ( Maps No XIIL Mid XVII.) Chap II.] MIDDLE AGES. 271 and their lauds. On the death of Louis IV., (A. D. 911,) they set aside the legitimate claimant, and elected for their sovereign one of their own number, Conrad, duke of Franconia. His reign of seven years was passed almost wholly in the field, checking the incursions of the Hungarians, or quelling the insurrections of the other duke- doms against his authority. ' On his death (A. I). 918), Henry I., surnamed the Fowler, duke of Saxony, was elected to the throne, which his family retained little more than a century. (Until 1024.) The Saxon rulers of G-ermany, however, were not, like Charlemagne, the sovereigns of a vast empire ; but rather the chiefs of a confeder acv of princes, reckoned of superior authority in matters of national concern, while the nobles still managed their provincial administra- tion mostly in their own way. The history of the little more than nominal sovereigns of Germany, therefore, during this period, con- tains but little of the history of the German people. 7. In France, the royal authority, at the beginning of the tenth century, exercised an influence still more feeble than in ^ cof} _ Germany, and was little more than an empty honor, dition of Charles the Simple, whose name bespeaks his character, FRANCE - was the nominal sovereign ; but four other princes in Gaul, besides himself, bore the title of king, — those of Lorraine, Transjurane- Burgundy, 1 Provence, 2 and Brittany; 3 — while in other parts of the country, powerful dukes and counts governed their dominions with absolute independence. At length, in the year 920, an assembly of nobles formally deposed Charles, but he continued his nominal reign nearly three years longer, while the people and the nobility were scarcely conscious of his existence. 1 Transjurane-Bur' gundy , is that portion of Bur’ gundy that was embraced in Switzerland- - beyond the Jura, or western Alps. 2. Provence was in the south-eastern part of France, on the Mediterranean, bounded on the east by Italy, north by Dauphiny, and west by Langedoc. Greek colonies were founded here at an early period, (see Marseilles, p. 157,) and the Romans, having conquered the country, (B. C. 124,) gave it the name of Provincia, (the province,) whence its later name was derived. After the three-fold division of the empire of Louis le Debonnaire, the son and successor of Charlemagne, by the treaty of Verdun in 843, (see p. 260,) Provence fell to Lothaire ; but it afterwards became a separate kingdom, under the name of the kingdom of Arles. In 1246 it aassed to the house of Anjou by marriage ; and in 1481 Louis XI. united it to the dominie is of the French crown. (Map No. XIII.) 3 Brittany , or Bretagne, was one of the largest provinces of France, occupying the penin- sula at the north-western extremity of the kingdom, and joined on the east by Poitou, Anjou, Maine, and Normandy. It now forms the five departments, Finisterre, Cotes du Nord, (coat- doo-nor) Morbihan, Hie and Vilaine, and Lower Loire. Brittany is supposed to have derived Its name from the Britons, who, expelled from England by ihe Anglo Saxons, took refuge cere in the fifth century', it formed one of the duchies of France till it wai united to the vow a by Francis L in 1532. ( Mip No. XIII.) 272 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 8. The only really important event of French history during tho tenth century was the final settlement of the Northmen in that part of Neustria, 1 2 which received from them the name of Normandy. 3 In the year 911, during the reign of Charles the Simple, the Norman chief Kollo, who had made himself the terror of the West, ascended the Seine with a formidable fleet, and laid siege to Paris. After the purchase of a brief truce, Charles made him the tempting offer, to cede to him a vast province of France, in which he might establish himself on condition that he would abstain from ravaging the rest ot the kingdom, acknowledge the sovereignty of the crown of Franco and, together with his followers, make a public profession of Christi- anity. The terms were accepted : a region that had been completely laid waste by the ravages of the N ormans was now assigned to them for an inheritance ; and these ruthless warriors, abandoning a life of pillage and robbery, were soon converted, by the wise regulations of their chiefs, into peaceful tillers of the soil, and the best and bravest of the citizens of France. This remarkable event put an )nd to the war of Norman devastation, which, during a whole centuly, had de populated western Germany, Gaul, and England. 9. Of the independent aristocracy of France, after the death ol Charles the Simple, the most powerful were the counts of Paris, who, during the last few reigns of the Carlovingian princes, exercised little less than regal authority. At length, in the year 987, on the death of Louis V., the fifth monarch after Charles the Simple, Hugh Capet, count of Paris, was proclaimed king by his assembled vassals, and anointed and crowned in the cathedral of Iiheims, 3 by the arch- bishop of that city. The rest of France took no part in this election ; and several provinces refused to acknowledge the successors of Hugh Capet, for three or four generations. The aristocracy still monopo 1. Neustria. On the death of Clovis A. D. 511, (see p. 255,) his four sons divided the Mero- vingian kingdom, embracing northern Gaul and Germany, into two parts, calling the eastern iustrasia , and the western Neustria , — the latter term being derived from the negative particle e “not,” and Austria : — Austrasia, meaning the Eastern, and Neustria the Western monarchy. Neustria embraced that portion of modern France north of the Loire and west ot the Meuse {Map No. XIII.) 2. Normandy was an ancient province of France, adjoining Brittany on the north-east. (See Map No. XIII.) It became annexed to England through the accession cf \\ illiam, duke of Normandy, to the English throne, A. D. 1066. (See p. 290.) Philip Augustus wrested it from John, and united it to France, in 1203. 3. Rheims, a city of France ninety-five miles north-east from Paris, was a place of consider- able importance under the Romans, who called it DurocorlArum. It become a bishopric before the irruption of the Franks, and received many privileges fi jm the Merovingian kings Map No. XIII.) Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 27S lized all the prerogatives of royalty ; and the power of the n &ble* alone flourished or subsisted in the State. The period of two hun- dred and forty years, — from the accession of Hugh Capet to that of Louis IX., or Saint Louis, — is described by Sismondi as “ a long in- terregnum, during which the authority of king was extinct, although the name continued to exist.” II. The Feudal System, Chivalry, and the Crusades. — 1. A glance at the state of Southern and Western Europe in the centra] period of the Middle Ages will show that, with the waning power, and final overthrow, of the Carlovingian dynasty, a new order of things had arisen ; that kingdoms were broken into as many separate principalities as they contained powerful counts or barons ; that regularly-constituted authority no longer existed ; and that a numer- ous class of nobles, superior to all restraint, and involved in petty feuds with each other, oppressed their fellow subjects, and humbled or insulted their sovereigns, to whom they tendered an allegiance merely nominal. The rude beginnings of this state of society may be traced back to the germinating of the first seeds of order after the spread of barbarism over the Roman world ; its growth was checked under the first Carlovingians, who reduced the nobles to the lowest degradation ; but with the decline of royal authority in France, Germany, and Italy, it started into new life and vigor, and, towards the end of the tenth century, became organized under the name of the Feudal System. It maintained itself jintil t THE about the end of the thirteenth century ; and during the ff.udal period of its existence is the prominent object that en- SYSTEM - gages the attention of the historian of the Middle Ages. The unity of this portion of history will best be preserved by a brief historical outline of the system itself, and of the relations and events that grew out of it. 2 The people who overturned the empire of the Romans, made 4 partition of the conquered lands between themselves and the original possessors ; but in what manner or by what principles the division was made cannot now be determined with certainty ; nor can the exact condition in which the Roman provincials were left be ascer- tained, as the records of none of the barbarous nations of Europe extend back to this remote period. It is, however, evident that the chiefs, or leaders of the conquering invaders, in order to maintain • heir acquisitions, annexed, to the apportionment of lands among M* IS 274 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II their followers, the condition that every freeman who received a share should appear in arms, when called upon, against the enemies of tho community ; and military service was probably at first the only con- dition of the allotment. The immediate grantees of lands from the leading chief, or king, were probably the most noted warriors who served under him ; and these divided their ample estates among their more immediate followers or dependents, to be held of themselves by a similar tenure ; so that the system extended, through several gradations,' from the monarchs down through all the subordinates in authority. Each was bound to resort to the standard of his inline diatc grantor, and thence to that of his sovereign, with a band of armed followers proportioned, in numbers, to the extent of the terri- tory which he had received. 3. The primary division of lands among the conquerors, waa probably allodial ; that is, they were to descend by inheritance from father to son ; but in addition to the lands thus distributed among the nation, others were reserved to the crown for its support and dig- nity; and the greater portion of the latter, frequently extending to en tire counties and dukedoms, were granted out, sometimes as hereditary estates, sometimes for life, sometimes for a term of years, and on various conditions, to favored subjects, and especially to the provincial gov- ernors, who made under-grants of them to their vassals or tenants. On the failure of the tenant to perform the stipulated conditions, whether of military service, or of certain rents and payments, the lands reverted to the grantors ; and as the word feud signifies “ an estate in trust,” hence the propriety of calling this the Feudal System. 4. In a very imperfect state this system existed in France in the time of Charlemagne ; but that monarch, jealous of the ascendancy which the nobles had already acquired, checked it by every means in his power, — by suffering many of the larger grants of dukedoms, counties, &c., to expire without renewal, — by removing the adminis tration of justice from the hands of local officers into the hand r ; )f his own itinerant judges, — by elevating the ecclesiastical authority as a counterpoise to that of the nobility, — and by the creation of a standing army, which left the monarch in a measure independent of the military support )f the great landholders. Thus the nobles, desisting from the use of arms, and abandoning the task of defend- ing the kingdom, soon became unable to defend themselves ; bui when in the ninth and tenth centuries the royal authority was entire Ohio*. IL] MIDDLE AGES. 275 ly prostrated, when the provinces were subject to frequent inroads of the Normans and Hungarians, and government ceased to afford protection to any class of society, the proprietors of large estates found in their wealth a means of defence and security not within the reach of the great mass of the people. They converted their places of abode into impregnable castles, and covered their persons with kr ightly armor, jointed so as to allow a free movement of every part of the body ; and this protection, added to the increased physical strength acquired by constant military exercises, gave them an im- portance in war over hundreds of the plebeians by whom they were surrounded. In the confusion of the times, the governors of prov- inces, under the various titles of dukes, counts, and barons, usurped their governments as little sovereignties, and transmitted them by in- heritance, subject only to the feudal superiority of the king. 5. Meanwhile the small allodial proprietors, or holders of lands in their own right, exposed to the depredating inroads of barbarians, or, more frequently, to the rapacity of the petty feudal lords, sunk into a condition much worse than that of the feudal tenantry. Ex- posed to a system of general rapine, without law to redress their in- juries, and without the royal power to support their rights, they saw no safety but in making a compromise with oppression, and were re- duced to the necessity of subjecting themselves, in return for pro- tection, to the feudal lords of the country. During the tenth and eleventh centuries a large proportion of the allodial lands in France, Germany, and Italy, were surrendered by their owners, and received back again upon feudal tenures ; and it appears that the few who re tained their lands in their own right universally attached themselvos to some lord, although in these cases it was the privilege of the free- men to choose their own superiors. 6. Such was the state of the great mass of European society when the feuda' system had reached its maturity, in the tenth and eleventh centuries. Among the legal incidents and results that grew out of the feudal relation of service on the one side and protection on the other, were those of reliefs , or money paid to the lord by each vassal on taking a fief, or feudal estate, by inheritance ; fines , on a change of tenancy ; escheats , or forfeiture of the estate to the lord on ac- count of the vassals delinquency, or for want of heirs ; aids , or sums of money exacted by the lord on various occasions, such as the knighting of his eldest son, the marriage of his eldest daughter, or for the redemption of his person from prison ; wardship, or the 278 MODERN HISTORY. [Past II privilege of guardianship of the tenant by the lord during the mi nority of the former, with the use of the profits of his estate ; mar- riage, or the right of a lord to tender a husband to his female wards while under age, or to demand the forfeiture of the value of the marriage. These feudal servitudes, which were unknown in the time of Charlemagne, distinguish the maturity of the system, and show the gradual encroachments of the strong upon the weak. 7. The feudal government, in its best state, was a system of op* pression, which destroyed all feelings of brotherhood and equality between man and man : it was admirably calculated, when the nobles were united, for defence against the assaults of any foreign power ; but it possessed the feeblest bonds of political union, and contained innumerable sources of anarchy, in the interminable feuds of rival chieftains. It exerted a fatal influence on the character of society in general ; while individual man, in the person of the lord or baron, was doubtless improved by it ; and the great mass of the population of Europe, during the three or four centuries in which it was under the thraldom of this system, was sunk in the most profound igno- rance. Literature and science, confined almost wholly to the cloister, could receive no favor in the midst of turbulence, oppression, and rapine : judges and kings often could not write their own names : many of the clergy did not understand^the liturgy which they daily recited : the Chiistianity of the times, “ a dim taper which had need of snuffing,” degenerated into an illiberal superstition ; and every- thing combined to fix upon this period the distinctive epithet of the Dark Ages. Still the sentiment of independence — the pride and consciousness of power — and the feelings of personal consequence and dignity with which the feudal state of societ}’ inspired the nobles, contributed to let in those first rays of light and order which dis- pelled barbarism and anarchy, and introduced the virtues of a better age. S. In the midst of confusion and crime, while property was held by the sword, and cruelty and iniustive reigned supreme, II CHlVAUEtY. / . . ’ . , J j . . 1 , the spirit of chivaLry arose to turn back the tide of op- pression, and to plant, in the very midst of barbarism, the seeds of the most noble and the most generous principles. The precise time at which chivalry was recognized as a military institution, with out- ward forms and ceremonials, cannot now be ascertained; but the first notices we have of it trace it to that age when the disorders in the feudal system had attained their utmost point of excess, towards Chai\ II.] MIDDLE AGES. 277 the close of the tenth century. It was then that some noble barons, filled with charitable zeal and religious enthusiasm, and moved with compassion for the wretchedness which they saw around them, com- bine I together, under the solemnity of religious sanctions, with the holy purpose of protecting the weak from the oppression of the pow erful, and of defending the right cause against the wrong. 9. The spirit and the institution of chivalry spread rapidly ; trsachcry and hypocrisy became detestable; while courtesy, magna- nimity, courage, and hospitality, became the virtues of the age ; . and . the knights, who were ever ready to draw their swords, at whatever odds, in defence of innocence, received the adoration of the populace, and, in public opinion, were exalted even above kings themselves. The meed of praise and esteem gave fresh vigor and purity to the cause of chivalry ; and under the influence of its spirit great deeds were done by the fraternity of valiant knights who had enrolled themselves as its champions. “ The baron forsook his castle, and the peasant his hut, to maintain the honor of a family, or preserve the sacredness of a vow : it was this sentiment which made the pool serf patient in his toils, and serene in his sorrows : it enabled his master to brave all physical evils, and enjoy a sort of spiritual ro mance : it bound the peasant to his master, and the master to his king ; and it was the principle of chivalry, above all others, that was needed to counteract the miseries of an infant state of civilization. ” a 10. Though in the practical exemplifications of chivalry there was often much of error, yet its spirit was based upon the most generous impulses of human nature. “ To speak the truth, to succor the helpless and oppressed, and never to turn back from an enemy,” was the first vow of the aspirant to the honors of chivalry. In an age of darkness and degradation, chivalry developed the character of woman, smd, causing her virtues to be appreciated and honored, made her the equal companion of man, and the object of his devotion “ The love of God and the ladies,” says Hallam, u was enjoined as a single duty. He who was faithful and true to his mistress, was held sure of salvation in the theology of castles, though not of cloisters. ” b In the language of another modern writer, “ chivalry gave purity to enthusiasm, crushed barbarous selfishness, taught the heart to ex pand like a flower to the sunshine, beautified glory with generosity, and smoothed even the rugged brow of war.” A description of th«* a. Introduction to Froissart’s Chronicles. b. Hallam'* Middle Ages, p. 51* c. Jam-ss’s Chrivalry and the Crusades, p. 31. 278 MODERN HISTORY. [Pabt II various customs and peculiarities of chivalry, as they grew up by do grees into a regular institution, would be requisite to a full develop inent of the character of the age, but we can only glance at these topics here. As chivalry was a military institution, its members were taken wholly from the military class, which comprised none but the descendants of the northern conquerors of the soil ; for, with few exceptions, the original inhabitants of the western Roman empire had been reduced to the condition of serfs, or vassals, of their bar- barian lords. 11. The initiation of the German youth to the profession of arms had been, from the earliest ages, an occasion of solemnity ; and when the spirit of chivalry had established the order of knighthood, as the concentration of all that was noble and valiant in a warlike age, : t became the highest object of every young man’s ambition one day to be a knight. A long and tedious education, consisting of instruc- tion in all manly and military exercises, and in the first principles of religion, honor and courtesy, was requisite as a preparation for this honor. Next, the candidate for knighthood, after undergoing his preparatory fasts and vigils, passed through the ceremonies which made him a knight. Armed and caparisoned he then sallied forth in quest of adventure, displayed his powers at tournaments, and often visited foreign countries, both for the purpose of jousting with other knights, and for instruction in every sort of chivalrous knowl- edge. It cannot be denied, however, that the practice of knight- errantry, or that of wandering about armed, as the avowed cham- pions of the right cause against the wrong, gave to the evil-minded a very convenient cloak for the basest purposes, and that every ad. venture, whether just or not in its purpose, was too liable to be es- teemed honorable in proportion as it was perilous. But these were abuses of chivalry, and perversions of its early spirit. 12. During the eleventh century we find that chivalry, although probably first appearing in Gaul, had spread to all the surrounding nations. In Spain, the wars between the Christians and the Moors exhibited a chivalric spirit unknown to former times : about this period the institution of knighthood appears to have been introduced among the Saxons of England ; and it was first made known to the Italians, in the beginning of the eleventh century, by a band of knights from Normandy, whose religious zeal prompted them, as they W3re returning from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, to under take the relief of a small town besieged by the Saracens. As the Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 275 feudal system spread over Europe, chivalry followed in it3 path Its spirit, combined with religious enthusiasm, led to the crusades , and it was during the progress of those holy wars, which we now proceed to describe, that it attained its chief power and influence. 13. Pilgrimages to Jerusalem, and other hallowed localities iq Palestine, had been common in the early ages of the church; and towards the close of the tenth century they had increased m 0RIGIN to a perfect inundation, in consequence of the terror that of the arose from the almost universal expectation then enter- CRUSADES - tained, of the approaching end of the world. 3 - The idea originated in the interpretation given to the twelfth chapter of the Apocalypse, where it was announced that, after the lapse of a thousand years, Satan would be let loose to deceive the nations, and to gather them together to battle against the holy city, but that, after a little season, the army of the Deceiver should be destroyed by fire from heaven. But the dreaded epoch, the year 1000, passed by ; yet the current of pilgrimage still continued to flow towards the East ; for fanati cism had taken too strong hold of the minds of the people to be easily diverted from its course. 14. After Palestine had fallen into the possession of the Turks, about the middle of the seventh century, (see p. 249,) the pilgrims to Jerusalem were subjected to every species of extortion and out- rage from this wild race of Saracen conquerors ; and the returning Christians spread through all the countries of Europe indignation and horror by the pathetic tales which they related, of the injuries and insults which they had suffered from the infidels. Among others, Peter the Hermit, a native of Amiens, 1 returning from a pil- grimage to Palestine, where he had spent much time in conferring with the Christians about the means of their deliverance, complained in loud terms of these grievances, and began to preach, in glowing language, the duty of the Christian world to unite in expelling the infidels from the patrimony of the Saviour. 15. The pope, Urban II., one of the most eloquent men of the age, engaged zealously in the project, and at two general councils, 1, Amiens is a fortified city of France in the ancient province of Picardy, seventy-two raiie* north from Paris. (Map No. XIII.) a. The archives of European countries contain a great number of charters of the tenth century, beginning with these words: Appropinquante fine mnndi,—“ As the end of tho world to ap| reaching.” — Sismondi’s Roman Empire, ii. 256. 280 MODERN HISTORY. [Pam held at Placen' tia, 1 and Clermont,* and attended by a uumer is train of bishops and ecclesiastics, and by thousands of the laity, the multitude, harangued by the zealous enthusiasts of the cause, caught the spirit of those who addressed them, and pledged themselves, and all they possessed, to the crusade against the infidel possessors of the Holy Land. The flame of enthusiasm spread so rapidly throughout Christian Europe, that although the council of Clermont was held in November of the year 1095, yet in the following spring large bands iv the cnisa ders, gathered chiefly from the refuse and tfiRST dregs of the people, and consisting of men, women, and crusade c hil(l reil — 0 f all ages and professions — and of many and distinct languages, — were in motion toward Palestine. 16. Walter the Penniless, leading the way, was followed by Peter the Hermit ; but the ignorant hordes which they directed, marching without order and discipline, and pillaging the countries which they traversed, were nearly all cut off before they reached Constantinople ; and the few who passed over into Asia Minor fell an easy prey to the swords of the Turks. Immense bands that followed these hosts, mingling the motives of plunder, licentiousness and vice, with a foul spirit of fanatical cruelty, which proclaimed the duty of exter minating all, whether Jews or Pagans, who rejected the Saviour, were utterly destroyed by the enraged natives of southern Germany and Hungary, through whose dominions they attempted to pass. The loss of the crusaders in this first adventure is estimated at three hundred thousand men. a But while these undisciplined and barba- rous multitudes were hurrying to destruction, the flower of the chiv- alry of Europe was collecting — the genuine army of the crusade- under six as distinguished chiefs as knighthood could boast, headed by Godfrey of Bouillon, 3 one of the most celebrated generals of the age. In six separate bands they proceeded to Constantinople, some 1. Placen' tia, now Piazenza, was a city of northern Italy, near the junction of the Trebla Orith the Po, thirty-seven miles south-east from Milan. When colonized by the Romans, 219 . C., it was a strong and important city ; and it afforded them a secure retreat after the unfor- tunate battles of Ticinus and Treb' bia. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Clermont , a city of France, in the ancient province of Auvergne, is eighty-two miles west from Lyons, and two hundred and eight south from Paris. ( Map No. XIII.) 3. Bouillon was a small, woody, and mountainous district, nine miles wide and eighteen long, now included in the duchy of Luxembourg, on the borders of France and Belgium Pa town of Bouillon is fifty-miles north-west from the city of Luxembourg. Bouillon, w *en in the possession of Godfrey, was a dukedom. In order to supply himself with funds for his expedition to the Holy Land, Godfrey, who was likewise duke of Lower Lorraine, Cnoie, p. 270,) mortgaged Bouillon to the bishop. ( Map No. XIII.) a Gibbon, iv. 116—125. Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 28 i by way of Italj and the Adriat'’ ic, and others by way of the Danube, but their conduct, unlike that of the first crusaders, was in genera 1 2 ! remarkable for its strict discipline, order, and moderation. 1 7. Alex' ius, the Greek emperor of Constantinople, had before craved, in abject terms, assistance against the infidel Turks ; but now, when the Turks, occupied with other interests, no longer men- aced his frontier, his conduct changed, and alarmed by the vast swarms of crusaders who crossed his dominions, he strove, by treach- ery and dissimulation, and even by hostile annoyances, to diminish their numbers, and thwart their designs, and to wring from their chiefs acts of homage to his own person. With some of the chiefs, the crafty Greek succeeded ; but others spurned his proposals with indignation, and at the hazard of war resolved to maintain their in dependent position ; and when at length the several detachments of the army of the crusaders passed into Asia, they left behind them in their treacherous auxiliaries, the Christians of the Byzantine em- pire, worse enemies than they had to encounter in the Turks. 18. It is said that after the crusaders had united their forces in Asia Minor, and had been joined by the remains of the multitude that had followed Peter the Hermit, the number of their fighting men, without including those who did not carry arms, was six hundred thousand, and that, of these, the number of knights alone was two hundred thousand. 3 - At Nice, 1 in Bithyn' ia, 3 the capital of the Sultany of Bourn, 3 they first encountered the Turks, and after a siege of two months compelled the city to surrender, in spite of the efforts of the Sultan, Soliman, for its relief. (A. D. 1097.) From Nice they set out for Syria ; and after having gained a victory over Soil- man near Dorilas' um, 4 in a march of five hundred miles they trav- ersed Lesser Asia, through a wasted land and deserted towns, without finding a friend or an enemy. 19. The siege of Antioch, unparalleled for its difficulties and the 1. JVYce, called by the Romans Niece' a, was the capital of Bithyn’ ia. The Tuikish \c «n oj jsnik occupies the site of the Bithyn’ ian city. (Map No. IV.) 2. Bithyn’ ia was a country of Asia Minor, having the Euxine on the north, and the Propon- tis and Mysia on the west. (Map No. IV.) 3. Room (meaning the kingdom, of the Romans ), wa- the name given by Soliman, sultan n the Turks, to the present Natolia, (the western part of Asia Minor,) when he im adeu and became master of it in the 11th century. 4. Doriloe' um was a city of Phrygia, on the confines of Bithyn’ ia. The plain of Dorila?' um k often mentioned in history as the place where the armies of the Eastern empire assembled [n their wars against the Turks. ( Map No. IV.) a. James’s History of the Crusades, p. 111. 282 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II losses on both sides, was the next obstacle to the onward march of the crusaders, now reduced to half the number that had been collect- ed at the capture of Nice; but when the enterprise seemed hopeless, the town was betrayed into their hands by a Syrian renegade, (June 1098.) A few days later, the victors themselves, suffering the ex- tremity of privation and famine, were encompassed by a splendid Turkish and Persian army of three hundred thousand men ; yet the Christians collecting the relics of their strength, and urged on by a belief of miraculous interposition in their favor, sallied from the i )wn, and in a single memorable day annihilated or dispersed the host of their enemies. 20. While the siege of Antioch was progressing, the Turkish princes consumed their time and resources in civil wars beyond the Tigris ; and the caliph of Egypt, embracing the opportunity of weakness and discord to recover his ancient possessions, besieged and took Jerusa- lem. The Egyptian monarch offered to join his arms to those of the Christians, for the purpose of subduing all Palestine ; but it was evident that he purposed to enjoy the fruits of victory without par- ticipation ; and the answer of the crusading chiefs was firm and uni- form : “ the usurper of Jerusalem, of whatever nation, was their enemy, and they would conquer the holy city with the sword of Christ, and keep it with the same.” 21. With an army reduced to less than fifty thousand armed men, the crusaders, in the month of May, 1099, proceeded from Antioch towards Jerusalem. Marching between Mount Lib' anus 1 and the sea-shore, they obtained by treaty a free passage through the petty Turkish principalities of Trip' oli, 2 Sidon, Tyre, 3 Acre, 4 and Caesarea, 5 1. To the four chains of mountains running parallel to the sea-coast through northern Syria or Palestine, the name Lit' anus has been applied. To a chain farther east the Greeks gave the name Anti-Lib' anus. (Map No. VI.) 2. Trip’ oli , at this day one of the neatest towns of Syria, is a seaport, seventy-five milt* north-west from Damascus. It was one of the most flourishing seats of ancient literature, an.l contained an extensive library, numbering, it is said, one hundred thousand volumes, which was destroyed by the crusaders in the year 1108. On this occasion the crusaders displayed the same fanatical zeal of which the Saracens have been accused, though some think unjustly, in the case of the Alexandrian library. A priest having visited an apartment in the library in which were several copies of the Koran, reported that it contained none but impious works of Mahomet ; and the whole was forthwith committed to the flames. (Map No. VI.) 3. Tyre and Sidon, see p. 61, and Map No. VI. 4. Acre is a town of Syria on the coast of the Mediterranean, at the north-eastern limit of the bay of Acre. Mount Carmel terminates on the south-western side of the bay. This town is rendered famous in modern history by its determined and successful resistance to the arms of Napoleon in 1799. See p. 471. (Map No. VI.) 5 . Ccesarea was an ancient Roman town on the sea-coast of Palestine, thirty miles south-west from Acre. It was a flourishing city till A. D. 635, when it fell into the hands of the Saracens Chaf. II] MIDDLE AGES. 283 which promised to remain, for the time, neutral, and to follow the example of the capital. When at length the holy city broke upon the view of the Christian host, a sudden enthusiasm of joy filled every bosom ; past dangers, fatigues, and privations, were forgotten ; the name J erusalem was echoed by every tongue ; and while some shouted to the sky, some knelt and prayed, some wept aloud, and some cast themselves down and kissed the earth in silence. But to the excess of rejoicing succeeded the extreme of wrath at seeing the city in the hands of the infidels ; and in the first ebullition of rage, a simultaneous attack was commenced on the town ; but a vigorous repulse taught the necessity of more judicious methods of assault. 22. Passing over the details of the siege which followed, it is suf- ficient to state, that, within forty days, Jerusalem was taken by a desperate assault, and that the blood of seventy thousand Moslems washed the pavements of the captured city ; for the soldiers of the cross believed that they were doing God good service in exterminat- ing the blasphemous strangers ; and that all mercy to the infidels was an injury to religion. When the bloody strife was over, the leaders and soldiers, washing the marks of gore from their person^, and casting off their armor, in the guise of penitents and amid the loud anthems of the clergy, ascended the Hill of Calvary 1 on their knees, and proceeding to the holy sepulchre, with tears of joy kissed the stone which had covered the Saviour, and then offered up their prayers to the mild Teacher of that beautiful religion whose princi- ples are u peace and good will to men.” Peter the Hermit, whose preaching had excited the crusade, had followed the army through all its perils ; and when he entered the city with the conquerors, the Christians -of Jerusalem recognized the poor pilgrim who had first spoken to them words of hope, and promised them deliverance from the oppression of their Turkish masters. The reception which he now met with from the enthusiastic multitude, who in the fervor of their gratitude attributed all to him, and casting themselves at his feet, invoked the blessings of heaven on their benefactor, more than a thousand fold repaid the Hermit for all the anxiety, the toils, and dangers, which he had endured. The ultimate fate of this extraor dinary individual is unknown. In 1101 it fell into the hands of the crusaders, when it sunk to rise no more. Caesarea was the place where Peter converted Cornelius and his house, (Acts, x. 1,) and where Paul made hie memorable speeches to Felix and Agrippa. (Acts, xxiv., xxv., xxvi.) I. Hill of Crlvary. See description of Jerusalem p. 164, and Map No. VII.} 284 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 23. Jerusalem was now delivered from the hands of the infidels* the great object of the expedition was accomplished ; and the feudal institutions of Europe were introduced into Palestine in all their purity. Godfrey of Bouillon was chosen the first sovereign of Je- rusalem ; and the Christian kingdom thus established continued to exist nearly a century. Several minor States were established in the East by the crusaders, but as they seldom united cordially for mutual defence, and were continually assailed by powerful enemies, none of them were of long duration. Even during the sovereignty of Godfrey, the kingdom of Jerusalem, owing to the return of many of the crusaders, and their losses in battle, was left for a time to be supported by an army of less than three thousand men. But the spirit of pilgrimage was still rife ; and it is estimated that, between the first and second crusade, five hundred thousand people set Out from Europe for Syria, in armed bands of several thousand men each ; and although the greater portion of them perished by the way, the few who reached their destination proved exceedingly serviceable in supporting the Christian cause, and in re-peopleing the devastated lands of Pales- tine. The period between the first and second crusade is remarkable for the rise, at Jerusalem, of the two most distinguished orders of knighthood — the Hospitallers, and the Bed- Cross Knights, or Temp- lars. The valor of both orders became noted : the Hospitallers ever burned a light during the night, that they might always be prepared against the enemy ; and it is said that any Templar, on hearing the cry “ to arms,” would have been ashamed to ask the number of the enemy. The only question was, “ where are they ?” 24. During nearly two centuries after the council of Clermont, each returning year witnessed a new emigration of pilgrim warriors for the defence of the Holy Land, although but six principal cru- sades followed the first great movement ; and all these were excited by some recent or impending calamity to Palestine. A detailed aC' count of these several crusades would only exhibit the perpetual recurrence of the same causes and effects ; and would appear but so many faint and unsuccessful copies of the original. Avoiding detail, we shall therefore speak of them only in general terms. 25. Forty-eight years after the conquest of Jerusalem, the loss v the P r i nc ip a l Christian fortresses in Palestine led to a second second crusade, which was undertaken by Conrad III., crusade. em peror of Germany, and Louis VII., king of France (A. D. 1147.) The Pope Eugenius abetted the design, and com* Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES 28 f* missioned the eloquent St. Bernard to preach the cioss through France and Germany. A vast army under Conrad took the lead in the expe iition ; but not a tenth part ever reached the Syrian boun- daries The army of French and Germans was but little more for- tunate ; and the poor remains of these mighty hosts, still led by the emperors of France and Germany, after reaching Jerusalem, joined the Christian arms in a fruitless siege of Damascus, which was the termination of the second crusade. 26. Forty years after the second crusade, Jerusalem was taken by Saladin, the Sultan of Egypt, whose authority was acknowledged also by the greater part of Syria and Persia. (A. D. 1187.) The loss of the holy city tilled all Europe with consternation ; and new expeditions were fitted out for its recovery. France, yI THB Germany, and England, joined in the crusade ; and the third armies of each country were headed by their respective CRUSADE - sovereigns, Philip Augustus, Frederic Barbarossa, and Kichard I., surnamed the lion-hearted. Frederic, after defeating the Saracens in a pitched battle on the plains of Asia Minor, lost his life by im- prudently bathing in the river Orontes ; a and his army was reduced to a small body when it reached Antioch. The French and English, more successful than the Germans, besieged and took Acre, after a siege of twenty-two months (July, A. D. 1191); but as Bichard and Philip quarrelled, owing to the latter’s jealousy of the superior military prowess of the former, Philip returned home in disgust; and Bichard, after defeating Saladin in a great battle near Ascalon, 1 and penetrating within sight of Jerusalem, concluded a three years truce with his rival, and then set sail for his own dominions. (A. D Oct. 1192.) 27. The fourth crusade b was undertaken at the beginning t»f tin. thirteenth century, (A. D. 1202,) at the instigation of yn thk pope Innocent III. No great sovereign joined in the fourth enterprise ; but the most powerful barons of France CRUSADE - 1. Ascalon , a very ancient city of the Philistines, was a sea-port town of the Mediterranean, ;orty-five miles south-west from Jerusalem. Its ruins present a strange mixture of Syrian, Greek, Oothic, and Roman remains. There is not a single inhabitant within the old walls, which are still standing. The prophecy of Zechariah, “Ascalon shall not be inhabited,” and that of Ezekiel, “It shall be a desolation,” are now actually fulfilled. ( Map No. VI.) a. Some authorities say the Cydnus. See James’s Chivalry and the Crusades, p. 239. b. Severs!- important expeditions that were made to the Holy Rand a short time previous tc this, and that were promoted by the exhortations of pope Celestine III., are represented by some writers as the fourth crusade. In this way some writers enumerate nim distinct crusades som« more, whi’e others des.ribe only six 286 MODERN HISTORY [Part Ji took the cross, and gave the command to .Boniface, marquis of Montserrat. 1 They hired the Venetians to transport them to Pales tine, and agreed to recapture for them the city of Zara, 2 in Dalmatia ; and this object was accomplished, while the pope in vain launched the thunders of the church at the refractory crusaders. Instead of sailing to Palestine, the expedition was then directed against the Greek empire, under the pretence of dethroning a usurper ; ar.d the result was the conquest of Constantinople by the Latins, and the founding of a new Latin or Roman empire on the ruins of the By- zantine. (A. D. April 1204.) The new empire existed during a period of fifty-seven years, when the Greeks partially recovered their authority. The fourth crusade ended without producing any benefit to Palestine. 28. The fifth crusade, undertaken fourteen years after the fall of viii the Byzantine empire, was at first conducted by Andrew, fifth monarch of Hungary. The Christian army, after spend crusade. j n g some time i n the vicinity of Acre, sailed to Egypt ; but after some successes, among which was the taking of Damietta, 3 ultimate ruin was the issue of the expedition. A few years later, (A. D. 1228), Frederic II., emperor of Germany, then arrayed in open hostility with the pope, led a formidable army to Palestine, and after he had advanced some distance from Acre towards Jerusalem, concluded a treaty with the sultan Melek Kamel, whereby the holy city and the greater part of Palestine were yielded to the Christians After the return of Frederic to Europe, new bands of crusaders pro- ceeded to Palestine: the sultan Kamel retook Jerusalem, but the Christians again obtained it by treaty. 29. While these events had been passing in Palestine a new dy nasty had arisen .in the north of Asia, which for a time threatened a complete revolution of all the known countries of the world. In the early part of the thirteenth century Gengis Khan, ix. tartar ^.j ie 0 f a p e ^ty Mongol prince, had raised himself to CONQUESTS. I J tor ’ be the lord of all the pastoral nations throughout the vast plains of Tartary. After desolating China, 4 and adding its five 1. Montserrat was an Italian marquisate in western Lombardy, now included in Piedmont The marquises of Montserrat, rising from small beginnings in the course of the tenth century, and gradually extending their territories, acted, during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, one of the most brilliant parts alloted to any reigning house in Europe. 2. Zara , still the capital of Dalmatia, is a seaport on the eastern coast of tie Adriat’ ic, one hundred and fifty miles south-east from Venice. 3. Damietta is on the Damietta, or principal eastern branch of the Nil e, six miles r'rom its mourn. 1. China , a vast country of eastern Asia, may be : Imost said to have no history of m>y in Chap. II.' MIDDLE AGES. 287 northern provinces to his empire, at the head of seven hundied thou- sand warriors a he invaded and overran the dominions of the sultan of Persia. His successor Octai directed his resistless arms west- ward, under the conduct of his general Baton, who, in the course of six years, led his warriors, in a conquering march, from east to west, over a fourth part of the circumference of the globe. The inun- dating torrent, passing north of the territories of the Byzantine em- pire, left them unharmed ; but it rolled with all its fury upon the more barbarous nations of Europe. A great part of Russia 1 was desolated ; and both Kiev 2 and Moscow, 3 the ancient and modern capital, were reduced to ashes : the Tartars penetrated into the heart of Poland, 4 and as far as the borders of Germany, whence they turned to the south and spread over the plains of Hungary. Already the remote nations of the Baltic trembled at the approach of these barbarian warriors; and Germany, France, England, and Italy, were on the point of arming in the common defence of Christendom, when Baton and the five hundred thousand warriors who still accompanied him were recalled to Asia by the death of their sovereign. (A. D. 1245.) 30. Among the many tribes and nations that had been driven from their original seats by the great Tartar inundation, were the Coras- mins, embracing numerous hordes of Tartar origin, that had attached themselves to the fortunes of the sultan of Persia. They now pre- cipitated themselves upon Syria and Palestine, and massacred indis- terest to the general reader, it has so few revolutions or political changes to record. The authentic history of the Chinese begins with the compilations of Confucius, who was born B. C. 550. From that period the annals of tl\e empire have been carefully noted and preserved in an unbroken line to the present day — forming a series of more than five hundred volumes of uninteresting chronological details. 1. Russia , the largest, and one of the most powerful empires, either of ancient or modern times, extends from Behring’s straits and the Pacific on the east, to the Gulf of Bothnia on the west, — a distance of nearly six thousand mile3, with an average breadth of about fifteen hun- dred miles. In this immense empire about forty distinct languages are in use, having attached to them a great number of different dialects. In the year 1535 the extent of the Russian do- minions was estimated at thirty-seven thousand German square miles; but in the year 1E59 it nad increased to ten times that amount. (For early history of Russia see p. 309.) 2. Kiev, or Kiow , the capital of the modern Russian province of the same name, is on the Dnieper, two hundred and twenty miles north of Odes’ sa, the nearest port on the Black Sea. Kiev was the former residence of the grand dukes of Russia — the earliest seat of the ChristiaB religion In Russia— and for a considerable period the capital of the empire. ( Map No. XVII.) 3. .Moscow, still one of the capitals ot the Russian empire, and the grand entrepot of its in- ternal commerce, is situated on the navigable river Moskwa, a branch o'" the Volga, four him dred miles south-east from St. Petersburg. It was founded in the year 1 |47. {Map No. XII.) 4. Poland, see p. 311. a. Gibbon, iv 251. 288 MODERN HISTORY. [Pari 11 criminately Turks, J ews, and Christians who opposed them. J era- ealem was taken ; and it is said every soul in it was put to the sword ; but at length the Turks and Christians, uniting their forces, utterly defeated the Corasmins, and thus delivered Palestine from one of the most terrible scourges that had ever been inflicted on it. 31. The ravages of the Corasmins in Palestine called forth x the the crusade, which was led by Louis IX., king sixth of France, commonly called St. Louis. He began by an crusade, attack on Egypt ; but after some successes he was de- feated, made prisoner when enfeebled by disease, and forced to purchase his liberty by the payment of an immense ransom. (A. I). 1250.) Twenty years later St. Louis embarked on a second cru- sade — the last of those great movements for the redemption of the Holy Land. The fleet of Louis being driven by a storm into Sar dinia, here a change of plans took place, and it was resolved to at tack the Moors of Africa. The French landed near Carthage, and took the city ; but a pestilence soon carried off Louis and the greater portion of his army, when the expedition was abandoned. 32. From this time the fate of the Eastern Christians grew daily more certain ; and in the year 1291 a Turkish army of two hundred thousand men appeared before the walls of Acre, the last strong- hold of the crusaders in Palestine. After a tedious siege the city was taken ; and thus the last vestige of the Christian power in Syria was swept away. The crusades had occupied a period of nearly two centuries, and had led two millions of Europeans to find their graves in Eastern lands ; and yet none of the objects of these expeditions had been accomplished ; — a sad commentary upon the folly and fa- naticism of the age. The effects of these holy wars upon the state of European society will be referred to in a subsequent chapter. 3 - Ill English History. — 1. Our last reference to the history :t England was to that period rendered brilliant by the after T 'ihe re ig n of Alfred the Great, the real founder of the Eng- death of lish monarchy ; and we now proceed to give a brief but Alfred. C0Iinec ted outline of the continuation of English history during the central period of the Middle Ages, which has just passed in review before us. 2. After the death of Alfred, in the first year of the tenth cen* tury, (A. D. 901,) England, still a prey to the ravages of the Danes, a. See Part III. ch. ix. of the University Edition. Chap. IL] MIDDLE AGES. 289 and intestine disorder, relapsed into confusion and barbarism ; and under a succession of eight sovereigns,* 1 from the time of Alfred, its history presents little that is important to the modern reader. During the reign of Ethelred II., the last of these rulers, the Danes and Norwegians, led by Sweyn king of Denmark, 1 acquired possession of the greater portion of the kingdom ; and on several occasions Ethelred purchased a momentary respite from their rav ages by large bribes, which only increased their avidity, and insured their return. At length the weak and cruel monarch ordered the massacre of all the Danes in the Saxon territories. (A. D. 1002.) The execution of the barbarous mandate occasioned the renewal of hostilities : the English nobles, in contempt of their sovereign, of fered the crown to Sweyn ; while Ethelred fled for refuge to the court of Richard, duke of Normandy, whose sister he had married. On the death of Sweyn, in the year 1014, the Danish army in Eng- land chose his son Canute to succeed him ; while the Saxon chiefs, with their wonted inconstancy, recalled Ethelred. On the death of the latter, his son Edmund, surnamed Ironside, from his hardihood and valor, was chosen king by the English ; but by his death, (A. D. 1016,) after a few months, Canute, in accordance with a previous treaty, was left in undisturbed possession of the whole of England. 3. Canute, surnamed the Great, proved to be the most powerful monarch of the age. By marrying Emma, the widow of Ethelred, he conciliated the vanquished Britons, and disarmed the hostility of the duke of Normandy ; while the earl of Godwin, the most power- ful of the English barons, was gained to his interests, by receiving the hand of the king’s daughter. In the year 1025 he subdued Sweden, and Norway 2 two years later, and on his death (Nov. 1036) he left his vast possessions of Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Eng- land, to be divided among his children His administration of the government of England was at first harsh , but he gradually emerged from his original barbarism, embraced Christianity, encouraged liter ature, and adopted some wise institutions for the benefit of his Anglo Saxon subjects.' 4. After the death of Canute, two of his sons, Harold and Hardi Canute, reigned in succession over England; after which, in 1041, 1. Denmark , Sweden , and Norway ; — see p. 308 2. Sweden and Norway. See Denmark , p. 308. a. Edward 1. the Elder, 901. Athelstan, 925. Edmund I., 941. Edred, 946. Edwy, 955^ Edgar, 959. Edw ard 11., the Martyr, 975. Ethelred II., 978 N 290 MODERN HISTORY. [P^ftT II the crown returned to the ancient Saxon family, in the person of Edward the Confessor, a younger son of Ethelred. The mild char- acter of Edward endeared him to his Saxon subjects, notwithstand- ing the partiality which he showed to his Norman favorites ; but his reigr of twenty -five years was weak and inglorious, and it was dis- turbed by the rebellion of the earl of Godwin, by occasional hostili ties with the Welsh and Scotch, and by intrigues for the succession. On his death. (1066,) Harold, son of Godwin, took possession of the throne ; but scarcely had he overcome his brother Tostig, who lis* puted the supremacy with him, when he found a more formidable competitor in William, duke of Normandy, to whom the late king had either bequeathed or purposed the succession. On the 25th of September, 1066, Harold gained a great victory over his brother; but, three days later, William landed in Sussex, 1 at the head of sixty thousand men, and on the fourteenth of October fought ii. norman jj aro }q the bloody battle of Hastings, 2 which ter minated the Saxon dynasty, and put William the Nor- man in possession of the throne of England. Harold was killed in battle ; the English army was nearly destroyed, and a fourth part of the Normans slain. The victory gave to William the title of the Conqueror ; and the subjugation of the realm by him is termed, in English history, the Norman conquest. 5. This conquest, however, was gradual, for the immediate results of the battle of Hastings gave to William less than a fourth part of the kingdom ; and his wars for the subjugation of the West, the North, and the East, were protracted during a period of seven years. William treated the English as rebels for appearing in the field against him, and distributed their lands among his Norman followers. To this distribution, the titles and revenues of many of the English nobility owe their origin. a The northern Saxons made a vigorous resistance, and William treated them with a severity in proportion to the valor and pertinacity of their defence — laying waste the country with fire and sword, until, in some countries, the danger of rebellion was removed by a total dearth of inhabitants. t is a southern county of 1 ingland, on the English channel, west of Kent. m. tidstings , now a town of ten thousand inhabitants, is fifty-four miles south-east fircm l^on don. It is pleasantly situated in a vale, surrounded on every side, except toward the sea. by hilla Rnd cliffs. On a hill east of the town are still to be seen banks and trenches, supposed to hava been the work of the Normans at the time of the invasion. (Map No. XVI.) a. See Notes, Warwick , Richmond , &c., p. 306. Zhai*. II] MIDDLE AGES. 291 6. The foundations of the feudal system hal existed in England before the conquest ; but the distribution of the conquered lands among the Norman followers of William, gave that prince the op- portunity of fully establishing the system as it then existed, in its maturity, on the continent. Preparatory to the introduction of the feudal tenures, William caused a survey to be made of all the lands in the kingdom, the particulars of which were inserted in what is called the Doomsday Book, or Book of Judgment, which is still in being. Under the iron rule of the conqueror the Anglo Saxons be- came vassals of their Norman lords ; the name Saxon was made a term of reproach ; and the Saxon language was regarded as barba ’•ous; while the Norman-French idiom was employed in all the acts of administration. 7. On the death of William / in the year 1087, his second son, William Bufus, took possession of the throne, to the prejudice of his elder brother Bobert, then absent in Normandy. His reign, and that of his brother and successor, Henry I., are distinguished by few events of importance ; but both plundered the kingdom : an ancient Saxon chronicle says that the former was “ loathed by nearly all his people, and odious to God and of the latter it is said that “justice was in his hands a source of revenue, and judicial murder a frequent instrument of extortion.” 8. Henry had married a Saxon princess ; and to his daughter Ma tilda, by this marriage, he designed to leave the crown ; but his nephew Stephen defeated his intentions by immediately seizing the vacant throne on the death of Henry. (1135.) A long civil war that followed was terminated by a general council of the kingdom which adopted Henry Plantagenet, 1 Matilda’s son* as the successor of Stephen. One year later the boisterous life and wretched reign of Stephen were brought to a close, when Henry II., the first of the Plantagenet dynasty, ascended the throne of England. (A. D. 1154.) 9. By inheritance and marriage, Henry possessed, in addition to the duchy of Normandy, the fairest provinces of north-western 1. Plantagenet is the surname of the kings of England from Henry II. to Richard III Inclusive. Antiquarians are much at a loss to account for the origin of this name ; and the best derivation they can find for it is, that Fulk, the first earl of Anjou of that name, being itung with remorse for some wicked action, went in pilgrimage to Jerusalem as a work of atonement ; where, being soundly scourged with broom twigs, which grew plentifully on the spot, be ever alter took the surname of Plantagenet , or broomstalk , which was retained by hit noble posterity. (Encyclopedia.) :292 MODERN HISTORY. [Faet n France; and these, in connection with his English dominions, rcn in BEDU0 _ dered him one of the most powerful monarchs in cliris- t:o\ of tendom. He also reduced Ireland 1 to a state of subjec Ireland. ^ion, and formally annexed it to the English crt/wn, al- though the complete conquest of that country was not effected until nearly four centuries later. By a wise and impartial administration of the government, Henry gained the affections of his people ; but he was long engaged in a kind of spiritual warfare with the pope, and the dose of his life was clouded by domestic misfortunes. His sons, instigated by their mother, and aided by Louis VII., king of France, repeatedly rebelled against him ; and he finally died of a broken heart, after a long reign of thirty -five years. (A. D. 1189.) 10. Henry was succeeded by his eldest son Richard, surnamed the Lion-hearted, who immediately on his accession, after plundering his subjects of an immense sum of money, embarked on a crusade to the Holy Land. After filling the world with his renown, being wrecked in his homeward voyage, and travelling in disguise through Grermany, he was seized and imprisoned, and only obtained his lib erty by an immense ransom, which was paid by his subjects. The 1. Ireland is a large island west of England, from which it is separated by the Irish Sea and St. George’s Cnannel. Its divisions, best known in history, are the four great provinces, Ulster in the north, Leinster in the east, Connaught in the west, and Munster in the south. Irish historians speak of Greek, Phoenician, Scotch, Spanish, and Gaulic colonies in Ireland* before the Christian era ; for which, however, there is no historical foundation. The oldest authentic Irish records were written between the tenth and twelfth centuries ; but some of them go back, with some consistency, as far as the Christian era. The early inhabitants of Ireland were evidently more barbarous than even those of Britain. In the fifth century Christ! anity was introduced among them by St. Patrick, a native of North Britain, who in his youth had been carried a captive into Ireland ; but the new faith did not flourish until a century 01 two later ; and it appears that, even then, the learning of the Irish clergy did not extend be- yond the walls of the monasteries. In the ninth an*d tenth centuries the Danes made them* selves masters of the greater part of the coasts of the island, while the interior, divided among a number of barbarous and hostile chiefs, was agitated by internal wars, which no sense of common dangers could interrupt. In the early part of the eleventh century, Brian Boru, king of Munster, united the greater part of the island under his sceptre, and expelled the Danes; but soon after his death, A. D. 1014, the kingdom was again divided ; and sanguinary wars continued to rage between opposing princes until the invasion by Henry II. of England, in the year 1169. So early as 1155 Henry had projected the conquest of Ireland, and had obtained from pope Adrian IV. full ‘permission to invade and subdue the Irish, for the purpose of re- forming them. The grant was accompanied by a stipulation for the payment to St. Peter, of a penny annually from every house in Ireland, — this being the price for which the independence of the Irish people was coolly bartered away. Henry, however, conquered only the four counties Dublin, Meath, Louth, and Kildare, being a part of Leinster, on the eastern coast. In 1315 Edward Bruce, brother of the king of Scotland, being invited over by the Irish, landed in Ireland, and caused himself to be proclaimed king ; but not being well supported, he was finally defeated and k.illed in the battle of Dundalk, in the year 1318, after v hich the Scotch forces wero witlic rawn It was not until the time of Cromwell that English supremacy war fill H estab i shed u every part of the island. {Map No. XVI.) Chap II] MIDDLE AGES. 293 reign of this famous knight is chiefly signalized by his deeds in Pal- estine, and is of little importance in English history. 11. Richard was succeeded by his profligate brother John, sur- named Lackland. (A. D. 1 199.) In a long struggle with Philip Augustus of France, John lost most of his continental possessions : by stripping the church of its treasures he made the pope his enemy; and after a vain attempt to brave the storm of his vengeance, he made a cowardly submission, swore allegiance to the pope, aid agreed to hold his kingdom tributary to the holy see. The barons, provoked by the tyranny and vices of their sovereign, next took up arms against him : they received with indignation the pope’s decla* ration in favor of his vassal, — took possession of London,— and finally compelled the king to yield to their demands, and to sign the Magna Charta , or Great Charter of rights and liberties, which laid the first permanent foundation of British freedom. a John attempt- ed to annul the conditions imposed, and, being absolved by the pope from the oath which he had taken to the baion~, ne collected an army of mercenary soldiers from Germany, and proceeded to lay waste the kingdom ; but the barons proffered the crown to Louis, the eldest son of the French monarch, who came over with a large army to enforce his claims, when the sudden death of J ohn arrested impending dangers, and prevented England from becoming a province of France. 12. On the death of John, his eldest son, Henry III., then in the tenth year of his age, was acknowledged king by the nobility and the people. Henry was a weak and fickle sovereign ; and during his long reign of more than half a century, the country was agitated by internal commotions, caused by the king’s prodigality, favoritism, op- pressive exactions, and continual violation of the people’s rights in direct opposition to the principles of the Great Charter. Again the barons resisted, and called a parliament, when the king was virtually de- posed. (A. D. 1258.) An attempt to regain his authority led to all the horrors of civil war. In another parliament, called by the barons, (A. D. 1265,) and embracing delegates from the counties, cities, and boroughs, we find the first germs of popular representa- tion in England ; and although, eventually, the baronial party, whose tyranny wa? found scarcely less than that of the king, was over- thrown, yet their incautious innovation had already laid the basis of the future House of Commons. a. The Great Charter was siijned on the 19th of June, 1215, at Runnyrnede, on the Tbamea, between Staines and Wind/ or 294 MODERN HISTORY. lPabt II 13. Henry was succeeded by his son, Edward I., who, at the time of his father’s death, was absent on the last crusade to the Holy Land. (A. D. 1272.) The active and splendid reign of this prince, who lift behind him the character of a great statesman and com- mand )r, was mostly occupied with the attempt to unite the whole of Great Britain under one sovereignty. When Llewellyn, prince of iv subju- Wales, 1 refused to perform the customary homage to the gation of English crown, Edward declared war against him, over- wales. ran coun t r y ? and subdued it, after a brave resistance. (1277—1283.) 1 4. The remainder of Edward’s reign was filled with attempts to subjugate Scotland, to which country the English monarch laid claim as lord paramount, by the rights of fealty and succession. A Scotch king, taken prisoner by Henry II., had been compelled, as the price of his release, to do homage for his crown ; and the same had been demanded of later princes, in return for lands which they held in England. By the death of Alexander III. of Scotland, in the year 1283, the crown devolved on his grand daughter the princess Margaret, who was a niece of Edward I. of England. This lady was soon after affianced to Edward’s only son, the prince of Wales; and thus the prospect of uniting the crowns of the two kingdoms seemed near at hand, when the frail bond of union was suddenly destroyed by the untimely death of the princess. 15. The two principal Scotch competitors for the crown were now John Baliol and Robert Bruce, who agreed to submit their claims to the decision of Edward. The latter decided in favor of Baliol, on condition of his becoming a vassal of the English king. (A. D. 1292.) 1. Wales, anciently called Cambria, a principality in the west of Great Britain, having on the north and west the Irish Sea, and on the south and south-west Bristol Channel, is about one hundred and fifty miles in length from north to south, and from fifty to eighty in breadth. The Welsh are descendants of the ancient Britons, who, being driven out of England by tho Anglo Saxons, took refuge in the mountain fastnesses of Wales, or fled to the continent of Europe, where they gave their name to Brittany. In the ninth century Wales was divided into three sovereignties, North Wales, South Wales, and the intermediate district called Powis,— the reigning princes of which were held together by some loose ties of confederacy. In the year i33 the English king Athelstan compelled the Welsh principalities to become his tributaries ; an l upon the treaty then concluded with them, founded on the feudal relation of lord and sal, the Normans based their claim of lordship paramount over all Wales. During the eleventh and twel 'th centuries, South Wales was the scene of frequent contests between the Welsh and Normans. When Edward I. claimed feudal homage of Llewellyn, the duty of fealty was acknowledged by the latter ; but he was unwilling, ty gchxg to London, to place himself in tne power of a monarch who had recently violated r Veaty with him ; and hence arose a war whicn resulted in the death of Llewellyn, aiuv th* subjugation of hii country. A. D 1282-5. ( Map No. XVI.) Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 295 The impatient temper of Baliol could not brook the humiliating acta of vassalage required of him ; and when war broke out between France and England, he refused military aid to the latter, and con- cluded a treaty of alliance with the French monarch. (A. D. 1292.) War between England and Scotland followed; and Baliol, after a brief resistance, being defeated in the great battle of Dunbar, 1 2 was forced to make submission to Edward in v ‘ terms of abject supplication. The victor returned to London, carrying with him not only the Scottish crown and sceptre, but also the sacred stone on which the Scottish monarchs were placed when they received the royal inauguration. (A. D. 1296.) 16 Scarcely, however, had Edward crossed the frontiers, when the Scots reasserted their independence, and under the brave Sir Wil- liam Wallace, a man of obscure birth,, but worthy to be ranked among the foremost of patriots, defeated the English at Stirling, a and recovered the whole of Scotland as rapidly as it had been lost. Again Edward advanced, at the head of a gallant muster of all the English chivalry, and the Scots were defeated at Falkirk 3 (A. D. 1298.) The adherents of Wallace mutinied against him; and a few years later the hero of Scotland was treacherously betrayed into the hands of Edward, and being condemned for the pretended crime of treason, was infamously executed, to the lasting dishonor of the English king. (A. D. 1305.) 17. The cause of Scottish freedom was revived by Robert Bruce, grandson of the Bruce who had been competitor for the throne against Baliol. In the spring of the year 1306 he was crowned king at Scone 4 by the revolted barons. In the following year, Ed- 1. Dunbar is a seaport of Scotland, twenty-seven miles north-east from Edinburgh. The ancient castle of Dunbar, the scene of many warlike exploits, stood on a lofty rock, the base of which was washed by the sea. It was taken by Edward I. in 1296 ; — four times it received within its walls the unfortunate Queen Mary ; — and it was in the vicinity of Dunbar that Crom- well defeated the Scots under General Leslie, in 1650. {Map No. XVI.) 2. Stirling is a river port and fortress of Scotland, on the Forth, thirty miles north-west from Edinburgh. Its fine old castle is placed on a basaltic rock, rising abruptly three hundred feet from the river’s edge. {Map No. XVI.) 3. Falkirk is an ancient town of Scotland, twenty-two miles north-west from Edinburgh, and three miles south of the Frith of Forth. In the valley, a little north of the town, the Scotch, under Wallace, were defeated on the 22d of July, 1298. In this battle fell Sir John Stewart, the commander of the Scottish archers ind Sir John the Grahame, the bosom friend of Wal- lace. The tomb of Grahame, which the gratitude of his countrymen has thrice renewed, is to be seen in the churchyard of Falkirk. On a moor, half a mile south-west from the town. Charles Stuart, the Pretender, gained a victory over the royal army in 1746. {Map No. XVI. f.j 4. Scene , now a small village of Scotland, is a little above Perth, on the river Tay, eighteen miles w rst from Dundee, and thirty-five north-west from Edinburgh. It was formerly the rest- 296 MODERN HISTORY. [Pam II ward, assembling a mighty army, to render resistance hopeless, took the field against him, but he died on his march, and the expedition was abandoned by his son and successor, Edward II., in opposition to the dying injunctions of his father. (A. D. 13C7.) Still the war continued, and the Scotch were generally successful ; but after seven years Edward himself marched against the rebels at the head of more than a hundred thousand men ; but being met by Bruce at the head of little more than a third of that number, he experienced a total defeat in the battle of Bannockburn, 1 which established the in- dependence of Scotland. (A. I). June 24th, 1314.) 18. The northern nations of Europe, during the tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries, were much less advanced in civilization than those which sprung from the wrecks of the Homan empire ; and their obscure annal s offer little to our notice but the germs of rude king* doms in the early stages of formation. In the south-west of Europe, the wars between the Moors and Christians of the Spanish peninsula had already continued during a period of more than five centuries, with ever-varying results; but the overthrow of the Western cali- phate of Cordova, in the year 1030, followed by the dismemberment of the Moham' medan empire of Spain, into several independent States, (A. D. 1238,) struck a fatal blow at the Saracen dominion. But, unfortunately, the Christian provinces also were little united, and it was not uncommon for the Christian princes to form alliances with the Moors against one another. The founding of the Moorish kingdom of Granada, in 1238, for a time delayed the fall of the Moslems ; but the Christians gradually extended their power, until, near the close of the fifteenth century, Granada yielded to the tor- rent that had long been setting against it, and with its fall the su- premacy of the Christian faith and power was acknowledged through- out the peninsula. a dince of the Scottish kings — the place of their coronation — and has been the scene of many istorieal events. The remains of its ancient palace are incorporated with the mansion of the earl of Mansfield. {Map No. XVI.) I. Bannockburn , the name of which is inseparably connected with one of the most mem- orable events in British history, is three miles south-west from Stirling. About one mile west from the village James III. was defeated in 1488, by his rebellious subjects and his son Jame* IV., and, after' being w runded in the engagement, was assassinated at it mill in the vicinity s JUap No. XVI.) a. See next Section, pp. 317-18. and Notes. Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 29 ? SECTION III GSNERAI HI 41 DRY DURING THE FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES. L ENGLAND AND FRANCE DURING THE FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES. AN ALYSIS. 1. Continuation of the histories of France and England.— 2. Defeat cf Edward II. in the battle of Bannockburn. Edward offends the barons. [Gascony.] The Great Charter Gonfrmed, and annual parliaments ordained. — 3. Rebellion of the barons, and death of Ed Trarl. Reign of Edward III. invasion of Scotland. [Halidon Hill.] French and English wars. — 4. Edward disputes the succession to the throne of France Invasion of France, and battle of Cressy. [Cressy.] Defeat of the Scots, and capture of Calais. [Durham. Calais.]— 5. Renewal of the war with France, and victory of Poictiers. (1356.) Anarchy in France. Treaty of Bretigny. The conquered territory. [Bretigny. Aquitaine. Bordeaux.] — 6. Renewal of the war with France in 1368. Relative eondition of the two powers. The French recover their provinces. [Bayonne. Brest, and Cherbourg.] — 7. Death of Edward III. of England, and Charles V. of France. The distractions that followed in both kingdoms. [Orleans. Lancaster. Gloucester.] Wat Tyler’s insurrection. [Blackheath.] — 8. Character of Richard II. He is deposed, and succeeded by Henry IV. (1399.) The legal claimant. Origin of the contentions between the houses of York and Lancaster. — 9. Insurrection against Henry. [Shrewsbury.] — 10. Accession of Henry V., and happy change in his character. He invades France, and defeats the French in the battle of Agincourt. — 11. Civil war in France, and return of Henry. The treaty with the Burgundian faction. Opposition of the Orleans party. [The States General. The dauphin.] — 12. The infant king of the English, Henry VI., and the French king Charles VII. Joan of Arc. Her declared mission. — 13. Successes of the French, and fate of Joan. — 14. The English gradually lose all their continental possessions, ex cept Calais. Tranquillity in France. 15. Unpopularity of the reigning English family. Popular insurrection. Beginning of the wars of the Two Rosks. [St. Albans.] — 16. Sanguinary character of the strife. First period of the war closes with the accession of Edward IV., of the house of York. — 17. The French king. The reign of Edward IV. The earl of Warwick. Overthrow of the Lancastrians. The fate of Margaret, her son, and the late king Henry IV. [Warwick. Tewkesbury.]— 18, The cotemporary reign of Louis XI. of France. The relations of Edward and Louis. — 19. Fate of Edward V., and accession of Richard III. Defeat and death of Richard, and end of the “ Wars of the Two Roses.” [Richmond. Bosworth.] 20. Reign of Henry VII. The impostors Simnel and Warbeck. [Dublin.] — 21. Treaties vr. ii France and Scotland. The Scottish marriage. — 22. Why the reign of Henry VII. is an •mpo tant epoch in English history. Z. OTHER NATIONS AT THE CLOSE OF THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY. 1. Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Union of Calmar. [Calmar.] 2. The Russian empire. Its early history. [Dnieper. Novogorod.] Divisions of tl kingdom in the eleventh century. — 3. Tartar invasions. The reign of John III. duke of Mos- cow. Russia at the end of the fifteenth century. — 4. Founding of the Ottoman empire, on the ruir.9 if the Eastern or Greek empire. [Emir.] The Turkish empire at the close of the four- teenth century. The sultan Bajazet overthrown by Tamerlane. — 5. The Tartar empire of Tamerlane. Defeat of the Turks. Turks and Christians unite against the Tartars. Deatfc of Tame.lane. [Samarcand. Angora.] — C. Taking of Constantinople by the Turks, and extinction of the Eastern empire. 7. Poland. Commencement and eany history of Poland. Extent of the kingdom at the close of the fifteenth century. [Poland. Lithuania. Teutonic knights. Moldavia.] — 8. The German empire at the close of the fifteenth century. Elective monarchs. — P. Causes that ren Jer the history of Germany exceedingly complicated. The three powerful States of Ger munv about the middle of the fourteenth century. [Luxemburg. Bohemia. Moravis Silesia. N* 298 MODERN HISTORY. [Part It Luaatia Brandenburg. Holland. Tyrol. Austria.]— 10. Austrian princes of Germany. Im- portant changes made during the reign of Maximilian. [Worms.] — 11. Switzerland revolts from Austria. Long-continued wars. Switzerland independent at the close of the fifteenth century. [Rutuli. William Tell. Morgarten. Sempach.] — 12. Italian History during the central period of the Middle Ages. The Italian republics. [Genoa.] Duchy of Milan.— 13. The Florentines. Contests between the Genoese and Venetians. [Levant.] Genoa at t-he close of the fifteenth century. — 14. History of Venice. Her power at the end of the fifteenth century. [Morea.] The popes, and kings of Naples. Interference of foreign powers.— 15. Spain. Union cf the nost powerful Christian States. Overthrow of the Saracen dominions ic. Spain. [Navarre. Aragon. Castile. Leon. Granada.]— 16. History of Portugal. [Farther ecoun! of Portugal.] III. DISCOVERIES. . Navigation, and geographical knowledge, during the Dark Ages. Revival of commerce, [risa.] Discovery of the magnetic needle. The art of printing. Discovery of the Canaries, Portuguese discoveries. [Canaries. Cape de Verd and Azore islands.] — 2. Views and objects of Prince Henry. His death. Fame of the discoveries patronized by him. Christopher Co- lumbus. The bold project conceived by him. [Lisbon. Ireland. Guinea.] — 3. The trials of Columbus. His final triumph, in the discovery of America. Vasco de Gama. Closing remarks. 1. England and France during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. — 1. France and England occupy the most prominent place in the history of European nations during the closing period of the Middle Ages ; and as their annals, during most of this period, are so intimately connected that the history of one nation is in great part the history of both, the unity of the subject will best be pre- served, and repetition avoided, by treating both in connection. 2. The reign of Edward II. of England, whose defeat by the fecots in the famous battle of Bannockburn has already been men- tioned, although inglorious to himself, and disastrous to the British arms, was not, on the whole, unfavorable to the progress of constitu- tional liberty. The unbounded favoritism of Edward to Gaveston, a handsome youth of Gascony, 1 whom the king elevated in wealth and dignities above all the nobles in England, roused the resentment of the barons ; and the result was the banishment of the favorite, and a reformation of abuses in full parliament. (A. D. 1313.) The Great Charter, so often violated, was again confirmed ; and the im poitant provision was added, that there should be an annual assem bling of parliament, for protectipn of the people, when “ aggrieved by the king’s ministers against right.” 3. But other favorities supplied the place of Gaveston : the nobles rebelled against their sovereign : his faithless queen Isabella, sister of the king of France, took part with the malcontents, and 1. Gascony , before the French Revolution, was a province of France, situated between the Garonne, the sea, and the Pyrenees. The Gascons are a people of much spirit ; but their exag- geration in describing heir exploits has made the term gasconade proverbial. ( Map No. XIII. t Chap. ILJ MIDDLE AGES. 29 \) Edward was deposed, imprisoned, and afterwards murdered. (A D. 1327.) Edward III., crowned at fourteen years of age, unable to endure the presence of a mother stained with the foulest crimes, caused her to be imprisoned for life, and her paramour, Mortimer, to be executed. He then applied himself to redress the grievances which had proceeded from the late abuses of authority ; after which ho invaded Scotland, and defeated the Scots at Halidon Hill; 1 but on his withdrawal from the country, the Scottish arms again tri- umphed. 4 On the death, in the year 1328, of Charles IV. of France, the last of the male descendants of Philip the Fair, the T crown of that kingdom became the object of contest be- and English tween Edward III. of England, the son of Philip’s WARS - daughter Isabella, and Philip of Valois, son of the brother of Philip. After war had continued several years between the two nations, with only occasional intervals of truce, in the year 1346 Edward, in per- son, invaded France, and, supported by his heroic son Edward, called the Black Prince, then only fifteen years of age, gained a great vic- tory over the French in the famous battle of Cressy 2 — slaying more of the enemy than the total number of his own army. (Aug. 26th, 1346.) A few weeks after the battle of Cressy, the Scots, who had seized the opportunity of Edward’s absence to invade England, were defeated in the battle of Durham, 3 and their king Da rid Bruce taken prisoner. (Oct. 17, 1346.) To crown the honors of the campaign, the important seaport of Calais, 4 in France, surrendered to Edward, after a vigorous siege ; and this important acquisition was retained bj the English more than two centuries. 1. Halidon Hill is an eminence north of the river Tweed, not far from Berwick. 2. Cressy, or Crecy , is a small village, in the former province of Picardy, ninety-five milea north-west from Paris. It is believed that cannon, but of very rude construction, were first employed by the English in thk battle. {Map No. XIII.) 3. Durham , the capital of the county of the same name, is an important city in the north of England, two hundred and thirty miles north-west from London. The field on which tire bat- tle was fought, some distance north of Durham, on the road to Newcastle, (Oct. 1 7 th, 1316,) Wi.s called Neville's Cross. {Map No. XVI.) 4. Calais (Eng. Cal-is, Fr. Kah-la',) a seaport of France, on the Straits of Dover, in the former province of Picardy, is fifty miles north of Cressy. In 1558 Calais was retaken by sur prise by the duke of Guise. In 1596 it was again taken by the English under the archduke Albert, but in 1598 was restored to France by the treaty of Nervins. The obstinate resistance which Calais made to Ed warn III. in 1347, is said to have so much inee\» the conqueror that he determined to pul to death six principal burgesses of the town, who, to save their fellow citizens, had magnanimously placed themselves at his disposal ; but khat he was turned from his purpose only by the tears and entreaties of his queen Philippa. It Is believed, however, that Froissart alone, among his cotemp traries, relates th’s sto^/ ; and •doubts maj very reasonably be entertained of its truth. {Map No. Xlli.) 300 MODERN HISTORY. [Pa&t [I 5. After a truce of eight years, during which occurred the death of the French monarch, Philip of Valois, and the accession of his son John to the throne of France, war was again renewed, but was speedily terminated by a great victory, which the Black Prince ob tained over king John in the battle of Poictiers. (Sept. 1356.) The French monarch, although taken prisoner, and conveyed in triumph to London, was treated with great moderation and kindness ; but his captivity produced in France the most horrible anarchy, which was carried to the utmost extreme by a revolt of peasants, or serfs, against their lords, in most of the provinces surrounding the capitals At length, while king John was still a prisoner, the two nations con- eluded a treaty at Bretigny, 1 (A. D. 1360,) which provided that king John should be restored to liberty, and that the English monarch should renounce his claim to the throne of France, and to the pos- session of Normandy and other provinces in the north ; but that the whole south-west of France, embracing more than a third of the kingdom, and extending from the Rhone nearly to the Loire, should be guaranteed to England. The territory obtained from France was erected into the principality of Aquitaine, 2 the government of which was intrusted to the Black Prince, who, during several years, kept his court at Bordeaux. 3 6. The treaty with France was never fully ratified ; and in the year 1368 war between the two countries was commenced anew, the blame of the rupture being thrown by each nation upon the other. In the interval - since the late treaty a great change had taken place in the condition of the rival powers : king Edward was now declining in age; and his son the Black Prince was enfeebled by disease ; and the ceded French provinces were eager to return to their native king ; while, on the other hand, France had recovered from her great losses, and the wise and popular Charles V. occupied the throne, in the place of the rash and intemperate John France gradually recov?red J. Bretigny is a small hamlet six miles south-east from Chartres, and fifty miles south-weal rom Paris, in the former province of Orleans. 2. Aquitaine ( Aquitania ) was the name of the Roman province in Gaul south of the Loire. Since the time of the Romans it has been sometimes a kingdom and sometimes a duchy. B& fore tho revolution, what remained of this ancient province passed under the name of Gui enne. Bordeaux was its capital. (Map No. XIII.) 3. Bordeaux called by the Romans Burdigala , an important commercial city and seaport of France, is on the west bank of the Garonne, fifty-five miles from its mouth, and three hundred and seven miles south-west from Paris. Montesquieu and Montaigne, Edward the Black Prince* pope Clement V., and Richard II. of England, were natives of this city. ( Map No. XIII.) a. Feb. 1358. This revolt was called La Jacquerie , from Jacques Ben Ilomme, tire leadet ■>f the rebels. Chap: II.] MIDDLE AGES. 30 1 most of ier provinces without obtainining a single victory, although the keys of the country — Bordeaux, Bayonne, 1 Calais, Brest, ano Cherbourg 2 — were still left in the hands of the English. 7. On the death of Edward (A. D. 1377) the crown fell to the son of the Black Prince, Bichard II., then only eleven years of age. Three years later, Charles V., by his death, left the crown of France to his son Charles VI., a youth of only twelve years. Both kingdoms suffered from the distractions attending a regal minority : — in France the paople were plundered by the exactions of the regents, and the kingdom harassed by the factious struggles for power between the dukes of Bur' gundy and Orleans ; 8 and in England similar results attended the contests for the regency between the king’s uncles, the dukes of Lancaster, 4 York, 5 and Gloucester. 6 In the year 1381 the injustice of parliamentary taxation occasioned a famous revolt of 1. Bayonne is on the south side of the Adour, four miles from its mouth, near the south western extremity of France. Bayonne is strongly fortified, and, although often besieged, has never been taken. The military weapon called the bayonet takes its name from this city, where il is said to have been first invented, and brought into use at the siege of Bayonne, during the war between Francis I. and Charles V. ( Map No. XIII.) 2. Brest and Cherbourg are small but strongly-fortified seaport towns in the north-west cf France. Cherbourg was the last town in Normandy retained by the English. ( Map No. XIII.) 3. Bur' gundy and Orleans. An account of Bur' gundy has already been given. Orleans , a city of France, and formerly capital of the province of the same name, is situated on the Loire, sixty-eight miles south-west from Paris. Orleans occupied the site of the ancient Gena- bum, the emporium of the Cornutes, which was taken and burned by Caesar. (C;esar B. VII. 12.) It subsequently rose to great eminence, and was unsuccessfully besieged by At' tila and Odoacer. It became the capital of the first kingdom of Bur' gundy under the first race of French kings. Philip of Valois erected it into a duchy and peerage in favor of his son ; and Orleans has since continued to give the title of duke to a prince of the blood royal. Charles VI. conferred the title of “duke of Orleans” on his younger brother, who became the founder of the Valois-Orleans line. Louis XIV. conferred it on his younger brother Philip, the founder of the Bourbon dynasty of the house of Orleans. Louis Philip was the first and only :uliug prince of the Bourbon-Orleans dynasty. {Map No. XIII.) 4. Lancaster , which has given its name to the “dukes of Lancaster,” is a seaport town on the coast of the Irish Sea, forty-six miles from Liverpool, and two hundred and five miles north-west from London. Lancaster is supposed, from the urns, altars, and other antiquities found there, to have been a Roman station. The first earl of Lancaster was created in 1266 In 1351 Henry, earl of Derby, was made duke of Lancaster: John Gaunt, fourth son of Ed- ward IL., married Blanch, the duke’s daughter, and, by virtue of this alliance, succeeded to the title. His son Henry of Bolingbroke became duke of Lancaster on his father’s death in 1393, and finally Henry IV., king of England in 1399, from which time to the present thi ) dnchy has been associated with the regal dignity. (Map No. XVI.) 5. York, Ste Note, p. 209. (Map No. XVI.) 6. Gloucester is on the east bank of the Severn, ninety-three miles north-west from London. It was founded by the Romans A. D. 44 ; and Roman coins and antiquities are frequently dug up on the supposed site of the old encampment. Richard II. created his uncles dukes of York and Gloucester ; and since that time the ducal title has remained the highest title of English nobility. The duke of Lancaster was the only one who really possessed a duchy (the county of Lancaster) subject to his government, and .hat was reunited to the crown in 1461. (Mat No. XVI.) 302 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II the lower classes, h jaded by the Blacksmith Wat Tyler, similar to the insurrection of the French peasants which raged in 1358. In both nations these events mark the advance of the serfs, in their progress toward emancipation, to that stage in which their hopes are roused, and their wrongs still unredressed. The serfs of Englanl demanded equal laws, and the abolition of bondage : to the number of sixty thousand they assembled at Blackheath, 1 — obtained possess- ion of London, and put to death the chancellor and primate, as evil counsellors of the crown, and cruel oppressors of the people ; but the fall of their leader struck terror into the insurgents, and the- re- volt was easily extinguished, while the honor of the crown was sul- lied by a revocation of the promised charters of enfranchisement and pardon. More than fifteen hundred of the mutineers perished by the hand of the hangman, 8. It was not till the age of twenty-three that Bichard escaped from the tutelage of his uncles ; and then his indolence, dissipation, and prodigality, brought him into contempt ; and during his absence in Ireland a successful revolution elevated his cousin, Henry of Lan- caster, surnamed Bolingbroke, to the throne. (A. D. 1399.) The parliament confirmed the deposition of Bichard, who was soon after privately assassinated in prison. 3 - The accession of Henry IV. to the throne met with no opposition, although he was not the legal claimant, the hereditary right being in Edward Mortimer, who was descended from the second son of Edward III., whereas Henry was descended from the third son. The claim of Mortimer was at a later period vested by marriage in the family of the duke of York, descended from the fourth son of Edward ; and hence began the contentions between the houses of York and Lancaster. 9. The discontented friends of Henry proved his most dangerous enemies ; for the Percys, who had enthroned him, dissatisfied with his administration, took up arms and involved the country in civil war ; b but in the great battle of Shrewsbury 2 (July 21, 1403) the 1. Blackheath is an elevated moory tract in the vicinity of the British metropolis, south-west ©f the city. The greater portion is in the parish of Greenwich. 2. Shrewsbury is situated on the Severn, one hundred and thirty-eight miles north-west from London. William the Conqueror gave the town and surrounding country to Roger de Mont- gomery, who built here a strong baronial castle ; but in 1102 the castle and property were for- feited to the crown. Shrewsbury, from its situation close to Wales, was the scene of many border frays between the Welsh and English. In the battle of July 1403, the fall *'f the famoui Lord Percy, surnamed Hotspur, by an unknown hand, decided the victory in the sing’s favor {Map No. XVI.) a. Read Shakspeare’s “ King Richard II.” t». Read Shakspeare’s “First Part of King Henry IV Chap. ii.J MIDDLE AGES. 303 insurgents were defeated, although the insurrection was still kept up a number of years, chiefly by the successful valor of Owen Glendower, the Welsh ally of the Percy s. 10. Henry IY. was succeeded by his son Henry Y. in the year 1413. The previous turbulent and dissipated character of the new sovereign had given little promise of a happy reign ; but immediate- ly after his accession he dismissed the former companions of his vices, — took into his confidence the wise ministers of his father,-^ and, laying aside his youthful pleasures, devoted all his energies to the tranquillizing of the kingdom, and the wise government of the people.'* 1 Taking advantage of the disorders of France, and the tem- porary insanity of its sovereign Charles YI., he revived the English claim to the throne of that kingdom, and at the head of thirty thou- sand men passed over into Normandy to support his pretensions. After his army had been wasted by a contagious disease, which re- duced it to eleven thousand men, he met and defeated the French army of fifty thousand in the battle of Agincourt, 1 — slaying ten thousand of the enemy and taking fourteen thousand prisoners, among whom were many of the most eminent barons and princes of the realm. (Oct. 24, 1415.) 11. The Orleans and Burgundian factions which had temporarily laid aside their contentions to oppose the invader, renewed them on the departure of Henry, and soon involved the kingdom in the hor- rors of civil war. In the midst of these evils Henry returned to follow up his victory, and fought his way to Paris, when the Bur- gundian faction tendered him the crown of France, with the promise of its aid to support his claim. A treaty was soon concluded with the queen of the insane king and the duke of Bur' gundy, by which it was agreed that Henry should marry Catherine, the daughter of Charles, and succeed to the throne on the death of her father ; while in the meantime he was to govern the kingdom as regent. (May 1420.) The States General 2 of the kingdom assented to the treaty and the western and northern provinces owned the sway of England; but the central and south-eastern districts adhered to the cause of 1. Jlgincourt is a small village of France in the former province of Artois, one hundred and ■en miles north from Paris. {Map No. XIII.) 2. By the States General is meant the great council or general parliament of the nation, composed of representatives from the nihility, the clergy, and the municipalities. The countig districts sent no representatives. (See University Edition, p. 824.) a. Happily portrayed in Shakspeare’s “Second Pai of King Henry IV,” \ct v., Scene U and v. 304 MODEM* HISTORY. [Part II the dauphin, 1 afterwards Charles VII., the only surviring son of hia father, and the head of the Orleans party. Henry V. did not live to wear the crown of France ; and the helpless Charles survived him only two months. (Died A. D. 1422.) 12. The English king left a son, Henry VI., then only nine months old, to inherit his kingdom. France, however, was now openly divided between the rival monarchs — its native sovereign Chari as VII., and the English king, in the person of the infant Henry. In the war which followed, the prospects of the English were gradually improving, when they received a fatal check from the extraordinary appearance of a heroine, the famous Joan of Arc, whom the credulity of the age believed to have been divinely com- missioned for the salvation of the French nation. Moved by a sort of religious phrensy, this obscure country girl was enabled to inspire her sovereign, the priests, the nobles, and the army, with the truth of her holy mission, which was, to drive the English from Orleans, which they were then besieging, and to open the way for the crown ing of Charles at Rheims, then in the hands of the enemy. 13. Superstition revived the hopes of the French, and inspired the English with manifold terrors — the harbingers of certain defeat : in a short period all the promises of the maiden were fulfilled, and in accordance with her predictions she had the happiness to see Charles VII. crowned in the cathedral. Her mission ended, she wished to retire to the humble station from which Providence had called her, but being retained with the army, she afterwards fell into the hands of the English, who inhumanly condemned and executed her for the imaginary crime of sorcery. 14. In the death of Joan of Arc the English indeed destroyed the cause of their late reverses ; but nothing could stay the nc a impulse which hei wonderful successes had given to the French nation. In the year 1 137 Charles gained possession of his capital, after twenty vears exclusion from it ; the Burgundian faction had previously be- ome reconciled to him, and thenceforward the war lost its serious character, while the struggle of the English grew more and more feeble, until, in 1453, Calais was the only town of the continent re- maining in their hands. From this period until the death of 1. Dauphin is the title of the eldest son of the king of France. In 1349 Hambert II. trans- ferred his estate, the province of Dauphiny, to Philip of Valois, on condition that the eldest son of the king of France should, in future, be called the dauphin . and govern this territory. The dauphin, however, retains only the title, the estates having long been united with Un crown lands. Ch/u*. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 305 Charles VII., il .461, France enjoyed domestic tranquil iity, while civil wars of the fiercest violence were raging in England. 15. The hereditary claim of the house of York to the English throne has already been mentioned, (p. 302.) Henry was a weak prince, and subject to occasional fits of idiocy ; but his wife, Marga- ret of Anjou, 1 a woman of great spirit and ambition, possessing the allurements, but without the virtues, of her sex, ruled in his name. The haughtiness of the queen, the dishonor brought on the English arms by the loss of France, and the imbecility and insignificance of Ilenry, when contrasted with the popular virtues of Richard duke of York, rendered the reigning family unpopular with the nation ; and when Richard advanced his pretensions to the crown, a powerful party rallied to his support. A formidable rising of the people in the year 1450, under a leader who is known in history under the nickname of Jack Cade, first manifested the gathering n THE WAR3 discontent. Five years later civil war between the York- of the two ists and Lancastrians broke out in different parts of the R0SES ' kingdom ; and in the first battle, at St. Albans, 2 King Henry was taken prisoner. The Yorkists wore, as the symbol of their party, a white rose, and the Lancastrians a red rose ; and the contests which marked their struggle for power are usually called the “ wars of the two roses.” 16. We have not room to enter into details of the sanguinary strife that followed. “ In my remembrance,” says a cotemporary writer, a “ eighty princes of the blood royal of England perished in these convulsions ; seven or eight battles were fought in the course of thirty years ; and their own country was desolated by the English as cruelly as the former generation had wasted France.” After many vicissitudes of fortune, in which Henry was twice defeated and taken prisoner, and Richard and his second son were slain, at the close of the first period of the war the white rose triumphed, and Edward IV., eldest son of the late duke of York, became king of England. (A. D. 1461.) 17. Charles VII. of France died the same year, and was succeed* 1. Anjou was an ancient province of France, on both sides of the Loire, north ot Poitou. In the year .246 Louis IX. of France besiowed this province cn his younger brother Charles, with the title of count of Anjou ; but in 1328 it fell to the crown, at the accession of Philip VL Subsequently different princes of the blood bore the title of Anjou; and Margaret, whf> be came queen of England, was the daughter of Ren6 of Anjou. (Map No. XILT.) 2. St. Albans is a small town twenty miles north-west from London. su Philip de Comines. 20 306 MODERN HISTORY. [Pabt II. ed oii the throne by his son Louis XI. The reign of Edward IY of England was a reign of terror. Once he was deposed, and Henry reinstated, by the great power and influence of the earl of Warwick, 1 to whom the people gave the name of king-maker. But Warwick afterwards fell in battle ; and in the year 1471 the heroic Margaret and her son were defeated and taken prisoners, and the power of the Lancastrians was overthrown in the desperate battle of Tewkesbury,® which concluded this sanguinary war. Margaret was at first im- prisoned, but afterwards ransomed by the king of France : her son was assassinated : Henry VI. breathed his last, as a prisoner, in the Tower of London ; and Edward was finally established on the throne. 18. The reign of Edward IY. was throughout cotemporary with that of Louis XI. of France, a prince of a tyrannical, superstitious, crafty, and cruel nature, but who possessed such a fund of comic humor, and such oddities of thoughts and manner, as to throw his Atrocious cruelties into the shade. The relations of these two priaces with each other were in a high degree dishonorable to both. Ed- ward, by threatening war upon France, obtained from Louis the secret payment of exorbitant pensions for himself and his ministers ; and the latter were with much reason charged with being the hired agents of the French king. Both these princes died in 1483, and both were succeeded by minors. 19. Edward V., at the age of twelve years, succeeded his father as king of England ; but after a nominal reign of little more than two months, the young king and his brother the duke of York were murdered in the Tower, at the instigation of their uncle the duke of Gloucester, who caused himself to be proclaimed king, with the title of Richard III. But the whole nation was alienated by the crimes of Richard : the claims of the Lancastrian family were revived by Henry Tudor, earl of Richmond ;* and at the decisive battle of Bos- 1. The earldom of Warwick dates from the time of William the Conqueror, whe bestowed tie town and castle of that name, with the title of earl, on Henry de Newburg, one of his fok lowers. The town of Warwick, capital of the county of the same name, is on the river Avon, eighty-two miles north-west from London. {Map No. XVI.) 2. Tewkesbury is on the river Avon, near its confluence with the Severn, thirty-threo mile* south-west from Warwick, and ninety miles north-west from London. The field on which the o/ittle was fought, in the immediate vicinity of the town, is still called the “ Bloody Meadow.” 3. Richmond , which gave a title to the dukes of that name, is in the north of England, forty- one miles north-west from York. Its castle was founded by the first earl of Richmond, who received from William ,he Conqueror the forfeited estates of the earl of Mercia, aijd buill Richmond castle to pro Act his family and property. The title and property, after being possessed by different, persons allied to the blood royal, were at length vested in the crown by \he accession of Henry, earl of Richmond, tc the throi }, with the title of Henry VII. {Map No. XVI.) Chap. 1L] MIDDLE AGES. 307 worth field/ Richard was defeated and s.ain (1485). The crown which Richard wore in the action was immediately placed on the head of the earl of Richmond, who was proclaimed king, with the title of Henry VII. His marriage soon after with the princess Elizabeth, heiress of the house of York, united the rival claims of York and Lancaster in the Tudor family, and put an end to the civil contests which, for more than half a century, had deluged England with blood 20. The early part of the reign of Henry VII. was disturbed b two singular enterprises, — the attempt made in Ireland, by Lambert Simnel, to counterfeit the person of the young earl of Warwick, nephew of Edward IV., and the only remaining male heir of the house of York; and the similar attempt of Perkin Warbeck to counterfeit the young duke of York, one of the princes who had been murdered in the Tower at the instigation of Richard III Both impostors, claiming the right to the throne, received their principal support in Ireland ; but the former, after being crowned at Dublin, 2 and afterwards defeated in battle, (1487,) ended his days as a menial in the king’s household, — while the latter, after throwing himself upon the king’s mercy, being detected in subsequent plots, expiated his crime on the scaffold. 21. The most important of the foreign relations of Henry were a treaty with France, which stipulated that no rebel subjects of either power should be harbored or aided by the other ; and a treaty of peace with Scotland, by which Margaret, eldest daughter of Henry, was given in marriage to the Scottish king, J ames IV., a marriage from which have sprung all the sovereigns who have reigned in Great Britain since the time of Elizabeth The reply of Henry to his counsellors who objected to the Scottish marriage, that the kingdom of England might by that connection fall to the king of Scotland, shows a great degree of sagacity, that has been verified by the result. u Scotland would then,” said Henry, “ become an accession to Eng land, not England to Scotland, for the greater would draw tLo less it is a safer union for England than one with France.” 22. The reign of Henry VII. may justly be considered an im portant era in English history. It began in revolution, at the close 1. Bosworth is a small town ninety-five miles north-west from London. In the battle-field, in the vicinity of this town, is an eminence called Grown Hill, where Lord Stanley is said to have placed Richard’s crown on the ea.-l of Richmond’s head. (Map No. XVI.) 2. Dublin , the capital of Ireland, is on the eastern sea-coast of the island, at the mouth or the river Liffey, two hundred and ninety-two miles north-west from London. It was called iy the Danes Diveliv, or Dubhlin , “ the black pool,” from its vicinity to the mu ldy swamps at .he moaih of the river. It has a population of two hundred and fifty thousand. (Map No. XV] ) 308 MODERN HISTORY [Part II of the long and bloody wars between the houses of York and Lan- caster : it effected a change in descents : it marks the decline of the feudal system, the waning power of the baronial aristocracy, and a corresponding increase of royal prerogatives : it was coteinporary with that greatest of events in Modern History, the discovery of Amer- ica, — with the advance in knowledge and civilization that dawned upon the closing period of the Middle Ages; with the consolidation of the great European monarchies into nearly the shape and extent which they retain at the present day ; and with the growth of the “ balance of power” system, which neutralized the efforts of princes at universal dominion. A general survey of the condition of the prin- cipal States of Europe at this period will better enable us to com prehend the relations of their subsequent history. II. Other Nations at the close of the fifteenth century.— 1. Of the States of Northern Europe — Denmark, 1 Sweden, and Nor- i Denmark wa y> — constituting the ancient Scandinavia, merit our Sweden, and first attention. After these kingdoms had long been Norway, agitated by internal dissensions, they were finally, by the treaty of Calmar, 2 (1397,) united into a single monarchy, near 1. Denmark embraces the whole of the peninsula north of Germany, early known as the Cimbrie Chersonese , and afterwards as Jutland. Its earliest known inhabitants were the Cimbri. (See p. 171.) The famous but mysterious Odin, the Mars as well as the Mohammed of Scan- dinavian history, is said to have emigrated, with a band of followers, from the banks of the Tan’ ais to Scandinavia about the middle of the first century before the Christian era, and to have established his authority, and the Scythian religion, over Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Skiold, son of Odin, is said to have ruled over Denmark ; but his history, and that of his pos- terity for many generations, are involved in fable. Hengist and Horsa, the two Saxon chiefs who conquered England in the fifth century, reckoned Odin, (or Wodin in their dialect,) as their ancestor. Gorm the Old, son of Hardicanute I., ( Horda-ltnut ,) united all the Danish States undqr his sceptre in the year 863. His grandson Sweyn, subdued a part of Norway in the year 1000, and a part of England in 1014. His son Canute completed the conquest of Eng- land in 1016, and also subdued a part of Scotland. Canute embraced the Christian religion, and introduced it into Denmark; upon which a great change took place in the character of the people. At his death, in 1036, he left the crowns of Denmark and England to his son Hardi- Canute II. In 1385, Margaret, daughter of the Danish prince Waldemar, and wife of Haquin king of Norway, styled the Semir' amis of the North, ascended the throne of Norway and Denmark. In 1389 she was chosen by the Swedes as their sovereign ; and in 1397 the treaty «>ri Calmar united the three crowns— it was supposed forever. In 1448, the p i tees of th$ family of Skiold having become extinct, the Danes promoted Christian [., count of Cldenburg, to the throne. He was the founder of the royal Danish family which has ever since kept possession of the throne. In 1523 the Swedes emancipated themselves from the cruel and tyrannical yoke of Christian II., king of Denmark. In their struggle for independence they were led by the famous Gustavus Vasa, who was raised to the throne of Sweden by the unani- mous suffrages of his fellow citizens. Norway remained connected with Denmark till 1811, when the allied powers gave it to Sweden, as indemnity for Finland. {Map No. XIV.) 2. Calmar , rendered famous by the treaty of 1397, is a seaport town on the small island of Quarnholm, which is in the narrow strait that separates the island of Oland from the south eastern coast of Sv edeu. (Map No. XIV.) Chat. II] MIDDLE AGES. 30 * the close of the fourteenth century, through the influence of Marga- ret of Denmark, whose extraordinary talents and address have ren- dered her name illustrious as the “ Semir'amis of the North.” But the union of Calmar, although forming an important epoch in Scan- dinavian history, was never firmly consolidated ; and after haying been renewed several times, was at length irreparably broken by Sweden, which, in the early part of the sixteenth century, (1521,) under the conduct of the heroic Gustavus Yasa, recovered its ancient independence. 2. East and south-east of the Scandinavian kingdoms were the numerous Sclavonic tribes, which were gradually gathered into the empire of Russia. The original cradle of that mighty empire which dates back to the time of Rurick, a chief- n ' RUSS * AN tain co temporary with Alfred the Great, was a narrow territory extending from Kiev, along the banks of the Dnieper, 1 north to Novogorod. 2 Darkness for a long time rested upon early Russian history, but it has been in great part dispelled by the genius and re- search of Karamsin, and it is now known that as early as the tenth century the Russian empire had attained an extent and importance, as great, comparatively, among the powers of Europe, as it boasts at the prespnt day. About the middle of the eleventh century the system of dividing the kingdom among the children of successive monarchs began to prevail, and the result was ruinous in the ex- treme, occasioning innumerable intestine wars, and a gradual decline of the -strength and consideration of the empire. 3. Toward the middle of the thirteenth century the Tartar hordes of Northern Asia, falling upon the feeble and disunited Russian States, found theVn an easy prey ; and during a period of two hun- dred and fifty years, Russia, under the Tartar yoke, suffered the direst atrocities of savage cruelty and despotism. At length, about the year 1430, John III., duke of Moscow, the true restorer of his 1. Dnieper , the Borysthenes of the ancients, still frequently called by its ancient name, is a largs river of European Russia. It rises near Smolensko, runs south, and falls into the Black Sea, north-east of the mouths of the Danube. ( Map No. XVII.) 2. Novogorod , or Novgorod, called also Veliki , or “ the Great,” formerly the most importam city is the Russian empire, is situated on the river Volkhof, near its exit from Lake Ilmen, one hundred miles south-east from St. Petersburgh, and three hundred and five north-west from Moscow. The Volkhof runs north to Lake Ladoga. So i npregiiable -vas N' vgoroa once deemed as to give rise to the proverb, Quis contra Deos et mngnam N^vogordiam ? “Who can resist the Gods and Great Novgorod ‘t n From Novgorod to Kiev is a distance of nearly six hundred miles. 310 MODERN HISTORY. [Part Ij country’s glory, succeeded in abolishing the ruinous system by which the regal power had been frittered away, while at the same time lie threw off the yoke of the Moguls, and repulsed their last invasion of his country. Under the reign of this wise and powerful prince, the many petty principalities which had long divided the sovereignty were consolidated, and, at the end of the century, Russia, although scarcely emerged from its primitive barbarian darkness, was one ot >he great powers of Europe. 4. South of the country inhabited by the Russians, we look in vain, at the close of the fifteenth century, for the once III £mpire AN f ame d Greek empire of Justinian, or, as sometimes called, the Eastern empire of the Romans. The account which we have given of the crusades represents the Turks, a race of Tartar origin, as spread over the greater part of Asia Minor. About the beginning of the fourteenth century, a Turkish emir, a called Otto- man, succeeded in uniting several of the petty Turkish States of the peninsula, and thus laid the foundation of the Ottoman empire. About the‘year 1358 the Ottoman Turks first obtained a foothold in Europe ; and at the close of the fourteenth century their empire ex- tended from the Euphrates to the Danube, and embraced, or held as tributary, ancient Greece, Thes' saly, Macedonia, and Thrace, while the Roman world was contracted to the city of Constantinople, and even that was besieged by the Turks, and closely pressed by the ca- lamities of war and famine. The city would have yielded f j the efforts of Bajazet, the Turkish sultan ; but almost in the moment of victory the latter was overthrown by the famous Timour, or Tamer lane, the new Tartar conqueror of Asia. 5 About the year 1370, Tamerlane, a remote descendant of th® Great Gengis Khan, (p. 286,) had fixed the capital of his new do- minions at Samarcand, 1 from which central point of his power ho 1. Samarcand , anciently called Marakanda , now a city of Independent Tartary, in Bokhara, was the capital cf the Persian satrapy of Sogdiana. (See Map No. IV.) Alexander is thought to have pillaged it. It was taken from the sultan Mahomet, by Gengis Khan, in 1220 ; and under Timo; v or Tamerlane, it became the capital of one of the largest empires in the world and the cen ,r_ of Asiatic learning and civilization, at the same time that it rose to high dis tinction on account of its extensive commerce with all parts cf Asia. Samarcand is now in a a. Emir , an Arabic word, meaning a I'v.aer, or commander, was a title first given to the caliphs ; but when they assumed the tit 1 j of sultan, that of em r was applied to their chijdren. At length it was bestowed upon al 7 . who were thought to be descendants of Mahomet in the lino of bis daughter Fatimah. Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 311 made tbiity-five victorio is campaigns, — conquering all Persia, North era Asia, and Hindostan, — and before his death he had IV TAETAa placed the crowns of twenty-seven kingdoms on his empire cf head. In the year 1 402 he fought a bloody and decisive TAMERLANK battle with the Turkish sultan Bajazet, on the plains of Angora, 1 in Asia Minor, in which the Turk sustained a total defeat, and fell into the hands of the conqueror. Tamerlane would have carried his conquests into Europe ; but the lord of myriads of Tartar horsemen was not master of a single galley ; and the two passages of the Bosf- porus and the Hellespont were guarded, the one by the Christians, the other by the Turks, who on this occasion forgot their animosities to act with union and firmness in the common cause. Two years later Tamerlane died, at the age of sixty-nine, while on his march for the invasion of China 6. The Ottoman empire not only soon recovered from the blow which Tamerlane had inflicted upon it, but in the year 1453, during the reign of Mahomet II., effected the final conquest of Constanti- nople. On the 29th of May of that year the city was carried by assault, and given up to the unrestrained pillage of the Turkish soldiers : the last of the Greek emperors fell in the first onset : the inhabitants were carried into slavery ; and Constantinople was left without a prince or a people, until the sultan established his own residence, and that of his successors, on the commanding spot which had been chosen by Constantine. The few remnants of the Greek or Roman power were soon merged in the Ottoman dominion ; and at the close of the fifteenth century the Turkish empire was firmly established in Europe. 7. While at the close of the fifteenth century the three Scandina- vian kingdoms of the North, and Russia, formed, as it were, separate worlds, having no connection with the rest of Europe, Poland, 2 the ancient Sarmatia, supplying the connect decayed condition : gardens, fields, and plantations, occupy the place of its numerous streets and masques ; and we search in vain for its ancient palaces, whose beauty is so highly eulo- gized by Arab historians. 1. Angora , a town of Natolia in Asia Minor, (see Note, Ro-tm, p. *231,) is the same as the ancient Ancyra , which, in the time of Nero, was the capital of Galatia. Here St. Paul preached to the Galatians. 2. The Poles were a Sclavonic tribe (a branch of the Sarmatians), who, in the seventh cen mry, passed up the Dnieper, and thence to the Niemen and the Vistula. About the middle of ibe tenth century they embraced Christianity, and toward the end of the same century were first called Po/cs, that is, Sclavonians of the plain The numerous principalities into which 3i2 MODERN HISTORY [Part II mg link between the Sclavonian and German tribes, had risen to a considerable degree of eminence and power. The history of Poland commences with the tenth century ; but the prosperity of the king- dom began with the reign of Casimir the Great. (1333-1370.) In the year 1386 Lithuania 1 was added to Poland; and about the mid- dle of the following century the Polish sovereign, Wladislas, was present ',d with the crown of Hungary, which he had nobly defended against the Turks. But Hungary soon reverted again to the German empire. After long wars with the Teutonic knights, 3 who, since the erusades, had firmly established their order in the Prussian part of the Germanic empire, the knights were everywhere defeated during the reign of Casimir IV., (1444-1492,) who added a large part of Prussia to the Polish territories. The Turkish province of Mol- davia 3 also became tributary to Poland ; and at the close of the fif- teenth century this kingdom had extended its power from the Baltic to the Euxine, along the whole frontier of European civilization, thus forming an effectual barrier to the Western States of Europe against barbarian invasion. 8. The German empire, at the close of the fifteenth century, com- prised a great number of States lying between France and Poland, extending even west of the Bhine, and embracing the whole of cen- the Poles were divided were first united into one kingdom in 1025, under king Boleslaus I. ; but Poland was afterwards subdivided among the family of the Piasts until 1305, when Wladis- las, king of Cracow, united with hiss overeignty the two principal remaining divisions, Great and Little Poland. From 1370 to 1382 Hungary was united with Poland. The union with Liihuania in 1386, occasioned by the marriage of the grand duke of Lithuania with the queen of Poland, was more permanent. After the Lithuania nobility, in 1569, united with Great and. Little Poland, in one diet, Poland became the most powerful State in the North. Although Po- land has ceased to constitute an independent and single State — its detached fragments having become Austrian, Prussian, or Russian provinces -still the country is distinctly separated from those which surround it, by national character, language, and manners. The present Poland possessing the name without the privileges of a kingdom, and reduced to a territory extending •to hundred miles north and south, and two hundred east and west, is, substantially, a part of ts»e Russian empire. (Map No. XVII.) 1. The greater part of Lithuania , once forming the north-eastern d vision of Poland, haa ! een united to Russia. It is comprised in the present governments of Mohilew, Witepsk, Minsk, Wilna, and Grodno. (Map No. XVII.) 2. The TeuLvAi Knights composed a religious order founded in 1190 by Frederic, duke of Saabia, during a crusade in the Holy Land, and intended to be confined to Germans of noble rank. The original object of the association was to defend the Christian religion against the Infidels, and to take care of the sick in the Holy Land. By degrees the order made several conquests, and acquired great riches ; and at the beginning of the fifteenth century it possessed a large extent of territory extending from the Oder to the Gulf of Finland. The war with the Pdes greatly abridged its power, and finally the order was abolished by Napoleon, in -ha war wfth Austria, April 24th, 1809. 3. Moldavia , nominally a Turkish province, but in reality under the protection of Russia, embraces the north-eastern part of the ancient Dacia. ( Maps Nos. IX. and XVIL) Chap IL] MIDDLE AGES. 313 tral Europe. The Carlovingian sovereigns of Germany were hered- itary monarchs ; but as early as the year 887 the great vassals of the crown deposed their emperor, and elected ' another sovereign, and from that remote peiiod the em- perors of Germany have continued to be elective. 9. Owing to the great number of the Germanic States, which were of different grades, from large principalities down to free cities and the estates of earls or counts — the frequent changes of territory among them, by marriages, alliances, and conquests, — the weakness of the federal tie by which they were united — and their conflicting interests, and frequent wars with each other and with the emperor, — the history of Germany is exceedingly complicated, and generally devoid of great points of interest. Many of the States had their own sovereigns, subordinate to their common emperor. About the middle of the fourteenth century there were three powerful States in Germany, which had absorbed nearly all the rest. These were 1st, Luxemburg' which possessed Bohemia,' 1 2 Moravia, 3 and part of Si- lesia, 4 and Lusatia : 5 * 2d, Bavaria , which had acquired Brandenburg, 4 Holland, 7 and the Tyrol : 8 and 3d, Austria , 9 which, in addition to a 1. The Grand Duchy of Luxemburg was divided in the year 1839, between Holland and Bel- gium. The town of Luxemburg, one hundred and eighty-five miles north-east from Paris, containing one of the strongest fortresses in Europe, belongs, with a portion of the surround- ing country, to Holland. (Map No. XV.) 2. Bohemia , having Silesia and Saxony on the north, Moravia and the arch-duchy of Austria on the south-east, and Bavaria on the west, forms an important portion of the Austrian empire. (Map No. XVII.) 3. Moravia , an important province of Austria, lies east of Bohemia. In 1783 a portion e Silesia was incorporated with it. Moravia is the country anciently occupied by the Quadi a_i. Marco'manni, who waged fierce wars against the Romans. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Silesia is north-east of Bohemia and Moravia, embracing the count, y on both sides of the Oder. (Map No XVII.) 5. Lusatia was a tract of country having Brandenburg on the north, Silesia on tl e east, Bo- hemia and Bavaria on the south, and Meissen on the west. It is now embraced in the east- ern part of the kingdom of Saxony, east of Dresden, the southern part of Brandenburg, and the north-western part of Silesia. It was divided into Upper and Lower Lusatia, the former being the southern portion of the territory. (Map No. XVII.) • (i. Brandenburg , the most important of the Prussian States, lies between Mecklenburg and Pomerania on the north, and West Prussian Saxony and the kingdom of Saxony on the scu'h. A includes Berlin, the capital of the Prussian empire. (Map No. XVII.) 7. Holland has the Prussian German States on the south-east, Belgium on the south, and the sea on the west. (Maps Nos. XV. and XVII.) 8. The Tyrol , (comprising the ancient Rlicetia with a part of Norieum, see Map No JX«) is a province of the Austrian empire, east of Switzerlard, and having Bavaria on the north, and Lombardy on the. south. The Tyrolese, although warmly attached to liberty, have always been steadfast adherents of Austria. ( Map No. XVII.) 9. The arch-duchy of Austria , the nucleus and centre of the Austrian empire, lies on both sides of the Danube, having Bohemia and Moravia on the north, and Styria anil Carlnthia on the south. In the time of Charlemagne, about the year 800, the margravate of A astria was 314 MODERN HISTORY. [Pamu large number of hereditary States, possessed much of the Suabi&n territory. (See Suabia, p. 270.) 10. In the year 1438 the German princes elected an emperor from the house of Austria; and, ever since, an Austrian prince, with scarcely any intermission, has occupied the throne of Germany. Near the close of the fifteenth century the German States, then under the reign of Maximilian of the house of Austria, made an im- portant change in their condition, by which the private wars and feuds, which the laws then authorized, and the right to carry on which against each other the petty States regarded as the bulwark of their liberty, were made to give place to regular courts of justice for the settlement of national controversies. In the year 1495, at a general diet held at Worms, 1 the plan of a Perpetual Public Peace was subscribed to by the several States : oppression, rapine, and vio- lence, were made to yield to the authority of lav. v, and the public tranquillity was thus, for the first time in Germany, established on a firm basis. 11. For a considerable period previous to the beginning of the fourteenth century, Switzerland, the Helvetia of the Ho- zert^d" mans, had formed an integral part of the Germanic em pire; but in the year 1307 the house of Austria, under che usurping emperor -Albert, endeavored to extend his sway over the rude mountaineers of that inhospitable land. The tyranny of Aus- tria provoked the league of Rutuli ; 2 the famous episode of the hero William Tell 3 gave a new impulse to the cause of freedom ; and in formed south of the Danube, by a body of militia which protected the south-east of Germany from the recursions of the Asiatic tribes. In 1156 its territory was extended north of the Dan ube, and made a duchy. In 1438 the ruling dynasty ot Austria obtained the electoral crown of the German emperors, and in 1453 Austria was raised to an arch-duchy. In 1526 it acquired Bohemia and Hungary, and attained the rank of a European monarchy. ( Map No. XVII.) 1. Worms is on the west bank of the Rhine, forty-two miles south-west from Iicakfort (Map No. XVU.) 2. Rutuli was a meadow slope under the Salzburg mountain, in the canton of Uri, and on the west bank of the Lake of Lucerne, where the confederates were wont to assemble at dead of night, to consult for the salvation of their country. (Map No. XIV.) 3. The story of William Tell , one of the confederates of Rutuli, is, briefly, as follows. Gess- ler the Austrian governor had carried his insolence so far as to cause his hat to be placed upon a pole, as a symbol of the sovereign power of Austria, and t<5 order that all who passed should uncover their heads and bow before it. Tell, having passed the hat without making obeisance, was summoned before Gessler, who, knowing that hr was a good archer, command- ed him to shoot, from a great distance, an apple placed on the head of his own son, — pr »mis> ing him his life if he succeeded. Tell hit the apple, but, accidentally dropping a concealed arrow, was asked by the tyrant why he had brought two arrows with him ? “ Had I shot my child,” replied the archer, “ the second shaft was fo r thee and, t e sure, I should not have Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 315 the year 1308 the united cantons of Uri, Schwytz, and Unterwalden, 1 ■b'trucK their first blow for liberty, and expelled their oppressors from the country. In 1315 the Swiss gained a great victory over the Austrians at Morgarten, 2 and another at Sempach 3 in 1386 ; but they were regarded as belonging to the Germanic empire until about the close of the fifteenth century, when, in the famous Suabian war, army after army of the Austrians was defeated, and the emperor Maxi- milian himself compelled to effect a disgraceful retreat. This was the last war of the early Swiss confederates in the cause of freedom ; and the peace concluded with Maximilian in 1499 establisheu the independence of Switzerland. 12. The condition of Italy during the central period of the Mid- dle Ages has already been described. (Sec II.) At the close of that period Italy still formed, nominally, a part of the Germanic empire ; but the authority of the German em- perors had silently declined during the preceding cen- turies, until at length it was reduced to the mere ceremony of coro nation, and the exercise of a few honorary and feudal rights over the Lombard vassals of the crown. In the twelfth and thirteenth cen- turies, numerous republics had sprung up in Italy ; and, animated by the spirit of liberty, they for a time enjoyed an unusual degree of prosperity ; but eventually, torn to pieces by contending factions, and a prey to mutual and incessant hostilities, they fell under the tyranny of one despot after another, until, in the early part of the fifteenth century, Florence, Genoa, 4 and Venice, were the only im- missed my mark a second time.” Gessler, in a rage not unmixed with terror, declared tha although he had promised Tell his life, he should pass it in a dungeon ; and taking his captive bound, started in a boat to cross the Lake of Lucerne, to his fortress. But a violent storm arising, Tell was set at liberty, and the helm committed to his hands. He guided the boat suc- cessfully to the shore, when, seizing his bow, by a daring leap he sprung upon a rock, leaving ifce barque to wrestle with the billows. Gessler escaped the storm, but only to fall by the un- erring arrow of Tell. The death of Gessler was a signal for a general rising of the Swiss cantons 1. Uri, Schwytz, Unterwalden, see Map No. XIV. 2. Morgan en, the narrow pass in which the battle was fought, is on the eastern shore of the small Lake of Egeri, in the canton of Schwytz, seventeen miles east from Lucerne,, ( Map No. XIV.) 3. Sempach is a small town on the east bank of the small lake of the same name, seven miles northwest from Lucerne. {Map No. XIV.) 4 . Genoa, a maritime city of northern Italy, is at the head of the gulf of the same name, loventy-five miles south-east from Turin. After the downfall of the empire of Charlemagne, Genoa erected itself into a republic. In 1174 it possessed an extensive territory in north-west- ern Italy, nearly all of Provence, and the island of Corsica. Genoa carried on long wars with l> isa and Venice, -that vith the latter being one of the most memorable in the Italian annals o t tie Middle Ages. 316 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL portant States that bad escaped the general catastrophe. Nearly all the numerous free towns and republics of Lombardy had been con quered by the duchy of Milan, which acknowledged a direct de- pendence on the German emperor. 13. The Florentines, who greatly enriched themselves by their commerce and manufactures, maintained their republican form of government, from about the close of the twelfth century, during a period of nearly two hundred and fifty years. The Genoese and Ve- netians, whose commercial interests thwarted each other, both in the Levant 1 and the Mediterranean, quarreled repeatedly; but eventu- ally the Venetians gained the superiority, and retained the command of the sea in their own hands. Of all the Italian republics, Genoa was the most agitated by internal dissensions ; and the Genoese, vol- atile and inconstant, underwent frequent voluntary changes of mas- ters. At the close of the fifteenth century Genoa was a dependency of the duchy of Milan, although subsequently it recovered once more its ancient state of independence. 14. Venice, to whose origin we have already alluded, was the earliest, and, for a long time, the most considerable, commercial city of modern Europe. At a very early period the Venetians began to trade with Constantinople and other eastern cities ; the crusades, to which their shipping contributed, increased their wealth, and extend ed their commerce and possessions ; and toward the end of the fif- teenth century, besides several rich provinces in Lombardy, the re- public was mistress of Crete and Cyprus, of the greater part of the Morea, 2 or Southern Greece, and of most of the isles in the iEgean Sea. The additional powers that at this time shared the dominion of Italy, were the popes, and the kings of Naples ; but the temporal domains of the former we.re small, and those of the latter soon passed into other hands ; for the continual wars which all the Italian States waged with each other had already encouraged foreign powers to form plans of conquest over them. In the year 1500 Ferdinand of Spain deprived France of Naples ; and from this time the Spaniards, who were already masters of Sicily and Sardinia, became, foi more than a hundred years, the predominating power in Italy. 1 , The Levant is a term applied to designate the eastern coasts of the Mediterranean, from southern Greece to Egypt. In the Middle Ages the trade with these countries was almost exclusively in the hands of the Italians, who gave to them the general appellation of Levant s, or eastern countries. (Italian, Levante : French, Levant .) 2. Morea. the ancient Peloponnesus , or southern Greece, is said to derive its modern name from its resem Mime.} to a mulberry leaf. (Greek, morea, a mulberry tree.) Chap. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 3ir 15. Turning to Spain, we behold there, in the beginning of the fifteenth century, the three Christian States of Navarre, 1 ** IX SPAIN# Aragon, 2 Castile 3 and Leon 4 united, and the Moorish kingdom of Granada. 5 Frequent dissensions among the Christian States had long prevented unity ot action among them, but in the year 1474 Ferdinand V. ascended the throne of Aragon; and, as he had previously married Isabella, a princess of Castile, the two roost powerful Christian States were thus united. The plan of ex pelting the Moors from Spain had long been agitated; and in 1481 the war for that purpose was commenced by Ferdinand and Isabella Ten years, however, were spent in the sanguinary strife, before the u Navarre is in the northern part of Spain, having France and the Pyrenees on the north, Aragon on the east, Old Castile on the south, and the Basque provinces (Biscay, Guipmzcoa, and Alava) on the west. A portion of ancient Navarre extended north of the Pyrenees, and afterwards formed the French province of Bearn. (See Map No. XLJI.) During many cen- turies Navarre was an independent kingdom, but in 1284 it became united, by intermarriage, with that of France. In 1329 it again obtained a sovereign of its own. Although still claimed by France, in 1512 Ferdinand of Aragon united all the country south of the Pyrenees to the crown of Spain. In 1590 Henry IV., grandson of Henry king of Navarre, ascended the throne of France ; and from that time to the reign of Charles X., the French monarchs, (with the ex- ception of Napoleon,) assumed the title of “king of France and Navarre but only the small portion of Navarre north of the Pyrenees remained annexed to the French monarchy. Span- ish Navarre is still governed by its separate laws, and has, nominally at least, the same con- afitution which it enjoyed when it was a separate monarchy ; but its sovereignty is vested in lie Spanish crown. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Aragon was bounded on the north by the Pyrenees, east by Catalonia, south by Valencia, and west by Castile and Navarre. While a separate kingdom it was the most powerful of the peninsular States, and comprised, in 1479, under the sovereignty of Ferdinand, exclusive of Aragon proper, Navarre, Catalonia, Valencia, and Sardinia. ( Map No. XIII.) 3. Castile is the central and largest division of modern Spain. The northern portion tAng that first recovered from the Saracens, is called Old Castile, and comprises the modern prov- inces of Burgos, Soria, Segovia, and Avila: the southern portion, called New Castile, comprises the provinces of Madrid, Guadalaxara, Cuenca, Toledo, and La Mancha. After the expulsion of the Saracens, and various vicissitudes, the sovereignty of Castile was vested by marriage in Sancho III. king of Navarre, whose son Ferdinand was made king of Castile in 1034. Three years later he was crowned king of Leon. The crowns of Qastile and Leon were repeatedly separated and united, till, by the marriage of Isabella, who held both crowns, with Ferdinamt, king of Aragon, in 1497, the three kingdoms were consolidated into one. ( Map No. XIII.) 4. Die kingdom of I^eon was bounded north by Asturias, east by Old Castile, south by E» tremadura, and west by Galicia and Portugal. During the eighth century, this district, after the expulsion of the Moors, was formed into a kingdom, called after its capital, and connected with Asturias. It was first added to Castile in 1037, in the reign of Ferdinand I. king of Cas- tile, who was king of Leon in right of his wife ; but it continued in an unsettled state till 1230, when it was finally united, by inheritance, to the dominions olf Ferdinand III. king of Castile. (Map No. XIII ) 5 . Granada , consisting of the south-eastern part of ancient Andalusia, (Note p. 232 ,) is on .he Mediterranean coast, in the south-eastern part of Spain. On the breaking up of the Afri- can empire in Spain, in the year 1238, Mohammed ben Alhavnar founded the Moorish king- dom of Granada, making the city of Granada his capital. Granada remained in the possession of the Moors two hundred and fifty years, which comprise the season of its prosperity In 1492 it surrendered to Ferdinand the Catholic, being the last foothold of Saracen power In Spain. (Map No. XIII.) £18 MODERN HISTORY. [Past II. Christians "Were enabled to besiege Granada, the Moorish capital; but the capitulation of that city in January, 1492, put an end to the Saracen dominion in the Spanish peninsula, after it had existed there during a period of eight hundred years. In the year 1512 Ferdi- nand invaded and conquered Navarre ; and thus the whole of Spain fSAS united under the same government. 16. Toward the close of the eleventh century, the frontier province of Portugal, 1 * * * * VI. which had been conquered by the Chris- toqai^ tians from the Moors, was formed into an earldom tributary to Leon and Castile ; but in the twelfth cen- tra y it was erected into an independent kingdom, and in the early pait of the thirteenth it had reached its present limits. The history of Portugal is devoid of general interest, until the period of those voyages and discoveries of which the Portuguese were the early pro- moters and which have shed immortal lustre on the Portuguese name. III. Discoveries. — 1. A brief account of the discoveries of the fifteenth century will close the present chapter. From the subver- sion of the Roman empire, until the revival of letters which succeed- ed the Dark Ages, no advance was made in the art of navigation ; and even the little geographical knowledge that had been acquired 1. Portugal , anciently called Lusitania , (Note p. 1G6,) was taken possession of by the Ro- mans about two hundred years before the Christian era ; previously to which the Phoenicians, Carthaginians, and Greeks, traded to its shores, and probably planted colonies there. In the fifth century it was inundated by the Germanic tribes, and in 712 was conquered by the Saracens Soon after, the Spaniards of Castile and Leon, aided by the native inhabitants, wrested north- ern Portugal, between the Minho and the Douro, from the Moors, and placed counts or govern- ors over tliis region. About the close of the eleventh century Henry, a Burgundian prince came into Spain to seek his fortune by his sword, in the wars against the Moors. Alphonse VI. king of Castile and Leon, gave to the chivalric stranger the hand of his daughter in mar- riage, and also the earldom of the Christian provinces of Portugal. In 1139 the Portuguese iarl, Alphonso I., having gained a brilliant victory over the Moors, his soldiers proclaimed him king on the field of battle ; and Portugal became an independent kingdom. Its power now rapidly increased : it maintained its independence against the claims of Castile and Leon ; and Alphonso extended his dominions to the borders of Algarve, in Lie south. In 1249 Alphonso ill. conquered Algarve, and thus, in the final overthrow of the Moorish power in Portugal, ex- tended the kingdom to its present limits. The language of Portugal is merely a dialect of the Spanish ; but the two people regard each other with a deep-rooted national antipathy. The character attributed to the Portuguese !s not very flattering. “ Strip a Spaniard of all his virtues, and you make a good Portuguese of him,” says the Spanish proverb. “I have 1 heard it more truly said,” says Dr. Southey, “ add hypocrisy to a Spaniard’s vices, and you have the Portuguese character. The two na- tions differ, perhaps purposely, in many of their habits. Almost every man in Spain smokes; the Portuguese never smoke, but most of them take snuff. None of the Spaniards will use ? wheelbarrow : none of the Portuguese will carry a burden : the one says, ‘ it is only fit for beasU to araw carriages the other, that ‘ it is fit only for beasts to carry burdens.' ” (Map No. XIIL) Chat. II.] MIDDLE AGES. 319 wa3 nearly lost during that gloomy period. Upon the returning dawn of civilization, however, commerce again revived ; and the Italian States, of which Venice, Pisa, 1 and Genoa, took the lead, soon became distinguished for their enterprising commercial spirit. The discovery of the magnetic needle gave a new impulse to naviga- tion, as it enabled the mariner to direct his bark with increased bold- ness and confidence farther from the coast, out of sight of whose landmarks he before seldom dared venture ; while the invention of the art of printing disseminated more widely the knowledge of ne w discoveries in geography and navigation. In the fourteenth century the Canary 2 islands, believed to be the Fortunate islands of the ancients, were accidentally rediscovered by the crew of a French ship driven thither by a storm. But the career of modern discovery was prosecuted with the greatest ardor by the Portuguese. Under the patronage of prince Henry, son of king John the First, Cape Bojador, before considered an impassable limit on the African coast, was doubled ; the Cape de Verd 3 and Azore 4 islands were discovered ; and the greatest part of the African coast, from Cape Blanco to Cape de Verd, was explored. (1419 — 1430.) 2. The grand idea which actuated prince Henry, was, by circum- navigating Africa, to open an easier and less expensive route to the Indies, and thus to deprive the Italians of the commerce of those fertile regions, and turn it at oner upon his own country. Although prince Henry died before he h l accomplished the great object of his ambition, the fame of tk discoveries patronized by him had rendered his name illustrior and the learned, the curious, and the 1. Pisa, the capital of one of the most celebrated republics of Italy, and now the capital of the province of its own name in the grand duchy of Tuscany, is on the river Arno, about eight miles from its entrance into the Mediterranean, and thirteen miles north-east from Leg- horn. In the tenth century Pisa took the lead among the commercial republics of Italy, and in the eleventh century its fleet of galleys maintained a superiority in the Mediterranean. In tl 3 thirteenth century a struggle with Genoa commenced, which, after many vicissitudes, ended il the total ruin of the Pisans. Pisa subsequently became the prey of various petty tyrants, and was finally united to Florence in 1406. 2. The Ca.nti.ries are a gr dining years by a rival in the full vigor of life, he wisely resolved not to forfeit his fame by vainly struggling to retain a power which he was no longer able to wield ; and, in imitation of Diocletian, tc the surprise of the world he abdicated his throne, and having re Bigned his German empire to his brother Ferdinand, and his king- doms of Spain, the Netherlands, and Italy, to his son Philip, he re- tired to end his days in the solitude of the monastery of St. Just. 1 1. Passau is a fortified frontier city of eastern Bavaria, on the southern bank of the Danube, It derives its chief historical importance from the treaty concluded there in 1552. (.Map No a XVII.) 2. The monastery of St. Just is in the province of Estremadura in Spain, near the town of Plasencia about one b undred and twenty miles south-west from Madrid. (Map No. XIII.; p 22 838 MODERN HISTORY. [Past 11 25. The ex-emperor divided the hours of his retirement between pious meditation and mechanical inventions, taking little interest in the affairs of the world around him. It is related of him that, for amusement, he once endeavored to make two watches go exactly alike. Several times he thought he had succeeded ; hut all in vain— the one went too fast, the other too slow. At length he exclaimed 1 “ Behold, not even two watches can I bring to agree with each other; and yet, fool that I was, I thought that I should be able to govern, like the works of a watch, so many nations all living under different skies, in different climes, and speaking different languages.” Finally, shortly before his death, he caused a solemn rehearsal to be made of his own funeral obsequies — a too faithful picture of that eclipsed glory which he had survived. He died in the year 1558, being at the time in the fifty- sixth year of his age. 26. During the reign of Charles V., England, Sweden, and Den mark, had followed the example of Grermany in separating from tho church of Rome. The Reformation in England, however, was, at this early period, a political rather than a moral and religious change, accomplished by the king and the aristocracy with little regard to the dictates of conscience or the convictions of reason, and retaining in part the Catholic hierarchy. By a decree of parliament (1534) the king was acknowledged as the protector and supreme head of the Church of England ; the monasteries were suppressed, and their property, amounting to more than a million of dollars, was given to the crown. Nothing would induce the king to renounce the title, which he had received from the pope, of “ defender of the faith and, with equal intolerance, he persecuted both Catholics and Pro- testants, — the former for having denied his supremacy, and the latter as heretics. . But while Henry VIII. merely withdrew his kingdom from the authority of the pope, the true principles of the Reforma tion were spreading among the people. The government of Henry was administered with numerous violations, both of the chartered | privileges of Englishmen, and of those still more sacred rights which national law has established ; and yet we meet,, in cotemporary authorities, with no expressions of abhorrence at his tyranny ; but *he monarch is often mentioned, after his death, in language of eulogy. Although he had few qualities that deserve esteem, he had many which a nation is pleased to behold in a sovereign. 27. On the death of Henry VIII., in 1547, and the accession Oho*. III.] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 339 of his son Edward a VI., then in the tenth year of his age, the Protestant religion prevailed in England ; but this amiable prince died at the early age of fifteen ; and after a rash attempt of a few of the nobility to seat Lady Jane Grey, niece to Henry VI.IL, on the throne, the sceptre passed to the hands of Edward’s sister Mary, b (1553) called the “Bloody Mary,” an intolerant Catholio and cruel persecutor of the Protestants. In her reign, of only five years’ duration, more than eight hundred miserable victims were burnt at the stake, — martyrs to their religious opinions. Mary mar- ried Philip II. of Spain, the son and successor of Charles V., who induced her in 1557 to unite with him in the war against France. Among the events of this war, the most remarkable are the victory of St. Quentin, 1 gained by the Spaniards, and the conquest of Calais by the French, under the duke of Guise, the last possession of tKe English in France. (1558.) In the same year occurred the death of Mary, about a month later than the death of Charles V. Mary was succeeded by her sister Elizabeth, the daughter of Anne Boleyn, under whose reign the Protestant religion became firmly established in England. III. The Age of Elizabeth. — 1. As the marriage of Henry VIII. with Anne Boleyn had not been sanctioned by the Bomish Church, the claims of Elizabeth were not recognized by the Catholio States of Europe ; and, the youthful Mary, c queen of Scotland, and grand neice of Henry VIII., and next heir to the crown if the illegitimacy of Elizabeth could be established, was regarded by them as the rightful claimant of the throne. Mary, who had been educated in France, in the Catholio faith, and had been married when very young to the dauphin, was persuaded by the king of France, and her maternal uncles, the Guises, to assume the arms and title of queen of England ; a false stop which laid the foundation of all her subsequent misfortunes. 2. Elizabeth endeavored to promote Protestant principles, as the 1. St. Quentin , formerly a place of great strength, is a town of France, in the former pro vim* of Picardy, 'eighty miles north-east from Paris. On the 10th of August, 1557, the army of Philip II., commanded hy the duke of Savoy, engaged the French, commanded by the consta ble Montmorenci, near this town, when the French were totally defeated, with the loss of all their artillery and baggage, and about seven thousand men killed and prisoners. The town, defended by the famous admiral Coligni, soon afterwards fell into the hands of the Spaniards, {Map No. X1U.) a. Son of Henry VIII. and Jane Seymour. b. Daughter of Henry’s first wife Catherine. c. Daughter of James V., who was son of James IV., and Margaret of England. See p. S07. 340 MODERN HISTORY [Paei II best safeguai d jf her throne ; and in the year 1 559 the parliament formally abolished the papal supremacy, and established the Church of England in its present form. On the other side Philip II. was the champion of the Catholics ; and hence England now became the counterpoise to Spain, as France had been during the reign of Charles V., while the ancient rivalry between Franco and Spain pre vented these Catholic powers from cordially uniting to check the progress of the Reformation. 3. On the death of Henry II. of France, by a mortal wound re- ceived at a tournament, (1559) the feeble Francis II., the husband of Mary of Scotland, ascended the throne, but died the following year, (Dec. 1560,) and was succeeded by his brother Charles IX., then at the age of only ten years. Mary then left France for her native dominions ; but she found there the Romish church over- thrown, and Protestantism erected in its stead. The marriage of the queen to the young Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, in spite of the remonstrances of Elizabeth, led to the first open breach between Mary and her Protestant subjects. Darnley, jealous of the ascend- ancy which an Italian, David Rizzio, Mary’s private secretary, had acquired over her, headed a band of conspirators who murdered the favorite before the eyes of the queen. Soon after, the house which Darnley inhabited was blown up by powder ; Darnley was buried un- der its ruins ; and three months later Mary married the earl of Both- well, the principal author of the crime. An insurrection of the Pro- testant lords followed these proceedings ; Mary was forced to dismiss Bothwell, and resign the crown to her infant son James VI., but subsequently endeavoring to resume her authority, and being defeat- ed by the regent Murray, her own brother, she fled into England, and threw herself upon the protection of Elizabeth, her deadly enemy. (1568.) Elizabeth retained the unfortunate Mary a prisoner, gave the guardianship of her young son to whom she pleased, and, through, her influence over the Protestant nobility of Scotland, was enabled to govern that country mostly at her will. 4. During these events in Scotland Elizabeth was carrying on a secret war against the attempts of Philip II. to establish the inqui- sition in the Netherlands, and also against a similar design of the Catholic party in France, which ruled that country during the mi nority of the sovereign. In both these countries the attempts of the Catholic rulers provoked a desperate resistance. In France, banish- ment or death had become the penalty of heresy, when in January 3 HAP IIL] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. S4t 1562, an edict was issued by the government, through the influence of the queen regent, granting tolerance to the Hugue- nots, as the French Protestants were called, and allowing religious them to assemble for worship outside the walls of towns. WAR IN The powe.ful family of Guises were indignant at the countenance thus given to heresy ; and as the duke of Guise was passing through a small village, his followers fell upon the Pro- testants who were assembled outside the walls in prayer, and killed sixty of their number. This atrocity was the signal for a general rising ; the prince of Conde, the leader of the Protestant party, took possession of Orleans, and made that town the head-quarters of the Huguenots, as the capital was of the Catholics, while at the same time the aid of Philip of Spain was openly proffered to the Guises, and Conde concluded a treaty with Elizabeth, to whom he delivered Havre-de-Grace 1 in return for a corps of six thousand men. 5. At the opening of this civil and religious war, the greatest en thusiasm prevailed on both sides, — in the opposing armies prayers were heard in common, morning and evening, — there was no gam- bling, no profane language, nor dissipation ; but, under an exterior of sanctity, feelings of the most, vindictive hate were nourished, and the direst cruelties were openly perpetrated in the name of religion. The Catholic governor of Guienne 2 went through his province with hangmen, marking his route by the victims whom he hung on the trees by the road side. On the other hand, a Protestant baron in Dauphiny 3 precipitated his prisoners from the top of a tower on pikes ; — both parties made retaliatory reprisals, each spilling blood upon scaffolds of its own erection. 6. The first great battle was fought at Dreux, 4 the prince of Conde commanding the army of the Protestants, and the constable Mont- morency that of the Catholics ; but while the latter won the field, each of the two generals became prisoner to the opposite party. The duke of Guise, who was next in command to Montmorency, treated 1. Havr e-de-grace , now called Havre , is a fortified town, and the principal commercial sea- port, on the western coast of France, at the mouth of the river Seine, one hundred and nine miles north-west from Paris. {Map No. XIII.) 2. The province of Guienne was in the south-west part of the kingdom, on both sides ol the Garonne. {Map No. XIII.) 3. The province of Dauphiny , of which Grenoble was the capital, was in the south-eastern part of France, having Bur' gundy on the north, Italy on the east, Provence on the south, and the Rhine on the west. {Map No. XIII.) 4. Dreux , the ancient seat of the counts of Dreux, is a town of France, forty-five miles lUt{e siuth of west from Paris. {Map No. XIII.) 342 MJDERN HISTORY. [Part II his captive rival with the utmost generosity : they shared the same tent — the same bed ; and while Conde, from the strangeness of his position, remained wakeful. Guise, he declared, enjoyed the most pro- found sleep. The admiral Coligni succeeded to the command of the defeated Huguenots ; and Orleans, their principal post, was only saved by the assassination of the duke of Guise, whom a Protestant from behind, wounded by the discharge of a pistol. The capture 01 death of the chiefs on both sides, Coligni excepted, brought aboui an accommodation ; and in March, 1563, the treaty of Amboise 1 wa? declared, granting to the Protestants full liberty of worship within the towns of which they then were in possession. 7 The treaty of Amboise was scarcely concluded when its term? began to be modified by the court, so that, as a cotemporary writei observes, “ edicts took more from the Protestants in peace than force could take from them in war.” The Protestant leaders, Conde and Coligni, tried in vain to get possession of the young king ; and a battle was fought in the very suburbs of Paris, in which the aged Mont- morency was slain. (1567.) A Lame Peace,” 3 - concluded in the following year, confirmed that of Amboise ; but the wary Protestant leaders saw in it only a trap to ensnare them as soon as their arm^ should be disbanded. The mask was soon thrown off by an attempt of the court to seize the two chiefs : the Huguenots were defeated in four battles ; Conde was slain, and Coligni severely wounded ; but in 1570 the peace of St. Germain 2 was concluded ; and amnestj and liberty of worship were again granted to the Protestants. 8. The object of the court, however, was not peace, but vengeance and Charles IX., now in his twentieth year, engaged zealously in tht project of his mother Catherine, to entice the Protestant leaders tc the capital, and there massacre them, and afterwards carry on a wai of extermination against the Huguenots throughout the kingdom For the purpose of enticing the Huguenots to the capital, and lulling them into security, it was proposed that young Henry of Navarre, a Protestant should espouse the king’s sister Margaret, — a marriage .. Amboise is a town and castle on the Loire, in the former province of Touraine. fifteen miles east of Tours. The castle occupies the summit of a rock about ninety feet in height. {Map No. XIII.) 2. St. O e-main is a town of France, on a hill near the south bank of the Seine, six miles north of Versailles, and nine miles north-west from Paris. It is chiefly noted for its palace, originally built by Charles V., ami often the residence of the kings of France. James II. of England, with most of his family, passed their exile, and died, in it. {Map No. XIII.) a. So called as well r >m its infirm and uncertain nature, as from the accidental lameness of its two negotiators. Chap. Ill] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 343 which would, in itself, be a bond of union between the two parties. The nuptials were celebrated with the greatest magnificence ; and amid the festivities which followed, the plan of the massacre wap matured. When the decree of extermination was placed before Charles for his signature, he at first hesitated, appalled by the enor- mity of the deed, but at length signed it, exclaiming, “ let none es- cape to reproach me.” 9. About three o’clock in the morning of St. Bartholomew’s day, the 24th of August, 1572, the young duke of Guise and liis band of eut throats commenced the bloody work by breaking into the apartment of the aged Coligni, and slaying him while C re of st. engaged in prayer ; the tocsin was sounded, and the barthol- Catholics of Paris, with the sign of the cross in their caps to distinguish them, rushed forth to the massacre of their brethren. What is surprising, the victims made no resistance ! They would not derogate, at such a moment, from their character of mar- tyrs. The massacre lasted, in Paris, eight days and nights, without any apparent diminution of the fury of the murderers. 10. Charles commanded the same scene to be renewed in every town throughout the kingdom ; and fifty thousand Protestants are believed to have fallen victims to the monarch’s order. A few com- manders, however, refused to obey the edict : one wrote back to the court, “ that he commanded soldiers, not assassins and even the public executioner of a certain town, when a dagger was put into his hands, threw it from him, and declared himself above the crime. The prince of Navarre, who had espoused the king’s sister, and his companion the young prince of Conde, were spared only on the con- dition of becoming Catholics ; but both yielded in appearance only, A- circumstance as horrible as the massacre itself, was the joy it ex- cited. Philip II., thinking Protestantism subdued, sent to congratu- late the court of France : medals to commemorate the event were struck at Borne ; and the pope went in state to his cathedral, and returned public thanks to Heaven for this signal mercy. 11. But the crime from which so much was expected, produced neither peace nor advantage ; and the civil war was renewed with greater force than ever : mere abhorrence of the massacre caused many Catholics to turn Huguenots ; and although the latter were at first paralyze! by the blow, the former were stung by remorse and shame. Charles himself seemed stricken already by avenging fate. As the accounts of the murders of old men, women, and children, were MODERN HISTORY. [Paet 11 successively brought to him, while the massacre continued, he drew aside M. Ambroise, his first surgeon, to whom he was much attached, although he was a Protestant, and said to him, “ Ambroise, I know not what has come over me these two or three days, but I find my mind and body in disorder ; I see everything as if I had a fever ; every moment, as well waking as sleeping, the hideous and bloody faces of the killed appear before me ; I wish the weak and* innocent had not been included.” From that time a continued fever preyed upon . him, and, eighteen months later, carried him to the grave, (May 1574,) but not until he had been compelled to grant the Hu guenots a peace, after seeing that his grand and sweeping crime had but enfeebled the Catholic party, instead of insuring its triumph. 12. At the time of the massacre of St. Bartholomew, civil war iv the was ra g^ u S i n the Netherlands. During the six years nether- of the administration of the duke of Alva, Philip’s gov- lands. ernor j n that country, the land was desolated by the in- satiate cruelty of one of the greatest monsters of wickedness the world has ever seen ; and it is the recorded boast of Alva himself that, during his brief administration, he caused eighteen thousand of the inhabitants to perish by the hands of the executioner. At length, in 1572, a general rising against the Spanish power was organized, the prince of Orange being at the head of the revolters. After a war of varied fortunes on both sides, in 1576 the States-general, or congress, of most of the Batavian and Belgic provinces, met, and as- sumed the reins of government in the name of the king, and soon after concluded a union between the States, which is known as the Pacification of Ghent } The expulsion, from the country, of Spanish soldiers and other foreigners was decreed ; Alva’s sanguinary de- crees and edicts against heresy, were repealed, and religious tolera- tion guaranteed. 13. Ere long, however, the confederacy thus formed fell to pieces, ■)wing to jealousies between the Catholic and Protestant States; nd it became evident that freedom could be attained only by a closer union of the provinces, resting on an entire separation from Spain. Acting on this belief, in January 1579 the prince of Orange con- voked an assembly of deputies at Utrecht, 1 2 where was signed the 1. Ghent is a city of Belgium, thirty miles north-west from Brussels. It belonged, success ‘vely, to the counts of Flanders and the dukes of Bur' gundy ; but the citizens enjoyed a great degree of independence. It was the birth-place of the emperor Charles V. ( Map No. XV.) 2. Utrecht is a city of Holland, on the old Rhine, twenty miles south-east ‘rom Vmsterdam. Ih Urap. Ill] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 345 famous act called the Union of Utrecht , the real basis or fundamental compact of the Republic of the United provinces. Early in the following year, 1580, the States-general assembled at Antwerp, 1 and, in spite of all the opposition of the Catholic deputies, the authority of Spain was renounced forever, and the “ United Provinces” de- clared a free and independent State. Philip, however, still waged ft vindictive war against them, while they received important aid from Elizabeth of England, a circumstance which led Philip to de clare war against the latter country. 14. The destinies of the unhappy queen of Scotland had long been implicated with the designs of the Catholics of Europe against the power and throne of Elizabeth. About the time of the massacre of St. Bartholomew, the infamous duke of Alva, the Spanish gov- ernor of the Netherlands, had formed a project of uniting with the English Catholics and Mary in a confederacy against Elizabeth ; and Mary was charged with countenancing the design ; but although par- liament applied for her immediate trial, Elizabeth was satisfied with increasing the rigor and strictness of her confinement. Mary was subsequently, and repeatedly, charged with being cognizant of simi- lar plans ; but her participation' in any of them is exceedingly doubt- ful. At length, however, an act of parliament was passed authoriz- ing her trial ; and after an investigation, in which law and justice were little regarded, she was condemned to death. Elizabeth, after some delay and hesitation, signed the warrant for her execution, which, she said, she designed to keep by her, to be used only in case of the attempt of Mary to escape ; but her council, having obtained possession of it from her private secretary, hastily despatched it to those who had charge of the prisoner, and the unhappy Mary was beheaded, after having been in captivity nineteen years. (1587.) 15. The execution of the queen of Scots inflamed the resentment of the Catholics throughout Europe, and gave additional vigor to the preparations of Philip II. for an invasion of England, a project which he had long had in contemplation, and by which he hoped to dastroy the power of the great supporter of the Prostestant cause. With justice, perhaps, Philip complained of the depredations which addition to the famous act called the “ Union of Utrecht,” signed here on the 29th of January, 1579, the treaties of Utrecht which terminated the war of the Spanish succession, and gave peace *.o Europe, (see p. 405, were concluded here in 1713 and 1714. (Map N >. XV.) 1. Antwerp is a maritime city of Belgium, on the north bank of the Scheldt, twenty-aix miles -lorth from Brussels. In the sixteenth century Antwerp enjoyed a more extensive io" rade ohan any other city in Europe. (Map No. XV.) 346 MODERN HISTORY. |Pabt 1L the English, under their great admiral Sir Francis Drake, had for many years committed on the Spanish possessions in South America, and more than once on the coasts of Spain itself; and now a vast armament was prepared to sweep the English from the seas, ravage their coasts, burn their towns, and dethrone their Protestant queen< 16. In May, 1588, the Spanish fleet of one hundred and thirty ships, some the largest that had ever plowed the deep, carrying, ex- v the elusive of eight thousand sailors, no less than twenty Spanish thousand of the bravest troops in the Spanish armies, a armada. i ar g e invading force in those days, sailed from the har- bor of Lisbon for the English coast. The pope had blessed the ex- pedition, and offered the sovereignty of England as the conqueror’s prize ; and the Catholics throughout Europe were so confident of success that they had named the armament u The Invincible Ar- mada.” The queen of England beheld the preparations, and heard the vauntings of her enemies, with a resolution worthy of the occa- sion and the cause. She visited the seaports in person, superintend- ed the preparations frr defence, and on horseback addressed the troops ; and such was the enthusiasm which she everywhere inspired, that even her Catholic subjects joined their countrymen, heart and hand, against foreign domination. Lord Howard of Effingham was appointed admiral of the fleet; Drake, Hawkins, and Frobisher, the most renowned seamen in Europe, served under him ; while an army of forty-five thousand men was organized for the defence of the coast and the capital. 1 7. After the Armada had sailed from Lisbon it suffered consider ably from a storm off the French coast : in passing through the Eng- lish Channel it was seriously harassed, during several days, by the lighter English vessels ; and while at anchor off Calais, the English sent a number of fire-ships into the midst of the fleet, destroyed several vessels, and threw the others into such confusion that the Spanish admiral no longer thought of victory, but only of escape As the south wind blew, he was unable to retrace his course, and therefore resolved to return by coasting the northern shores of Scot- land and Ireland. But his disasters were not ended : many of his vessels were driven, by a storm, on the coasts of Norway and Scot- land : off the Irish coast a second storm was experienced, with al- most equal loss ; and only a few shattered vessels of this mighty ar- mament returned to Spain, to bring intelligence of the calamities that had overwhelmed the rest. The defeat of the armada was regarded Chap. IIL] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 347 as the triumph of the Protestant cause , it exerted a favorable in fluence on the welfare of the United Provinces, and virtually secured their independence ; and it raised the courage of the Huguenots in France and completely destroyed the decisive influence which Spain had long maintained in the affairs of Europe. Henceforth the naval power ind the commerce of Spain declined ; and the king, at his death in 1598, bequeathed a vast debt to a nation whose resources notwithstanding her rich mines of gold and silver in tHe New World, w^e already exhausted. 1 8. The internal history of France, since the massacre of St. Bar- Itolomew, and the death of Charles IX., is filled with deplorable .jivil wars during most of the remaining portion of the sixteenth century. Charles was succeeded by his brother Henry III., who endeavored to play the opposing Catholic and Protestant parties against each other ; but being obliged, at length, by the violence of the Catholic league , to throw himself on the protection of the Protestants, he was assassinated by James Clement, a fanatic monk, just as he was on the point of driving his enemies from Paris. (Aug. 1589.) In the death of Henry III., the house of Yalois became extinct, and the throne passed by right of inherit- ance to the house of Bourbon, in the person of the Protestant Henry of Navarre, who now became king of France, with the title of Henry IY. He was at first opposed by the Catholic league ; but. after a struggle of four years, in which he received some aid from Eliza- beth of England, he abjured the Protestant faith, and thus became king of a united people. (1593-4.) To the Huguenots, however, he atoned for his compulsory desertion, by issuing, in VI THE 1598, the celebrated Edict of Nantes, 1 which terminated edict of the religious wars that had distracted France during ^ ANTES - thirty-six years. The Edict of Nantes secured to the Protestants (he free exercise of their religion, and an equal claim with the Catho lic3 to all offices and dignities. The parliament made considerable opposition to the registering of this edict, and the king was obliged to use menaces, as well as persuasion, to overcome their obstinacy. 19. The history of England, after the defeat of the Spanish Ar- mada, offers few events of interest during the remainder of the reign 1. Nantes is a celebrated commercial city and seaport of France, about thirty-four miles from the mouth of the Loire, and two hundred and ten south-west from Paris. Before the conquest of Gaul by the Romans it was already a considerable city, and the capital of the Yamnetes , who distinguished themselves by their opposition to Julius Caesar. [Map No. XIIJj 348 MODERN HISTORY. | Tart IL »f Elizabeth. A general insurrection, however, broke out in Ire land in 1598, the design of which was to effect the entire expulsion of the English from the island ; but although the insurgents were supplied with troops and ammunition by the Spanish monarch, and the pope held out ample indulgences in favor of those who should enlist to combat the English heretics, yet the rebels ultimately failed in their enterprise, after a sanguinary war which lasted six years. 20. The splendor of Elizabeth’s reign is a theme on which Eng- lish historians love to dwell. At this time England held the balance m charac- P ower i n Christendom, a position that was owing, in ter of no small degree, to the personal character of the sover- ET..IZABETH e jg n> ;ftr 0 monarch of England ever surpassed Elizabeth in firmness, penetration, and address ; and none ever conducted the government with more uniform success. Yet her political maxims were arbitrary in the extreme ; and she had little regard for the lib- erties of her people, or the privileges of parliament — believing that her subjects were entitled to no other rights than their ancestors had enjoyed. The principles of the English constitution were not yet developed. Elizabeth died in the year 1603, being then in the sev- entieth year of her age, and the forty-fifth of her reign. IY. Cotemporary History. — 1 . If we pass from European his tory to that of other portions of the world in the sixteenth century, the most prominent events that attract our notice are the establish ment of the Portuguese in Southern Asia, and of the Spaniards in Mexico and South America, — the rise of a Mogul empire in India, and of a new dynasty in Persia. After the fleet of De Gama had doubled the Cape of Good Hope, the enterprises of the Portuguese were directed to the securing of the commerce of the Indian seas ; but, goon after, under the viceroyalty of the illustrious Albuquerque, they formed numerous settlements and established forts and trading houses throughout all the coasts. In the year 1507 Al- buquerque took possession of .Ormus, 1 then the most splendid and polished city of Asia, situated at the en- trance of the Persian Gulf; and when the king of Persia, 1. Ormus , anciently called Ozyris, is a rocky island at the mouth of the Persian Gulf. It should scarcely be worth notice were it not for its former celebrity and importance. Before the appearance of the Portuguese in the East it was a great emporium, being the centre of the trade of the Persian Gulf, and of the contiguous countries, and possessing great wealth. The Portuguese held it till 1622, when it was wrested from them by Shah Abbas, assisted by an English fleet. The booty acquired by the captors on this occasion is said to have amounted to two millions sterling. This once rich and flourishing empori am is now in a state ot rraoarable decay. I. THE POR- TUGUESE COLONIAL EMPIRE. Chap. III.] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 349 to whom it had long belonged, demanded tribute from the Portu- guese, the viceroy pointing to his cannons and balls, replied : “ There is the coin with ’nhich the king of Portugal pays tribute.” The at- tempts of the Venetians and Mohammedans to expel the intruders were ineffectual, and in 1510, Goa, 1 the chief of the Portuguese es- tablishments, was made the capital of the Portuguese empire in Lidia. The Portuguese introduced themselves into China also ; and when their colonial empire was at its greatest extent, it embraced the coasts of Africa from Guinea to the Red Sea, and extended over all Southern and Eastern Asia ; although throughout this vast extent of country, they had little more than a chain of factories and forts. On the union of Portugal with Spain (1580), the Portuguese East India possessions followed the fate of the mother country, and passed into the unskilful hands of the Spaniards (1582) ; but when the intolerable cruelty of the Spanish government had driven the Dutch to revolt, the latter extended their commerce to the Indies, and, at the close of the century, had possession of nearly all that had formed the colonial empire of the Portuguese. 2. The Spaniards were more successful in making and retaining conquests in the New World. Soon after the discovery n SPANISH of America they extended their settlements over the colonial islands of the . West Indies, which were depopulated by EMPIRE - the excessive, and unhealthy labor imposed by them upon the na- tives. In 1519 the adventurer Cortez landed with a small force on the eastern coast of Mexico ; and in the course of two years the wealthy and populous kingdom of the Montezumas was reduced to a province of Spain. Yet, after all his services to his country, Cortez, like Columbus, was persecuted at home. It was with difficulty that he could gain an audience from the emperor, Charles V. When one day he pushed through the crowd which surrounded the coach of the emperor, and placed his foot on the step of the door, Charles asked who this man was. “ It is he,” replied Cortez, “ who has given you more kingdoms than your ancestors left you cities.” 3. After Mexico, the Spaniards sought other countries to conquer and depopulate. In 1532 Pizarro, a soldier of fortune, taking with him a force of only two hundred and fifty foot soldiers, sixty horse- 1. Goa, 'the old town,) is on an island of the same name on the south-western coast of Hin- dostan, two hundred and fifty miles south-east from Bombay. The old city, now almost de- serted except l>y priests, is “ a city of churches ; and the wealth of provinces seems to have been expended in their erection.” New Goa, built on the sea-shoro about five miles from the old town, is a well-built city, with a population of about twenty thousand. 350 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II men, and twilvc small cannon, invaded Peru, the greatest, the best governed, and most civilized nation of the New World. Pizarro and his companions marked their route with blood ; but wherever they directed their course they conquered in the name of Charles V. ; and before the close of the century the Spanish empire in America embraced the islands of the West Indies, all Mexico and Peru, and the coasts of nearly all South America. The enormous quantity of the precious metals which Spain drew from her American possessions contributed to make her, for awhile, the preponderating power in Europe ; but an inordinate thirst for the gold and silver of America led the Spaniards to neglect agriculture and manufactures. The Spanish colonies increased but slowly in population ; the capital itself was ruined ; and before the close of the sixteenth century the best days of Spain were over. 4. During the three hundred years previous to 1525, India, or in the Hindostan, was governed by Affghan princes, whose seat mogul em- of government was Delhi. In 1525, Baber, the fifth in pire in descent from Tamerlane, and sovereign of a little princi- pality between Kashgar 1 and Samarcand, entered Hin- dostan at the head of a large army, defeated and killed the last Affghan sovereign, and seated himself on the throne of Delhi. 2 With him began the race of Mogul princes, as they are called by Eu- ropeans, although their native tongue was Turkish. In the next cen- tury the Mogul empire was consolidated under Aurungzebe, who, by murdering his relatives, and shutting his father up in his harem, was enabled to ascend the throne of Hindostan in 1659. But notwithstand- ing the means by which he had obtained sovereign authority, he gov- erned with much wisdom, consulted the welfare of his people, watched over the preservation of justice, and the purity of manners, and, by a wise administration, sought to confirm his own power. After his death, in 1707, the Mogul empire began to decline; and even under 1. Kashgar , the most western town of any importance in the Chinese empire, is about foui hundred and fifty miles east from Samarcand. It was a celebrated commercial city before the Christian era, and, under several dynasties, it long formed an independent kingdom. The Chinese obtained possession of it about the middle of the eighteenth century. 2. Delhi is a city of northern Hindostan, about eight hundred and thirty miles north-west from Calcutta. It appears that no less than seven successive cities have stood on the ground occupied by Delhi nd its ruins. De hi was the residence of the Hindoo rajahs before 1 193, when it was conquered by the Affghans. In 1398 Delhi was taken and plundered by Tamerlane ; in 1525 by Baber ; in 1736 the Mahrattas burned the suburbs, and in 1739 Delhi was entered and pil- laged by Nadir Shah. Sine* i803 it has, together with its territory, virtually belonged to the Chap III.] SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 351 Aurungzebe it was much inferior, in extent and resources, to the em- pire now held by Britain in the same country. 5. We have already alluded to the revival of the Persian empire at the beginning of the sixteenth century. At that period we find the youthful Ismael, who traced his descent to the Sheik JV THE Suffee, a holy person who lived in the time of Tamer- Persian lane, heading a band of adherents against a neighboring EMPIRE - prince, and, in the course of four years, reducing all Persia to his sway. For fifteen years fortune smiled on his arms ; but he was a I length defeated by Selim, the sultan of Constantinople. The latter, however, reaped no real advantage from his dearly-bought victory ; and when Ismael died he left a. name on which the Persians dwell with enthusiasm, as the restorer of their country, and the founder of one of the most brilliant of the Mohammedan dynasties — called the Suffeean , or Suffavean, from the holy sheik Suffee. 6 Tamasp succeeded his father Ismael, when only ten years of age His reign was long and prosperous. ' Anthony Jenkinson, one of the earliest adventurers to Persia, visited the court of Tamasp as an envoy from queen Elizabeth ; but the intolerance of the Moham- medan soon drove the Christian away. The three sons of Tamasp in succession made an effort for the crown ; but their short reigns merit little notice. At length, in 1582, the youthful Abbas, a grandson of Tamasp, was proclaimed king by some of the discontent- ed nobles, and forced to appear in arms against his father Moham- med, who was deserted by his army, and is not mentioned again in history. But Abbas did not long remain a tool in the hands f others, for, seizing the reigns of power, he soon rose to distinction, defeated the Turks in many battles, in 1622 took Ormuz from the Portuguese, and became supreme ruler of a mighty empire. During nis reign commenced an amicable intercourse between the English and Persian nations, which continued Tor many years. 7. Abbas was, in many respects, an enlightened prince : his foreign policy was generally liberal, and he extended toleration to other re- ligions : he spent his revenues in improvements : caravanseras, bridges, aqueducts, bazaars, mosques, and colleges, arose in every quarter ; and Ispahan 1 the capital was splendidly embellished. But 1. Ispahan, formerly the capital of Persia, is situated between the Caspian Sea and the Persian Uul^ two hundred and eleven miles south of Teheran, the modern capital. Although Ispahan nas now a population of over one hundred thousand, yet it presents to the traveller, in its ouildings at least, little beyond the magnificent ruins of its former greatness. Under the reign of Shah Abbas* Ispahan was the emporium of the Asiatic world. The city was at that time 352 MODERN HISTORY. [Past I as a parent, and relative, the character of Ahbas appears in a mos, revolting light. He had four sons, on whom he doated as long as they were children, hut when they grew up toward manhood they became objects of jealousy, if not of hatred : their friends were con- sidered as his enemies ; and praises of them were as a knell to his soul. The eldest was assassinated, and the eyes of the rest put out, by ordei; of their inhuman parent. Horrid tragedies were of fre- quent occurrence in the harem of this Eastern tyrant. Yet such is the king whom the Persians most admire ; and so precarious is the nature of despotic power in Persia, that monarchs of a similar char acter alone have successfully ruled the nation. When this monarch ceased to reign, Persia ceased to prosper. 8. Abbas was succeeded by a series of imbecile tyrants, and in 1722 the country was overrun by the Affghans, who, during seven wretched years, converted the fairest provinces of Persia into deserts, her cities into charnel houses, and destroyed the lives of a million of her people. At length the famous Kouli Khan, a brigand chief, was raised to the throne with the title of Nadir Shah. He distin- guished himself alike by his victories and his ferocity ; but being assassinated in 1743, his death was followed by a long-continued civil war. The most noted of the Persian monarchs since the death of Nadir Shah have been the eunuch Mehemet Khan, Futteh Ali Shah, and Abbas Mirza, the latter of whom ascended the throne in 1835. twenty-four miles in circuit, and contained a million of people. Its bazaars were filled with merchandize from every quarter of the globe, mingled with rich bales of its own celebrated manufactures ; and the Shah’s court was the resort of ambassadors fr om the proudest kingdom; of the East, and from Europe also. Chap IV. J SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 353 CHAPTER IV. THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. I. THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR. ANALYSIS. 1. German history from 1558 to 1018. The events that led to tho “Thirtj Years’ War.” Extent of that war. — 2. Ferdinand succeeds Matthias as emperor of Germany, but is deposed in Bohemia. Frederic the elector-palatine. The Palatine Period of the war. [Prague.] — 3. Mansfeldt is unable to cope with the imperial generals. Protestant alli- ance with th3 Danes, and opening of the Danish Period of the war. Defeat of the Danish king by Tilly. [Lutter. Gottingen. Brunswick.] — 4. The Danes are driven from Hungary, and most of Denmark is conquered. Ambitious views of Ferdinand. Siege of Stralsund, Treaty of Lubec. [Stralsund. Lubec.]— 5. The hopes of a general peace. Tyranny of Ferdi- nand, and revolt of the Protestants. Interposition of Gustavus Adolphus, and opening of the Swedish Period of the war — 6. Intrigues of Richelieu,— leading to the invasion of Germany by the Swedes in 1630. [Rochelle.] — 7. Contempt in which the Swedes were held by the Ger- mans. [Pomerania.] Character of the opposing forces. The military system of Gustavus. — 8. Early successes of the Swedes. Magdeburg plundered and burned by the imperialists. [Mag- deburg.] — 9. Compensation for the loss of Magdeberg. [Leipsic.] Gustavus overruns Ger- many. Death of Tilly. — 10. Successes of Wallenstein. [Nuremburg. Dresden.] Death of Gustavus. [Lutzen.] — 11. Close of the Swedish period of the war, and death Of Wallenstein. The French Period of the war. — 12. Circumstances of the leaguing of the French with the Protestants. The Rhine becomes the chief seat of the war. — 13. The remainder of the Thirty Years’ War. Death of Ferdinand. Death of Louis XIII. and Richelieu. Treaty of Westphalia [Westphalia.] Condition of Germany. — 14. Chief articles of the treaty of Westphalia. II. ENGLISH HISTORY:— THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION. 1. England during the period of the Thirty Years’ War. Union of England and Scotland, 1603. — 2. The character of James I., and the character of his reign. — 3. His successor Charles I. His misfortunes.— 4. Difficulties that immediately followed his accession. The second and third parliament. Dissolution of the latter. — 5. The interval until the assembling of anothei parliament. Conduct of the English clergy, and persecution of the puritans. Scotch rebel- lion. March of the Covenanters into England. Fourth and fifth parliament. — 6. Opening acts of The Long Parliament. Impeachment of Strafford and Laud. Remarks. — 7. Continued encroachments of Parliament. Irish rebellion. Impeachment of five members of the Com- mons. — 8. The king erects his standard at Nottingham, and opens the civil war — 1642. [Not- tingham.] Strength of the opposing parties. — 9. The battles of Edghill and Newbery. [Edg hill. New’oery.] — 10. The Scotch League. — 11. Campaigns of 1644 and 1645. [Marston* Moor. Naseby.] The king a prisoner. — 12. Civil and religious dissensions. Oliver Crom- well. — 13. The reaction in favor of the king arrested by Cromwell. Trial and execution of Charles I. 1649.— 14. Remarks upon this measure. Character of Charles. — 15. Abolition of Monarchy. Cromwell’s military successes. [Worcester.] — 16. War with Holland Navigation act. Naval battle. — 17. Continuance of the war, and defeat of the British. [Good win Sands.] Bravado of Tromp. — 18. Defeat of the Dutch in the English Channel. The final conflict, and death of Tromp. Peace with Holland. — 19. Controversy between Cromwell and. Parliament. The Protectorate. — 20. Continued dissensions and parliamentary opposition to Cromwell. The army. War with Spain. — 21. Character of Cromwell’s administration. Ate tempt to invest him with the dignity of king. — 22. Remainder of Cromwell’s life. His death.— 23. Richard. His abdication. Anarchy. Restoration of monarchy, 1660. — 24. First lm pressiom produced by Charles II. His character. The parliament of 1661. — 25. Manners and 23 354 MODERN HISTORY. [Pabt ll morals of the na:ion. — 91. Increasing discontent. War with Holland. The capital threatened. [Dunkirk. Cha ham.]— 27. The plague of 1665. The great fire of 1666—28. Treaty of Breda. [Breda. New Netherlands. Acadia and Nova Scotia.] Another war with Holland. Treaty of Nimeguen. [Orange. Nimeguen.] — 29. The professions and the secret designs of Charles. H is intrigues with the French monarch. His growing unpopulai ity. Popish plot. Russell and Sidney. Absolute power of the king. His death. — 30. James II. His general policy. The approaching crisis. — 31. Arbitrary and unpopular measures of the king. [Windsor.] — 32 Monmouth’s rebellion. The inhuman Jeffries. — 33. Events of the Revolution of 1688.— 34. Settlement of the crown on William and Mary. Declaration of rights. — 35. Scotch and Irish rebellion. [Killiecrankie.] Events that led to a general European war. French history toward# file close of the century. Death of William, 1702. III. FRENCH HISTORY WARS OF LOUIS XIV. 1. The Administration of Cardinal Richelieu, 1624 — 42. — 2. Mazarin’s abministra tion, 1642 — 61 . Treaty of Westphalia, and war of the Fronde. — 3. Continuance of the war bo tween France and Spain. CondC and Turenne. England joins France in the war. [Arras. V alenciennes. Flanders.] — 4. Both France and Spain desirous of peace. Treaty of the Pyren- ees, 1659. [Bidassoa. Gravelines. Roussillon. Franche-ComtC.] — 5. Louis assumes the administration of government. [Louvre. Invalides. Versailles. Languedoc.]— 6. Ambitious projects of Louis. His invasion of the Spanish Netherlands. [Brabant.] — 7. Capture of Franche-Comte. Triple alliance against Louis. Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle. [Aix-la-Chapelle.] — 8. Designs of Louis against Holland. — 9. The bayonet. Comparative strength of the French and Dutch forces. — 10. Invasion of Holland. [Amsterdam.] The inhabitants think of aban- doning their country. Prince William of Orange effects a general league against the French monarch. (1674.) — 11. The war in the Spanish Netherlands. Turenne and CondC. Duquesne. — 12. Peace of Nimeguen, 1678. Remarks of Voltaire. — 13. Great prosperity and increasing ascendancy of France. The greatest glories of the reign of Louis. — 14. Madame de Maintenon. Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. — 15. General league, and war, against Louis, 1686 — 8. His activity in meeting his enemies. — 16. Successes of the French commanders. Battle of La Hogue. [Beachy Head. Namur. La Hogue.] — 17. Campaign of 1693. Peace of Ryswick, 1697. State of France at the close of the seventeenth century. [Nerwinden. Ryswick. Strasburg.] IV. COTEMPORARY HISIORY. 1. Increasing extent of the field of history. — 2. Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. Gustavus Adolphus, and his successors. — 3. Poland, during the seventeenth century. The reign of John Sobieski, 1674 — 97. His victories over the Turks. [Kotzim]. — 4. Siege of Vienna by the Turks and Hungarians. [Vienna.] — 5. Its deliverance by Sobieski, 1683. — 6. Complete dis- comfiture of the Turks. Ingratitude of Austria, and decline of Poland. — 7. Russia, at the commencement of the seventeenth century. Peter the Great. His efforts for improving the condition of his people and country. [Azof. Dwina. Volga. St. Petersburg ]— 8. His travels, &c. Political acts of his reign. — 9. Turkey from the early part of the sixteenth to the latter part of the seventeenth century. Decline of her power at the close of the century. [Zenta, Carlow itz, Transylvania. Sclavonia. Podolia. Ukraine.] — 10. Italy during the seventeenth century. Effects of the Reformation. Of the Spanish rule in Italy. — ll. The low state cf morals. General suffering and degradation. — 12. The Spanish peninsula during the seven teenth century. Expulsion of the Moors, 1610. — 13. Revolt of Portugal, 1640. Independence of Holland, 1648. Treaty of Westphalia, 1648. — 14. The Asiatic nations during the seven- teenth century. Persia. China. — 15. The great Mogul empire of Asia. Aurungzebe. — 16. Co I.ONIAL Establishments. Dutch colonies. [Surinam. Moluccas. Ceylon.] Colonial policy of the Dutch. — 17. Spanish colonial empire. — 18. Materials and character of Spanish colonial history.— 19. French colonization in the New World. In the Old. [Madagascar. Pondicherry.] — 20. English colonial possessions. The London East India Company. /Java. Madras. Bom- bay. Calcut,a.] — 21. English colonization in America. History of the British American colo- nies during the seventeenth century. The early colonists of New England. — 22. Instructive *nd interesting character of early American history. Omission of a separate compend of Vmerican histo • • in this work Celap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 355 1. The Thirty i ears’ War. — 1. From the death of Charles V. in the year 15J8, to me year 1618, there were no events in German history that exercised any important influence on the politics of Europe. At the iatter period, however, the German emperor, Matthias, succeeded in procuring the subordinate crown of Bohemia for his cousin Ferdinand, a bigoted Catholic; a ‘circumstance which increased the hostile feelings that had long existed between the Bo man Catholic and Protestant parties in Bohemia; but when Ferdi nand banished the new faith from his dominion, and destroyed the Protestant churches, his impolitic conduct led to an open revolt of his Protestant subjects. (1618.) This was the commencement of a thirty years’ war — the last conflict sustained by the Beformation — a war indeterminate in its objects, but one which, before its close, in- volved, in its complicated relations, nearly all the states of continental Europe. 2. While this petty war was raging on the narrow theatre of the Bohemian territory, Matthias died ; and Ferdinand, to the great alarm of the Protestant party throughout Germany, was elected em- peror of all the German States, under the title of Ferdinand II. (1619) ; but at the very moment of his election he received the in- telligence of his deposition in Bohemia, which had just been made public among the people. The Bohemians now chose Frederic, the elector -palatine, son-in-law of the British monarch James I., for their sovereign ; but Frederic was unequal to the crisis, and r PALATINK being besieged in his own capital, he lost the battle of period of Prague 1 by his negligence or cowardice. Ferdinand, as- THE WAR ' sisted by a Spanish force under Spinola, and by the Catholic league of Germany, now overran Bohemia, and compelled Frederic to seek refuge in Holland, where he dwelt without a kingdom, and without eourage to reconquer it, — maintained at the expense of his father- in-law, the king of England. The punishment inflicted upom Bohe- mia was severe in the extreme : twenty-seven of the Protestant lead ers were condemned to death ; — by degrees all Protestant clergyman were banished from the country ; — and, finally, it was declared that no subject who did not adhere to the Boman Catholic church would be tolerated. Thirty thousand families, driven away by this cruel 1. Prague , the capital city of Bohemia, is situated on both sides of the Moldau, a branch of the Elbe, one hundred and fifty-two miles north-west of Vienna, and seventj-Iwo miles south- east from Dresden. Jerome, the friend of the great Bohemian reformer John Hass, was a nativ* of this city, and was thence sumamed. “ of Prague.” {Map No. XVII.) 356 MODERN HISTORY [Part H edict, took refuge in the Protestant States of Saxony and Branden- burg. Thus closed the Palatine period of the thirty years 1 war. 3. After the flight of Frederic, his general Mansfeldt still deter mined to maintain the Protestant cause against the emperor Ferdi- nand ; but he found himself unable to cope with the imperial gen- erals, Tilly and Wallenstein. The Protestant towns of Lower Saxony, foreseeing the fate to which they might be subjected, next took up arms, and having entered into an alliance with Christian IV. of Den-* n Danish niark, made him captain general of the confederated period of army. (1625.) Thus opened the Danish period of the the war. war 'With a body of twenty-five thousand men, consist- ing of Danes, Germans, Scotch, and English, the Danish king crossed the Elbe, where he was joined by seven thousand Saxons ; but, after some successes, he was defeated by Tilly near the castle of Lutter, 1 on the road from Gottingen 2 to Brunswick, 3 with the loss of four thousand men, besides a vast number of prisoners. (Aug. 26th, 1626.) 4. In the following year, 1627, the Danes were driven from Ger- many by Wallenstein, the imperial commander, who had now in- creased his forces to one hundred thousand men. Not content with driving Christian from Germany, Wallenstein pursued him into Denmark ; and soon the whole of the peninsula, with the exception of one fortress, was conquered, and the king was obliged to take refuge in his islands. The ambitious views of Ferdinand now aimed at the extirpation of the Lutheran heresy throughout his own empire, and the reestablishment of the Catholic faith throughout the entire north, by the subjugation of Norway and Sweden, in addition to Denmark. As a preliminary step towards the accomplishment of this gigantic undertaking, Wallenstein was first to secure the dominion of the Baltic and the North Sea. Assisted by a Spanish fleet, he took possession of several ports on the Baltic ; but the citi- zens of Stralsund/ aided by five thousand Swedish and Scottish troops, defended their walls with such determined courage and p-er- sev irance, that Wallenstein was forced to abandon the siege, after a 1. letter, “near Barenberg, in Hanover,” south-west from Brunswick. This battle was fought Aug. 26th, 1626. 2. Gottingen , in the kingdom of Hanover, is fifty-six miles south-west from Brunswick. U ia especially noted for its university, which, down to 1831, was fully entitled to its appellation “ the queen of German universities.” (Map No. XVII.) 3. Brunswick , the early seat of the dukes of that name, is a city of Germany, s: tuatecl on the Ocker, a branch of the Weser, thirty-seven miles a little south of east from Hanover. (Map No. XV 11.) 4. Stralsund is a strongly-fortified Prussian town, on the narrow strait of the Baltic which separates the island of Rugen from the continent. (Map No. XVII.) Chap. IV. ] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 357 loss of twelve thousand men. This signal discomfiture induced the emperor to consent to treat for peace with Denmark ; and bj the treaty of Lubec, 1 Christian was restored to his dominions, on the condition of abandoning his German allies. (May, 1629.) Thus terminated the Danish period of the thirty years’ war. 5. It had been hoped that the treaty of Lubec would prove the forerunner of a general pacification ; and the subjects, the allies, and the enemies of Ferdinand, now united in imploring him to put an end to a civil war which had been waged with a ferocity hitherto un- known since the ages of Gothic barbarism. But, the Protestants being subdued, and no enemy left to oppose the emperor, the Homan Catholics thought the moment too favorable to be neglected, and Ferdinand was urged on by them to exercise the most intolerable tyranny over his Protestant subjects. The last beam of hope from the emperor’s clemency was extinguished, and the Protestants only awaited the arrival of a leader to throw off a yoke which m SWEDISH had become insupportable. A deliverer was found in period of Gustavus Adolphus, the Protestant king of Sweden. The THE WAR ’ circumstances that led to his interposition, — the opening of the Swedish period of the war — show how tangled has often been the web of European politics. 6. Cardinal Richelieu, the able minister of Louis XIII. of France, after having humbled the Huguenots by the capture of Ro- chelle, 2 their last stronghold, directed his great powers to the abase- ment of the house of Austria. With this view he was instrumental m depriving Ferdinand of his ablest general, Wallenstein, whose dismissal from power was successfully urged by an assembly of the German States in the summer of 1630. Richelieu had previously 1. Lubec , the capital of the “Hanseatic towns,” is situated on the river Trave, about twelve miles fr jm ts entrance into the Baltic, and thirty-six miles north-east from Hamburg. The surrounding territory subject to Lubec consists of a district of about eighty square miles.-. 'Map No. XVII.) 2. Rochelle is a town and seaport of France on the Atlantic coast, in the former pro v nee •<’ Saintonge, seventy-six miles south-east from Nantes. During the religious wars, and especially after the massacre of St. Bartholomew, Rochelle was a stronghold of the Protestants. Invested by the Catholic forces in 1572, it withstood a long siege, terminated by a treaty. The numerous Infraci.ons of that treaty, in the reign of Louis XIII., and under the ministry of Richelieu, led to a second siege, which commenced in August, 1627, and was as violent as the former, and longer and more decisive. After six months of heroic resistance, the famous engineer, Mete seau, was directed to bar the entrance to the harbor by an immense dyke, extending nearly live thousand feet into the sea, the remains of which are still visible at k w water. The result was soon fatally apparent. Famine quickly decimated the ranks of the besieged ; and after a resistance of fourteen months and eighteen days, Rochelle was compelled to capitulate, Riche- lieu made a triumphant entry into the city ; the fortifications were demolished, and tl e Pro- testants were deprived of their last place of refuge. (Map No. XIIL) 358 MODERN HISTORY pAKT II offered kis successful mediation in negotiating a six years* armistice between the hostile States of Sweden and Poland, with the view of leaving Gustavus Adolphus, the Swedish king, at liberty to turn his arms against the German emperor. All the inducements that an artful diplomatist could urge were brought to bear upon Gustavus, a prince ardmt in the Protestant faith, and already a sufferer from the insolence and rapacity of Wallenstein; and the result was a dec- aration of war against the German emperor, and an invasion of hi? territory by the Swedes, in the summer of 1630. 7. "When Ferdinand was informed that the Swedish monarch had landed in Pomerania 1 at the head of only fifteen thousand men, he treated the affair with much indifference; and the Roman Catholic party throughout the empire styled Gustavus, in contempt, the petty snow king , who, they said, would speedily melt beneath the rays of the imperial sun. But while the German armies were a motley of all creeds and nations, bound together only by the ties of a common warfare and pillage, the Swedes formed a phalanx of hardy and well- disciplined warriors, strengthened by the confidence that God was on their side ; and to Him they offered up their prayers twice a day, each regiment having its own chaplain. Besides this, Gustavus had introduced a new system of military tactics into his army ; and by the novelty and boldness of his positions, and the impetuosity of hi? movements, he completely disconcerted the adherents of the old Ger- man routine. 8. Although some of the Protestant princes of Germany, through ear of their emperor, or from jealousy of foreign dominion, hesi- tated about joining the new ally of their cause, yet the onset of the Swedes was irresistible : they rapidly made themselves masters of all Pomerania, and took Frankfort under the eye of the imperial gen- eral Tilly ; but they were unable to relieve Magdeburg, 2 which Tilly plundered and burned, amid scenes of the most revolting atrocity— n act which rendered his name infamous among all classes of the German population. 9. The unfortunate loss of Magdeburg was speedily compensated 1. Pomerania is a large province of Prussia, extending east from Mecklenberg about two hundred miles along the southern coast of the Baltic. Gustavus landed on the islands Wollen and Usedom, south-east of Stralsund. The first towns reduced by him were Wolgast and Stettin. (Map No. XVII.) 2. ' Magdeburg is a strongly-fortified city, and the capital of Prussian Saxony, situated on the Elbe, seventy-four miles south-west from Berlin. Magdeburg has suffered numerous sieges, but its fortifications are now so extensive that it is said it would require fifty thousand men to in- rest it. It was plundered and turned by Tilly, May 12th, 1531. (Map No. XVII.) Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 359 by formidable accessions of strength received from France and Eng land, and by a great victory gained by Gustavus over Tilly in the vicinity of Leipsic. 1 (Sept. 7th, 1631.) Gustavus now rapidly traversed Germany from the Elbe to the Rhine, pursuing his victo- rious career to the borders of Switzerland : all northern and western Germany, together with Bohemia, were in the hands of the Protest- ants ; and early in the following year Tilly himself was slain on the banks of the river Lech, a southern tributary of the Danube, in Ba- varia. 10. Ferdinand now saw no alternative, in his sinking fortunes, but to call the great and proud Wallenstein from retirement. His res- toration at once gave a new direction to the war. He quickly seized Prague, and restored Bohe.mia to his sovereign ; and Gustavus was now obliged to retire within the walls of Nuremberg 2 until he could rally his troops, which were scattered over Germany. After a tedious blockade of Nuremberg, in which both parties lost thirty thousand soldiers by famine and the sword, Wallenstein made a sudden move- ment towards Dresden ; 3 but the advance of Gustavus thwarted his plans and brought on that fatal action in which the Swedish hero lost his life. On the 16th of November, 1632, the two armies met at Lutzen ; 4 but scarcely had the battle commenced when Gustavus, throwing himself before the enemy’s ranks, fell pierced by two balls. After a desperate engagement the Protestants triumphed ; but the glory of their victory was dearly bought by the death of their leader. 1. Leipsic is a celebrated commercial city of the kingdom of Saxony, sixty miles north-west from Dresden. It is a manufacturing town of considerable importance, and is the greatest book emporium in the world. In Oct. 1813, Leipsic was the scene of a most tremendous con- flict between Napoleon and the allies, in which the French, greatly inferior in numbers, were repulsed with a heavy loss. {Map No. XVII 1 •2. Nuremberg is a city of Bavaria, ninety-three miles north-west from Munich. It is sur- rounded by feudal walls and turrets, and these are inclosed by a ditch one hundred feet wide and fifty feet deep, lined throughout with masonry. Nuremberg is celebrated in the history of the Reformation, having early embraced its doctrines. {Map No. XVII.) 3. Dresden , the capital of the kingdom of Saxony, is situated on the Elbe, one hundred miles south-east from Berlin, and two hundred and thirty north-west from Vienna. Population nostly Protestant. It has a great number of literary and scientific institutions, and establish- nents devoted to education. Dresden and its environs have been the scene of some of the most important conflicts in modern warfare, particularly on the 26th and 27th of August, 1813, when Napoleon defeated the allies under its walls. {Map No. XVII.) 4. Lutzen is a small town of Prussian Saxony, twelve miles south- west from Leipsic. It would be unworthy of notice were it not that its environs have been the scene of two of the most memorable conflicts of modern times, — the first, which occurred Nov. 16th, 1632, and in which the Swedish monarch Gustavus Adolphus fell ; and the second, which took place on nearly the same ground, May 2d, 1813, and in which tho French, under Napoleon, defeated the allies, who were encouraged by the presence of the emperor Alexander and the king of Prussia. {Map No. XVII.) *50 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 11. Thus terminated the Swedish period of the 11 Thirty years war for although the Swedes still determined to support the Pro testant cause in Germany, the animating spirit of the war had fled and the}’ were unable, alone, to accomplish anything effectual. A little more than a year after the fall of Gustavus, Wallenstein, being iv. french accuse d of treason to his master and the Catholic cause, period of was assassinated by the command of the emperor Fer- the war. jinand. (Feb. 1634.) We come now to what has been called the French period, embracing the closing scenes of this war. 12. The French minister, Richelieu, had long observed, with se cret satisfaction, the misfortunes of the house of Austria, and of the German empire generally ; and now he offered the aid of France to the Swedes and the German Protestants, with Holland and the duke of Savoy as allies, on the condition of extending the French frontier over a. portion of the German territory ; and thus the persecutor of the Huguenots was leagued with the Protestant powers of Europe against its Roman Catholic princes ; — “ a clear proof,” says a writer of French history, “ that his principles were politic, not bigoted.”' In a short time French armies were sent into Italy, Germany, and the Netherlands; and from this moment the provinces along the Rhine became the chief seat of the war, being pillaged and devas- tated as those along the Oder, Elbe, and Weser, had been previously. 13. From the moment of the active interference of France, the power of the German imperialists declined ; and the remainder of this “ Thirty years’ war,” which was marked by an unusual degree of ferocity on both sides, presents a continuation of gloomy and dis heartening scenes, in which Richelieu had the advantage, not from military but diplomatic superiority. Ferdinand died in the year 1637, without living to witness the termination of the civil and do- mestic war in which he had been engaged from the commencement of his reign. The French monarch Louis XIII., and his minister Richelieu, the great fomentors and leaders of the war, died in 1642, after which the negotiations for peace, which had been begun as earl} as 1636, were the more easily concluded; and in October 1648, the treaty of W estphalia 1 closed the sad scene of the long and sanguinary 1. Westphalia ia a province embracing all the northern portion of the Prussian dominions west of the Weser The “ peace of Westphalia” was concluded in 1648, at Munster and Osna- burg, — both then in Westphalia, but the latter now in Hanover. In 1641 preliminaries were agreed upon at Hamburg: in 1644 actual negotiations were commenced at Osnaburg, between the ambassadors of Austria, tlie German empire, and Sweden ; and at Munster between those of the emperor, Franrse, Spain, and other powers; but the ai tides adopted in both formed oj» Chap IV. J SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 8b i “ Thirty years’ war.” Peace found the German States in a sadly- depressed condition ; the scene that was everywhere presented was a wide waste of ruin ; and two-thirds of the population had perished, although not so much by the sword as b} contagion, plague, famine, and the other attendant horrors that follow in the train of war. 14. The chief articles of the treaty of Westphalia were, 1st, the confirmation of the religious peace of Passau, and the consequent establishment of the independence of the Protestant German powers: 2d, the dismemberment of many of the German States for the purpose of indemnifying others for their losses ; and the sanction of the com- plete sovereignty of each of the German States within its own terri- tory: 3d, the extension of the eastern limits of France: 4th, the grant, to Sweden, of a considerable territory on the Baltic coast, to- gether with a subsidy of five millions of dollars ; and 5th, the ac- knowledgment of the independence of the Netherlands by Spain, and of the Swiss cantons by the German empire. II. English History : — The English Revolution. — While the “ Thirty years’ war” was progressing on the continent, leading to the final triumph of religious liberty there, England was convulsed by domestic dissensions, which eventually led to a civil war, and the temporary overthrow of the monarchy. On the death of A ^ UNION OK 1 Elizabeth in 1603, James VI. of Scotland, the son of the England mfortunate Mary, succeeded to the throne of England, and with the title of James I. England and Scotland were scolLANI> * thus united under one sovereign ; and henceforth the two countries received the common designation of “ Great Britain.” 2. The character of James, the first English monarch of the Stuart family, was not calculated to win the affections of his n> subjects. He was as arbitrary as his predecessors of the James i. Tudor race ; and, although excelling in the learning of the times, he was signally deficient in all those noble qualities of a sovereign which command respect and enforce obedience. His imprudence in sur rounding himself with Scotch favorites irritated the English : the Scotch saw with no greater satisfaction his attempts to subject them to the worship of the English church : some disappointed Roman Catholics formed a conspiracy, which was fortunately detected, to destroy by gunpowder the king and assembled parliament ; and the treaty. After terras had been settled between the parties at Osna'jurg, the ministers repaired to Munster, where the final treaty was concluded, Oct. 24th, 1048. (Map No. XVII.) R 862 MODERN HISTORY. [Pari 1L puritans, aiming at farther reforms in the church and in the state, were committed to prison for even petitioning for some changes, not in the least inconsistent with the established hierarchy. James strenuously maintained the “ Divine right of kings ;” and his entire reign was a continued struggle of the house of commons to restore and to fortify, their own liberties, and those of the people. 3. In 1625 James was succeeded on the throne by his son Charles III# I., then in the twenty -fifth year of his age. Had Charlei Charles l lived a hundred years earlier, or had not the reformatory spirit of the age introduced great and important changes in th'< minds of men on the subject of the royal prerogative and the liber ties of the people, he might have reigned with great popularity; for his stern and serious deportment, his disinclination to all licentious- ness, and a deep regard for religion, were highly suitable to the char- acter of the English people at this period ; but it was the misfortune of Charles to be destitute of that political prudence which should have taught him to yield to the necessities of the times. 4. The accession of Charles was immediately followed by difficul- ties with his parliament, which had no confidence in the king, and which he suddenly dissolved, because it refused to vote the supplies demanded by him, and showed an inclination to impeach his favorite minister Buckingham. The second parliament proceeded with the impeachment of the minister, (1626,) and the king retaliated by im- prisoning two members of the house on the charge of “ words spoken by them in derogation of his majesty’s honor ;” but the exasperation of the Commons soon obtained their release. The third parliament, called in 1628, waiving all minor contests, demanded the king’s sanc- tion to a “ Petition of Bight,” which set forth the rights of the Eng- lish people as guaranteed to them by the Great Charter, and by various laws and statutes of the realm. Charles, after many evasions, reluctantly signed the Petition ; but in a few months he flagrantly violated the obligations it had imposed upon him, and in a fit of in- j dignation dissolved parliament, resolving never again to call another. (1629—39.) 5. During an interval of about ten years, and until the assembling of another parliament, no opposition, except such as public opinion interposed, was made to the full enjoyment of the unrestrained pre- rogatives of the king. Monopolies were now revived to a ruinous extent, find the benefits of them were sold to the highest bidder ; ille gal duties were sustained by servile judges; unheard-of fines were Chap. TV] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 363 imposed ; and no expedient was omitted that might tend to bring money into the royal treasury, and thus enable the king to rule without the aid of parliament. The English clergy, at the head of whom was archbishop Laud, one of the chief advisers of the king, usurped, by degrees, the civil powers of government ; and the puri tans were so rigorously persecuted that great numbers of them sought an asylum in America. In 1637 the attempts of Charles to intro- duce the Episcopal form of worship into Scotland, drove the Scotch presbyterians to open rebellion ; and a covenant to defend the re ligion, the laws, and the liberties of their country against every danger, was immediately framed and subscribed IV ‘ SCOTCH by them. The covenanters, having received arms and money from the French minister Richelieu, marched into England, but the English army refused to fight against their brethren, when the king, finding himself beset with difficulties on every side, wag obliged to place himself at the discretion of a fourth parliament. (April 1640.) This parliament, not fully complying with the king’s wishes, was abruptly dissolved after a month’s session ; but public opinion soon compelled the king to summon another, which assembled in November of the same year. 6. The new parliament, called the Long Parliament, from the ex- traordinary length of its session, first applied itself dili- y THE gently to the correction of abuses and a redress of griev- long par- ances. Future parliaments were declared to be triennial ; ' LIAMENT - many of the recent acts for taxing the people were declared illegal, and monopolies of every kind were abolished — the king yielding to all the demands that were made upon him. Not satisfied with these concessions, the commons impeached the earl of Strafford, the king’s first minister, and favorite general, accusing him of exercising pow- ers beyond what the crown had ever lawfully enjoyed, and of a sys- tematic hostility to the fundamental laws and constitution of the realm. By the unconstitutional expedient of a bill of attainder, Strafford was declared guilty ; and the king had the weakness to sign his condemnation. (1641.) Archbishop Laud was brought to trial and executed four years later. The severity of the punishment of Strafford, and the magnanimity displayed by him on his trial, have half redeemed his forfeit-fame, and misled a generous posterity ; but he died justly, although the means taken to accomplish his condem- nation, by a departure from the ordinary course of judicial proceed- ings, established a precedent dangerous to civil liberty. S64 MODERN HISTORY. [Pa2,t IL 7. With a strong hand parliament now virtually took possession of the government ; it declared itself indissoluble without its own consent, and continued to encroach on the prerogatives of the king until scarcely the shadow of his former power was left him. A re- bellion which broke out in Ireland was maliciously charged upon the king as its author ; and Charles, to refute the unworthy suspicion, intrusted the management of Irish affairs to parliament, which the latter interpreted into a transference to them of the whole military power of the kingdom. At length Charles, irritated by a threatening remonstrance on the state of the kingdom, caused five members of the Commons to be impeached ; and went in person to the House to seize them, — a fatal act of indiscretion which was declared a breach of privilege of parliament, for which Charles found it necessary to atone by a humiliating message. 8. The difficulties between the king and parliament, and their re- spective supporters, at length reached such a crisis, that in January 1642 the king left London, attended by most of his no- v ™ bility, and, repairing to Nottingham, 1 erected there the royal standard, resolving to stake his claims on the haz- ards of war. The adherents of parliament were not unprepared for the contest. On the side of the king were ranged most of the no bility of the kingdom, together with the Roman Catholics — all form ing the high church and monarchy party ; while parliament had on its side the' numerous presbyterian dissenters, and all ultra religious and political reformers ; — parliament held the seaports, the fleet, the great cities, the capital, and the eastern, middle, and southern counties ; while the royalists had the ascendancy in the north and west. 9. From 1642 until 1647 the war was carried on with various suc- cess. In the battle of Edghill, 2 fought in October 1642, nothing was decided, although five thousand men were left dead on the field. The battle of Newbury, 3 fought in the following year, (Sept 1. Nottingham is a city one hundred and tight miles north-west from London. It was the chief place of rendezvous for the troops of Ldward IV. and Richard III. during the wars of the Roses. Soon after Charles I. raised his standard here in 1642, the inhabitants, who were attached to the republican cause, compelled him to abandon the town and castle to the parlia- mentary forces. {Map No. XVI.) 2. Edghill is a small town in the county of Warwick, seventy-two miles north-west from L-ondon. {Map No. XVI.) 3. Newbury is a town in Berks county, England, on the Kennett, a southern branch of the Thames, fifty-three miles south-west from London. The vicinity of this town is celebrated for two battles fought during the civil wars between the royalist aud parliamentary forces, — Charles I. commanding his army in person on both occasions. The first was fought Sept 20th, 1643 ; the second, Oct 27th, 1644 but neither had any decided result. ( Map No. XVI.) SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. Chap IV.] 3i>5 20tli, 1643,) was equally indecisive; but it was attended with such loss on both sides that it put an end to the campaign, by obliging both parties to retire into winter quarters. 10. Both king and parliament now began to look for assistance to other nations; and while some Irish Roman Catholics yn THE joined the royal army, the parliament entered into a scotch “ Solemn League and Covenant” with the Scotch people, LhAGDE ’ by which the parties to it bound themselves to aid in the extirpation of popery and prelacy, and to promote the establishment of a church government conformed to that of Scotland. The Scots, rejoicing at the prospect thus held out of extending their mode of religion over England, sent an army of twenty thousand men, at the beginning of 1644, to cooperate with the forces of parliament. 1 1. The campaign of 1644 was unfortunate to the royal cause, the Irish forces being dispersed by Sir Thomas Fairfax, and the royal- ists experiencing a severe defeat at Marston Moor, 1 (2d July,) on which occasion fifty thousand British combatants engaged in mutual slaughter. In Scotland the royal cause was for a time sustained by the marquis of Montrose ; but the gallant Scot was at length over- whelmed by superior numbers ; and in the following year, June 14th, 1645, the battle of Naseby,’ gained by the parliamentary forces, de- cided the contest against the king, although the useless obstinacy of the royalists protracted the war till the beginning of 1647. a After the defeat at Naseby, the king, relying on the faith of uncertain promises, threw himself into the hands of his Scotch subjects ; but the latter, treating him as a prisoner, delivered him up to the commission- ers of parliament. 12. The war was now at an end, but civil and religious dissensions raged with greater fury than ever. The late enemies of the king were divided into two factions, the Presbyterians and the Independents, the former having a majority in the parliament, and the latter form ing a majority of the army. At the head of the Inde- pendent party was Oliver Cromwell, a general of the army, and a man of talent and address, who appears al- 1. Marston Moor is a small village of Yorkshire, England, seven miles west of the city of York. (Map No. XVI.) 2. Naseby is a decayed market town of England, eleven and a-half miles north-west from London. It is twenty-nine miles north-east of the locality of the battle of Edghill. The battle of Naseby was fought north of the town, in the plain that separated Naseby from Harborouglv Map No. XVI.) a. “Some of the castles of North Wales the last that surrendered, held out till April 1647 ” Hallam’s Const. Hist. Note p, 351.) 366 MODERN HISTORY. [Past H ready to have formed the design of obtaining supreme power. By his orders the king was taken from the commissioners of parliament, and placed in the custody of the army. A proposition of parliament to disband the army gave Cromwell an opportunity to heighten the disaffection of the soldiers ; and, placing himself at their head, he entered London, purged parliament of the members obnoxious to him, and imprisoned all who disputed his authority. 13. While parliament was suffering under the military dominatfon of Cromwell, a general reaction began to take place in favor of the king. The Scots, ashamed of the reproach of having sold their sover- eign, now took up arms in his favor ; but Cromwell marched against them at the head of an inferior force, and after defeating them entered Scotland, the government of which he settled entirely to his satisfaction. Parliament also entered into a negotiation with the king, with the view of restoring him to power ; but Cromwell sur rounded the House of Commons with his soldiers, and excluding all but his own partisans, caused a vote to be passed declaring it treason in a king to levy war against his parliament. Under the influence of Cromwell, proposals were now made for bringing the king to trial ; and when the few remaining members of the House of IX. TRIAL . . and execu- Lords refused their sanction to the measure, the Com- tion of m0 ns voted that the concurrence of the Lords was un- necessary, and that the people were the origin of all just power. The Commons then named a court of justice, composed mostly of the principal officers of the army, to try the king ; and on the charge of having been the cause of all the bloodshed during the continuance of the war, he was condemned to death. He was allowed only three days to prepare for execution ; and on the 30th of January, 1649, the misguided and unhappy monarch was behead- ed, being, at the time, in the forty-ninth year of his age, and the twenty fourth of his reign. 14. “ The execution of Charles the First,” says Hallam, “ has been mentioned in later ages by a few with unlimited praise, by some with faint and ambiguous censure, by most with vehement reproba- tion.” Viewing the case in all its aspects, we can find no justifica- tion for the deed ; for no considerations of public necessity required it ; and it was, moreover, the act of a small minority of parliament, that had usurped, under the protection of a military force, a power which all England de flared illegal. Lingard asserts that “ the men who hurried Chrrles to the scaffold were a small faction of bold and Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 367 ambitious spirits, who had the address to guide the passions and fanati- cism of thiir followers, and were enabled, through them, to control the real sentiments of the nation.” The arbitrary principles of Charles, which he had imbibed in the lessons of early youth, — his passionate temper, and want of sincerity, indeed rendered him unfit for the difficult station of a constitutional king ; but, on the other hand, he was deserving of esteem for the correctness of his moral principles ; and in private life he would not have been an unamiable man. 15. A few days after the death of Charles, the monarchical form of government was formally abolished ; the House of x AB0LI _ Lords fell by a vote of the Commons at the same time ; tion of the mere shadow of a parliament, known by the appella- M0NARCHY * tion of the Rump , and supported, by an army of fifty thousand men under the controlling influence of Oliver Cromwell, took into its hands all the powers of government ; and the former title of the “ English Monarchy” gave place to that of the Commonwealth of England. The royalists being still in considerable force in Ireland, Cromwell repaired thither with an army, and speedily reduced the country to submission * after which he marched into Scotland at the head of sixteen thousand men, and, in the battle of Dunbar, (Sept. 13th, 1650,) defeated the royal covenanters, who had proclaimed Charles II., son of the late king, as their sovereign. In the follow- ing year he pursued the Scotch army into England, and completely annihilated it in the desperate battle of Worcester. 1 (Sept. 13th, 1651.) 16. Cromwell had formed the project of a coalition with Holland, which was to make the two republics one and indivisible : * 7 XI. WAR but national antipathies could not be overcome ; and in- with stead of the proposed coalition there ensued a fierce and Holland. bloody war. Under pretence of providing for the interests of commerce, the British parliament passed the celebrated navigation act, which prohibited all nations from importing into England, in their ships, any commodity which was not the growth and manufacture of their own country ; — a blow aimed directly at the Dutch, who were the general factors and carriers of Europe. Ships were seized and re- prisals made ; and in the month of May, 1652, the war broke out by 1. Worcester , the capital of Worcester county, England, is on the eastern bank of the river Severn, one hundred miles north-west from London. Worcester is of great, but uncertain, antiquity, and is one of the best built towns in the kingdom. It is principally celebrated in history for its giving name to the decisive victory obtained there by Cromwell on the 13th Sept. 1551. (Map No. XVI.) 368 MODERN HISTORY. [Part EL a casual encounter of the hostile fleets of the two nations, in the straits of Dover, — the Dutch admiral Van Tromp commanding the one squadron, and the heroic Blake the other. After five hours’ fighting, the Dutch were defeated, with the loss of one ship sunk and another taken. 17. The States-general of Holland were seriously alarmed at the prospect of a naval war with England, but the English parliament would listen to neither reason nor remonstrance ; and in a short time the fleets of the two nations were at sea again. Several actions took place with various success, but on the 29th of November a deter- mined battle was fought off the Goodwin sands, 1 between the Dutch fleet commanded by Yan Tromp and De Buyter, and the English squadron under Blake. Blake was wounded and defeated ; five Eng- lish ships were taken, or destroyed ; and night saved the fleet from destruction. After this victory, Tromp, in bravado, placed a broom at his mast head, to intimate that he would sweep the English ships from the seas. 18. Great preparations were made in England to remove this dis- grace ; and in the month of February following (1653) eighty sail, under Blake, assisted by Dean and Monk, met, in the English Chan- nel, the Dutch fleet of seventy-six vessels, commanded by Van Tromp, who was seconded by De Ruyter. Three days of desperate fighting ended in the defeat of the Dutch, although Tromp acquired little less honor than his rival, by the masterly retreat which he con- ducted. In June several battles were fought; and in July occurred the last of these bloody and obstinate conflicts for naval superiority. Tromp issued forth once more, determined to conquer or die, and soon met the enemy commanded by Monk ; but as he was animat- ing his sailors, with his sword drawn, he was shot through the heart with a musket ball. This event alone decided the action, and the defeat which the Dutch sustained was the most decisive of the whole war. Peace was soon concluded on terms advantageous to England ; and Cromwell, as protector, signed the .treaty of pacifica- tion, (April 1654,) after having vainly endeavored to establish a union of government, privileges, and interests, between the two republics. 19. While the war with Holland was progressing, a controversy 1. The Ooodwin sands are famous and very dangerous sand banks, about four miles from 'he eastern coast of Kent, a few miles north-east from Dover. They are believed to have once formed part of the Kentish land, and to have been submerged about the end of the reign of iVillL £. Rufus. The channel between them and the main land is called ‘ the Downs,” a cate orated roadstead for ships, which affords excellent anchorage. ( Map No. XVI.) Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 369 had arisen between Cromwell and the army on the one hand, and the Long Parliament on the other. Each wished to rule supreme, but eventually Cromwell forcibly dissolved the parliament, (April 1653,) and soon after summoned another, composed wholly of mem bers of his own selection. The latter, however, commonly called Barebone's parliament, from the name of one of its leading members,, at once commenced such a thorough reformation in every department of the state, as to alarm Cromwell and his associates ; and it was re solved that these troublesome legislators should be sent back to theii respective parishes. A majority of the members voluntarily sur- rendered their power into the hands of Cromwell, who put an end to the opposition of the rest by turning them out of doors. (Dec 12th, 1653.) Four days later a new scheme of govern- xn ment, called “ The Protectorate,” was adopted, by which protecto- the supreme powers of state were vested in a lord pro- RaTE- tector, a council, and a parliament ; and Cromwell was solemnly in- stalled for life in the office of “ Lord Protector of the commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland.” 20. The parliament summoned by Cromwell to meet in September of the following year, suspecting that the Protector aimed at kingly authority, commenced its session (1654) by an inquiry into the right by which he held his power ; upon which Cromwell plainly informed the members that he would send them to their homes if they did not acknowledge the authority by which they had been assembled. About three hundred members signed a paper recognizing Cromwell’s scheme of government ; while the remainder, amounting to a hundred and sixty, resolutely refused compliance, and were excluded from their seats ; but although parliament was in some degree purged by the operation, it did not exhibit the subserviency which Cromwell had hoped to find in it. On the introduction of a bill declaring the Pro- tectorate hereditary in the family of Cromwell, a very large majority voted against it. The spirit which characterized the remainder of the session showed Cromwell that he had not gained the confidence of the nation ; and an angry dissolution, early in the following year, (Feb. 1655,) increased the general discontent. Soon after, a conspiracy of the royalists broke out, but was easily suppressed ; and even in the army, among the republicans themselves, several officers allowed their fidelity to be corrupted, and took a share in counsels that were intended to restore the commonwealth to its original vigor and puri- ty. During the same year (1655), a war with Spain broke out ; the k* 2 1 370 MODERN HISTORY. [Part It island of Jamaica, in the West Indies, was conquered ; the treasure- ships c>f the Spaniards were captured on their passage to Europe ; and some naval victories were obtained. 21. In his civil and domestic administration, which was conducted with ability, but without any regular plan, Cromwell displayed a general regard for justice and clemency; and irregularities were never sanctioned, unless the necessity of thus sustaining his usurped authority seemed to require it. Such indeed were the order and tranquillity which he preserved — such his skilful management of per • sons and parties, and such, moreover, the change in the feelings of many of the Independents themselves, since the death of the late monarch, that in the parliament of 1656 a motion was made, and carried by a considerable majority, for investing the Protector with the dignity of king. Although exceedingly desirous to accept the proffered honor, he saw that the army, composed mostly of stern and inflexible republicans, could never be reconciled to a measure that implied an open contradiction of all their past professions, and an abandonment of their principles ; and he was at last obliged to re fuse that crown which had been solemnly proffered to him by the representatives of the nation. 22. After this event, the domestic affairs of the country kept Cromwell in perpetual uneasiness. The royalists renewed their con- spiracies against him ; and a majority in parliament now opposed all his favorite measures ; a mutiny of the army was apprehended ; and even the daughters of the Protector became estranged from him. Over- whelmed with difficulties, possessing the confidence of no party, hav- ing lost all composure of mind, and in constant dread of assassina- tion, his health gradually declined, and he expired on the 13th of September, 1658, the anniversary of his great victories, and a day which he had always considered the most fortunate for him. 23. On the death of Cromwell, his eldest son, Richard, succeeded him in the protectorate, in accordance, as was supposed, with the dying wish of his father, and with the approbation of the council But Richard, being of a quiet, unambitious temper, and alarmed at the dangers by which he was surrounded, soon signed his own abdica- tion, and retired to private life. A state of anarchy followed, and xiii resto- con t en di n g factions, in the army and the parliament, for ration of a time filled the country with bloody dissensions, when monarchy. Q. enera j Monk, who commanded the army in Scotland, inarched into England and declared in favor of the restoration of Chip, IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 371 royalty. Tb is declaration, freeing tlie nation from the state of suspense in which it had long been held, was received with almost universal joy: the House of Lords hastened to reinstate itself in its ancient authority; and on the 18th of May, 1660, Charles the Second, son of the late king, was proclaimed sovereign of England, by the united acclamations of the army, the people, and the two houses of par- liament. 24. The accession of Charles II. to the throne of his ancestors was at first hailed as the harbinger of real liberty, and the promise of a firm and tranquil government, although no terms were required of him for the security of the people against his abuse of their con- fidence. As he possessed a handsome person, and was open and affable in his manners, and engaging in conversation, the first im- pressions produced by him were favorable ; but he was soon found to be excessively indolent, profligate, and worthless, and to entertain notions as arbitrary as those which had distinguished the reign of his father. The parliament, called in 1661, composed mostly of men who had fought for royalty and the church, gave back to the crown its ancient prerogatives, of which the Long Parliament had despoiled it — endeavored to enforce the doctrine of passive obedience, by com- pelling all officers of trust to swear that they held resistance to the king’s authority to be in all cases unlawful, — and passed an act of religious uniformity, by which two thousand Presbyterian ministers were deprived of their livings, and the gaols Ailed with a crowd of dissenters. Episcopacy was established by la,v; and the church, grateful for the protection which she received from the government, made the doctrine of non-resistance her favorite theme, which she taught without any qualification, and followed out to all its extreme consequences. 25. While these changes were in progress, the manners and morals of the nation were sinking into an excess of profligacy, encouraged by the dissolute conduct of the king in private life. Under the austere rule of the puritans, vice and immorality were sternly re- pressed ; but when the check was withdrawn, they broke forth with ungovernable violence. The cavaliers, as the partisans of the late king were called, in general affected a profligacy of manners, as their distinction from the fanatical and canting party, as they denominated the puritans ; the prevailing immorality pervaded all ranks and pro- fessions ; the philosophy and poetry of the times pandered to the general licentiousness ; and the public revenues were wasted on the 372 MODERN HISTORY. [p„ 1 A vilest associates of the king’s debauchery. The court of Charles $ras a school of vice, in which the restraints of decency were laughed to scorn ; and at no other period of English history were the immo- ralities of licentiousness practiced with more ostenation, or with less iisgrace. 26. While Charles was losing the favor of all parties and classes by his neglect of public business, and his wasteful profligacy, tha general discontent was heightened by his marriage with Catherine, a Portuguese princess, and by the sale of Dunkirk 1 2 to France ; but still greater clamors arose, when, in 1 664, the king provoked a war with Hol- land, by sending out a squadron which seized the Dutch settlements on the coast of Africa, and the Cape Verde Islands. The House of Commons readily voted supplies to carry on the war with vigor ; but such was the extravagance, dishonesty, and incapacity of those to whom Charles had intrusted its management, that, after a few inde- cisive naval battles, it was found necessary to abandon all thoughts of offensive war ; and even then the sailors mutinied in the ports from actual hunger, and a Dutch fleet, sailing up the Thames, burned the ships at Chatham, a on the very day when the king was feasting with the ladies of his seraglio. The capital was threatened with the miseries of a blockade, and for the first time the roar of foreign guns was heard by the citizens of London. 27. In the summer of 1665, while the ignominious war with Hol- land w T as raging, the plague visited England, but was confined prin- cipally to London, where its frightful ravages surpassed in horror anything that had ever been known in the island. But few recovered from the disease, and death followed within two or three days, and sometimes within a few hours, from the first symptoms. . During one week in September more than ten thousand died ; and the whole number of victims was more than a hundred thousand. In the fol- lowing year a fire, such as had not been known in Europe since the 1. Dunkirk, the most northern seaport of France, is situated on the straits of Dover, in ‘.ho ormer province of French Flanders, opposite, and forty-seven miles east from, the English town of Dover. Dunkirk is said to have been founded by Baldwin, count of Flanders, in 960 : in 1388 it was burned by the English ; and in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries t alternately belonged to them and to the Spaniards and French. Charles II sold it to Louis OV. for two hundred thousand pounds sterling. Louis, aware of its importance, lortified it at #reat expense, but was compelled, by the treaty of Utrecht, in 1713, tc consent to the demoli- tion of its fortifications, and even to the shutting up of its port. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Chatham is a celebrated naval and military depot, on the rivet Medway, twenty-eight miles south-east from London. It was anciently called Cetcham, or the village of cottager Many Roman remains have been found in its vicinity. It is tiiis town which gives the title of earl to the Pitt family. (Map No. XVI. Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 373 conflagration of Home under Nero, laid in ruins two-thirds of the metropolis, — consuming more than thirteen thousand dwellings, and leaving destitute two hundred thousand people. 28. After the war with Holland had continued two years, Charles was forced, by the voice of parliament and the bad success of his arms, to conclude the treaty of Breda, 1 (July 1667,) by which the Butch possessions of New Netherlands, 2 in America, were confirmed to England, while the latter surrendered to France Acadia and Nova Scotia. 3 In 1672, however, Charles was induced by the French monarch, Louis XIV., to join him in another war against the Dutch. The combined armies of the two kingdoms soon reduced the republic to the brink of destruction ; but the prince of Orange, 4 being pro- moted to the chief command of the Dutch forces, soon roused the courage of his dismayed countrymen : the dykes were opened, laying the whole country, except the cities, under water ; and the invaders were forced to save themselves from destruction by a precipitate re- treat. At length, in 1674, Charles was compelled, by the discon- tents of his people and parliament, who were opposed to the war, to conclude a separate treaty of peace with Holland. France continued the war, but Holland was now aided by Spain and Sweden, while in 1676 the marriage of the prince of Orange with the Lady Mary, daughter of the duke of York, the brother of Charles, induced England to espouse the cause of the republic, and led to the treaty of Nimeguen 5 1. Breda is a strongly-fortified town of Holland— province of North Brabant, on the river Merk, thirty miles north-east from Antwerp. Breda is a well-built town, entirely surrounded by a marsh that may be laid under water. It was taken from the Spaniards by prince Maurice in 1590, by means of a stratagem suggested by the master of a boat who sometimes supplied the garrison with fuel. With singular address he contrived to introduce into the town, under a cargo of turf, seventy chosen soldiers, who, having attacked the garrison in the night, opened the gates to their comrades. It was retaken by the Spaniards under the marquis Spinola in 16-25, but was finally ceded to Holland by the treaty of Westphalia in 1648. ( Map No. XV.) 2. New Netherlands , the present New York, had been conquered by the English in 1664, while England and Holland were at peace ; and the treaty of Breda confirmed England in the possession of the country. 3. The French possessions in America, embracing New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and the ad- jacent islands, were at first called Acadia. A fleet sent out by Cromwell in 1654 soon reduced Acadia, but it was restored by the treaty of Breda in 1667. 4. The family of Orange derive their title from the little principality of Orange, twelve miles in length and nine in breadth, of which the city of Orange, a town of south-eastern France, was the capital. Orange, known to the Romans by the name of Arausio, is situated on the small river Meyne, five miles east of the Rhone, and twelve miles north of Avignon. From the eleventh to the sixteenth century Orange had its own princes. In 1531 it passed, by marriage, to the count of Nassau. It continued in this family till the death, in 1702, of William Henry of Nassau-Orange (William III. of England), when the succession became the subject of a long contest ; and it was not till the peace of Utrecht in 1715 that this little territory was finally ceded to France. (Map No. XIII.) 5. Nimeguen , or Nymegen , is a town of Holland, province of Guelderland on the south s'kU MODERN HISTORY. 374 |P4ET II in 1 578, by which the Dutch provinces obtained honorable and ad- vantageous terms. 29. Although Charles professed adherence to the principles of the Reformation, yet his great and secret designs were the establishment of papacy, and arbitrary power, in England. To enable him to ac complish these objects, he actually received, from the king of France, a secret pension of two hundred thousand pounds per annum, for which he stipulated, in return, to employ the whole strength of Eng- land, by land and sea, in support of the claims of Louis to the vast monarchy of Spain. But the popularity with which Charles had commenced his reign had long been expended ; there was a prevail ing discontent among the people, — an anxiety for public liberty, which was thought to be endangered, — and a general hatred of the Roman Catholic Religion, which was increased by the circumstance that the king’s brother, and heir presumptive, was known to be a bigoted Roman Catholic. Parliament became intractable, and suc- cessfully opposed many of the favorite measures of the king ; and at length in 1678 a pretended Popish Plot for the massacre of the Pro- testants threw the whole nation into a blaze. One Titus Oates, an infamous impostor, was the discoverer of this pretended plot ; and .n the midst of the ferment which it occasioned, many innocent Catholics lost their lives. At a later period, however, a regular pro- ject for raising the nation in arms against the government was de tected; and the leaders, among whom were Lord Russell and Alger- non Sidney, being unjustly accused of participation in the Rye House plot for the assassination of the king, were beheaded, in defiance of law and justice. (1683.) From this time until his death Charles ruled with almost absolute power, without the aid of a parliament. He died suddenly in 1685. His brother, the duke of York, imme- diately succeeded to the throne, with the title of James II. 30. The reign of James was short and inglorious, distinguished xiv. by nothing but a series of absurd efforts to render him- james ii. se jf independent of parliament, and to establish the Roman Catholic religion in England, although he at first made the strongest professions of a resolution to maintain the established gov ernment, both in church and state. It soon became evident that a crisis was approaching, and that the great conflict between the pre- of t he Waal, fifty-three miles south-east from Amsterdam. It is known in history from the treaty concluded there August 10th, 1678, and from its capture by the French on the 6th of Sept. 1794, after a sevire actior n which the allies were defeated. (Map No. XV.> SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 375 Chap. IV. rogatiyes of the crown and the privileges of parliament was about to he brought to a final issue. 31. In the first exercise of his authority James showed the insin- cerity of his professions by levying taxes without the authority of parliament : in violation of the laws, and in contempt of the national feeling, he went openly to mass : he established a court of ecclesias- tical commission with unlimited power over the Episcopal church : he suspended the penal laws, by which a conformity had been re- quired to the established church ; and although any communication with the pope had been declared treason, he sent an embassy to Rome, and in return received a nuncio from his Holiness, and with much ceremony gave him a public and solemn reception at Windsor. 1 In this open manner the king attacked the principles and prejudices of his Protestant subjects, foolishly confident of his ability to rees- tablish the Roman Catholic religion, although the Roman Catholics in England did not comprise, at this time, the one-hundredth part of the nation. 32. An important event of this reign was the rebellion of the duke of Monmouth, a natural son of Charles II., who hoped, through the growing discontents of the people at the tyranny of James, to gain possession of the throne ; but after some partial successes he was de- feated, made prisoner, and beheaded. After the rebellion had been suppressed, many of the unfortunate prisoners were hung by the king’s officers, without any form of trial ; and when, after some in terval, the inhuman Jeffries was sent to preside in the courts before which the prisoners were arraigned, the rigors of law were made to equal, if not to exceed, the ravages of military tyranny. The juries were so awed by the menaces of the judge that they gave their ver- dict as he dictated, with precipitation : neither age, sex, nor station, was spared ; the innocent were often involved with the guilty ; and the king himself applauded the conduct of J effries, whom he after wards rewarded for his services with a peerage, and invested with the dignity of chancellor. 1. Windsor is a small town on the south side of the Thames, twenty miles south-west from London. It is celebrated for Windsor castle, the principal country seat of the sovereigns of England, and me of the most magnificent royal residences ir Europe. The castle, placed on the summit of a lofty eminence rising abruptly from the river, appears to have been founded by William the Conqueror, and it has been enlarged or embellished by most of his suecessors. On the north and east sides of the castle is the Little Park, a fine expanse of lawn, comprising nearly five hundred acres : on the south side is the Great Park, comprising three thousand eight hundred acres ; while near by is Windsor forest, a tract fifty -fix miles in circumference, laid out by William the Conqueror for the purpose of hunting (Map No. XVI.) 376 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 33. As the king evinced, in all his measures, a settled purpose of invading every branch of the constitution, many of the nobility and great men of the kingdom, foreseeing no peaceable redress of their grievances, finally sent an invitation to William, prince of Orange, the stadtholder of the United Dutch Provinces, who had married the king’s eldest daughter, and requested him to come over and aid them by his arms, in the recovery of their laws and liberties, xv. rf.volu- J J tion of About the middle of November, 16S8, William landed 1688. j n England at the head of an army of fourteen thousand men, and was everywhere received with the highest favor. James was abandoned by the army and the people, and even by his own children ; and in a moment of despair he formed the resolution of leaving the kingdom, and soon after found means to escape privately to France. These events are usually denominated “ the Devolution of 1688.” 34. In a convention-parliament which met soon after the flight of James, it was declared that the king’s withdrawal was an abdication of the government, and that the throne was thereby vacant ; and af- ter a variety of propositions, a bill was passed, settling the crown on William and Mary, the prince and princess of Orange; the success- ion to the princess Anne, the next eldest daughter of the late king, and to her posterity after that of the princess of Orange. To this settlement of the crown a declaration of rights was annexed, by which the subjects of controversy that had existed for many years, and particularly during the last four reigns, between the king and the people, were finally determined ; and the royal prerogative was more narrowly circumscribed, and more exactly defined, than in any former period of English history. 35. While the accession of William and Mary was peaceably ac^ quiesced in by the English people, some of the Highland clans of Scotland, and the Catholics of Ireland, testified their adherence to the late king by taking up arms in his favor. The former gained the attle of Killiecrankie 1 in the summer of 1689; but the death of heir leader, the viscount Dundee, who fell in the moment of victory, ended all the hopes of James in Scotland. In the meantime Louis XIV. of France openly espoused the cause of the fallen monarch, and 1. Killiecrankie is a celebrated pass, half a mile in length, through the Grampian hills in Scotland, in the county of Perth, sixty miles northwest from Edinburgh. In the battle of 1689 fought at the northern extremity of this pass, Mackay commanded the revolutionary f arcea and the famous Graham of Claverhouse, V scount Dundee, the troops of James IZ. So. A 7T.) Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 377 furnished him with a fleet, with which, in the spring of 1689, James landed in Ireland, where a bloody war raged until the autumn of 1691, when the whole country was again subjected to the power of England. The course taken by the French monarch led to a decla- ration of war against France in May 1689. The war thus com- menced involved, in its progress, most of the continental powers, nearly all of which were united in a confederacy with William for the purpose of putting a stop to the encroachments of Louis. An account of this war will be more properly given in connection with the history of France, which country, under the influence of the genius and ambition of Louis XIV., acquires, in the latter part of the seventeenth century, a commanding importance in the history of Europe. King William died in the spring of 1702, having retained, until his death, the chief direction of the affairs of Holland, under the title of stadtholder ; thus presenting the singular spectacle of a mon archy and a republic at the same time governed by the same individual. III. French History: — Wars of Louis XIV. — 1. During the administration of Cardinal Richelieu, ( 162U- 42,) the able minister of the feeble Louis XIII., France was trat10 n of ruled with a rod of iron. “ He made,” says Montes- cardinal queu, “ his sovereign play the second part in the mon- RICHKL1EU * archy, and the first in Europe ; he degraded the king, but he rendered the reign illustrious.” He humbled the nobility, the Huguenots, and the house of Austria ; but he also encouraged literature and the arts, and promoted commerce, which had been ruined by two centuries of domestic war. He freed France from a state of anarchy, but he es tablished in its place a pure despotism. No minister was ever more successful in carrying out his plans than Richelieu ; but his successes were bought at the expense of every virtue ; and as a man he merits execration. He died in December 1642, and Louis survived him but a few months, leaving, as his successor, his son Louis, then a child of only six years of age. 2. During the minority of Louis XIV., Cardinal Mazarin, an Italian, ruled the kingdom as prime minister, under the , ' o i 7 MAZARIN 9 regency of the queen mother, Anne of Austria. Under adminis- Mazarin was concluded the treaty of Westphalia, which TRATION - terminated the thirty years’ war ; and during the early part of his administration occurred the civil war of the Fronde, ' in which the 9 ‘War of the Fronde”— so called because the first outbreak in Paris was commence 1 by 378 MODERN HISTORY. [Past II magistracy, of Paris, supported by the citizens, rose agaiutrt the arbi trary powers of the government, and promulgated a plan for the ref- ormation of abuses ; but when the young nobility affected to abet and adopt its principles, they perverted the cause of freedom to their own selfish interests ; and the vain struggle for constitutional iiberty degenerated into the most ridiculous of rebellions. 3, Though the treaty of Westphalia (1648) had terminated the ‘ Thirty years’ war” among the parties originally engaged in it, a yet France and Spain still continued the contest in which they had at first only a secondary share. The civil disturbances of the Fronde occurring at this time, greatly favored the Spaniards, who recovered, principally on the borders of the Low Countries, many places which they had previously lost to the French ; and by means of the great military talents of Conde, a French general who had been exiled during the late troubles, and who now fought on the side of the Spaniards, the latter hoped to bring the war to a triumphant issue. The French, however, found in marshal Turenne a general who was more than a rival for Conde : he defeated the latter in the siege of Arras, 1 and compelled the Spaniards to retreat, but was himself compelled to abandon Valenciennes. 2 At this time Mazarin, by flattering the passions of Cromwell, induced England to take part in the contest : six thousand English joined the French army in Flan- ders; 3 and Dunkirk, taken from the Spaniards, was given to England, according to treaty, as a reward for her assistance. 4. But France, though victorious, was anxious for peace, as the finances of the kingdom were in disorder, and the death of Cromwell had rendered the alliance with England of little benefit ; while troops of urchins with their slings— fronde being the French word for “ a sling.” In derision the insurgents were first called frondeurs , or “ slingers,” — an insinuation that their force was trifling, and their aim merely mischief. 1. Arras is a city of northern France, in the former province of Artois, thirty-three rj>U« south-east from Agincourt. Robespierre, of infamous memory, and Damiens, the assassin of Louis XV., were natives of Arras. 2. Valenciennes is a town of north-eastern France, on the Scheldt, (skelt), near the Belgian frontier. (Map No. XV.) 3. In 863 Charles the Bold established the county of Flanders , which extended fmm the straits of Dover nearly to the mouths of the Scheldt. At different times Flanders fell under (he dominion of Bur' gundy, Spain, &c. Towards the beginning of the eighteenth century it was divided into French, Austrian, and Dutch Flanders. French Flanders comprised the French province of that name. (See Map No. XIII.) Adjoining this territory, on the east, was Aus- trian Flanders ; and adjoining the latter, on the east, was Dutch Flanders. Dutch and Austrian Flanders are now comprised in East an& Wesc Flanders, the two north-western provinces of Belgium (see Map No. XV.,) although the Dutch portion embraced only a small part of East Flanders. a. See p. 314. Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 379 Spain, engaged in war with the Netherlands and Portugal, gladly acceded to the offers of reconciliation with her most powerful enemy. On the banks of the Bidassoa 1 the treaty, usually known as the treaty of the Pyrenees, was concluded, (Nov. 1659,) and the infanta Maria Theresa, eldest daughter of Philip of Spain, was given in marriage to the French monarch ; although, to prevent the possible union of two such powerful kingdoms, Louis was compelled to re- nounce all claim to the Spanish crown, either for himself or his sue cessors. By the treaty of the Pyrenees, Conde was pardoned and again received into favor ; the limits of France were extended on the English Channel to Gravelines ; 2 while on the south-west the Pyrenees became its boundary, by the acquisition of Roussillon. 3 Thus France assumed almost its present form ; its subsequent acquisitions being Franche-Comte 4 5 and French Flanders. 5. About a year after the conclusion of the treaty of the Pyrenees, Mazarin died, (March 1661,) and Louis, summoning his council, and ex pressing his determination to take the government wholly into his own hands, strictly commanded the chancellor, T _ and secretaries of state, to sign no paper but at his ex- press bidding. To the stern, economical, and orderly Colbert, he in- trusted the management of the treasury ; and in a brief period the purchase of Dunkirk from England, the establishment of numerous manufactures, the building of the Louvre, 6 the Invalides, 6 and the 1. The Bidassoa , which rises in the Spanish territory, and falls into the Bay of Biscay, forms, in the latter part of its course, the boundary between France and Spain. A short distance from its mouth it forms the small Isle of the Pheasants, where the peace of the Pyrenees was concluded in 1659. The Bidassoa was the scene of important operations in the peninsular war of 1813. 2. Gravelines is a small town twelve miles east from Calais. (Map No. XIII.) 3. Roussillon, a province of France before the French Revolution, was bounded on the south »nd east by the Pyrenees and the Mediterranean. The counts of Roussillon governed this dis- trict for a long period. The last count bequeathed it to Alphonso of Aragon in 1178. In 1462 l t was ceded to Louis XI. of France, but in 1493 it was restored to the kings of Aragon, and in 1659 was finally surrendered to France by the treaty of the Pyrenees. ( Map No. XIII.) 4. Franche-Comte , called also Upper Bur' gundy, had Bur' gundy Proper, or Lower Bur- gundy, on the south and west. Besancon was its capital. In the division of the States cf the emperor Maximilian, Franche-Comt6 fell to Spain; but Louis XIV. conquered it in 1674, aad it was ceded to France by the peace of Nimeguen, in 1678. (Map No. XIII.) 5. The palace of the Louvre , one of the finest regal structures in Europe, has not been the residence of a French monarch since the minority of Louis XV., and is now converted into & national museum and picture gallery. The pictures are deposited on the first floor of a splendid range of rooms above a quarter of a mile in length, and facing the river. 6. The Hotel des Invalides (in'-va-leed) is a hospital intended for the support of disabled officers and soldiers who have Deen in active service upwards of thirty years. It coven « space of nearly seven acres, and is one of the grandest 1 1 tional institutions ol’ Europe. 380 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II palace of Versailles, 1 and the commencement of the canal of Langue- doc, 2 attested the miracles that mere economy can work in finance. 6. Arousing himself from the thraldom of love intrigues, Louis now began to awake to projects of ambition. The splendor of his court dazzled the nobility : his personal qualities won him the affection of his people : he breathed a new spirit into the administration ; and foreign potentates, like the proud nobles of his court, seemed to quail before his power. He repudiated the stipulations of the treaty of the Pyrenees, on the ground that the dower which he wai to receive with his wife had not been paid; and on the death of his father-in-law, Philip IV. of Spain, bv which event the crown devolved upon a sickly infant, by a second marriage, he laid immediate claim to the Spanish Netherlands in right of his wife, — alleging, in sup- port of the claim, an ancient custom of the province of Brabant, 3 by which females of a first marriage were to inherit in preference to sons of a second. The French monarch, after securing the neutrality of Austria, poured his legions over the Belgian frontier, and with great rapidity reduced most of the fortresses as far as the Scheldt. The captured towns were immediately fortified by the celebrated engineer Vauban, and garrisoned by the best troops of France. (1667-8.) 7. These successes encouraged Louis to turn his arms towards another quarter; and Franche-Comte, a part of the old Bur' gundy, but still retained by the Spaniards, was conquered before Spain was aware of the danger. (Feb. 1668.) The Hollanders, alarmed at the approach of the French, became reconciled to Spain, and a Triple Alliance was formed, between Holland, Sweden, and England, three Protestant powers, for the purpose of defending Jathoiie 1. Versailles is nine miles south-west from Paris. The palace of Versailles, cf prodigious size and magnificence, has not been occupied by the court since 1789. It was much out of ro pair, w r hen Louis Philippe transformed it into what may be called a national museum, intended to illustrate the history of France, and to exhibit the progress of the country in arts, arms, and civilization. ( Map No. XIII.} 2. The canal of Languedoc , commencing at Cette, fourteen miles south-west of Montpelier and extending to Toulouse on the Garonne, a distance of one hundred and forty-eight milea, thus connects the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. ( Map No. XIII.) 3. Brabant , first erected into a duchy in the seventh century, included the Dutch province of North Brabant, and the Belgic provinces of South Brabant and Antwerp. Having passed, by marriage, into the possession of the house of Bur' gundy, it afterwards descended to Charles V In the seventeenth century the republic of Holland took possession of the northern part, (now North Brabant,) which was thence called Dutch Brabant, while the remainder was known aa Austrian Brabant. Both repeatedly fell into the hands of the French, but in 1815 were in eluded in the kingdom of the Netherlands. Since the revolution of 1830 North Brabant has been included in Holland, and the other provinces, or Austrian Brabant, in Belgium. (Afc* No XV.) SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 381 Chap. IV.] Spain against Catholic France. Louis receded before this menacing league, and by restoring Franche-Comte, which he knew could at any time easily be regained, while he retained most of his Flemish con- quests, concluded the treaty of Aixda-Chapelle, 1 (1668,) which mere- ly suspended the war until the French king was better prepared to carry it on with success. 8. The great object of Louis was now revenge against Holland, the originator of the triple alliance. Knowing the profligate hat its of Charles II., he purchased with ready money the alliance of England ; he also bought the neutrality of Sweden, and the neigh- boring princes of G-ermany, while in the meantime he created a navy of a hundred vessels, built five naval arsenals, and increased his army to a hundred thousand men. 9. For the first time the bayonet, so terrible a weapon in French hands, was affixed to the end of the musket ; and the hundred thou- sand soldiers who composed the French army, armed as the French were, might well strike terror into the rulers of Holland, who could raise, at most, an army of only thirty thousand men. 10. In the spring of 1672 the French armies, avoiding the Spanish Netherlands, passed through the country betwixt the Meuse and the Rhine, 2 crossed the latter river in June, and rapidly advanced to within a few leagues of Amsterdam, 3 when the Dutch, by opening the dykes, let in the sea and saved the metropolis. But even Amster dam meditated submission ; one project of the inhabitants being to embark, like the Athenians, on board their fleet, sail for their East India settlements, and abandon their country to the modern Xerxes who had come to destroy their liberties. While Amsterdam was secure for the present behind its rampart of waters, and the French armies were wintering triumphantly in the conquered provinces, the envoys of the Dutch roused Europe against the ambition of Louis 1. Aix-la~Cliapelle (a-lah-shahpel’) is an old and well-built city of the Prussian States, near the eastern confines of Belgium, eighty miles east of Brussels. It was the favorite residence of Charlemagne, and for some time the capital of his empire. Two celebrated treaties have been concluded in this city; the first, May 2d, 16G8, between France and Spain; and tho second, Oct. I8th, 1748, between the different powers engaged in the wars of the Austrian sue cession. Here also was held thf celebrated congress of the allied powers in 1818. {Map No XVII.) 2. The Meuse and the Rhine ; —see Map No. XV. 1, Amsterdam , a famous maritime and commercial city of Holland, is on the south bank of the Y., an inlet or arm of the Zuyder Zee. Being situated in a marsh, its buildings are all founded on piles, driven from forty to fifty feet in a soil consisting of alluvial deposits, peat, clay, and sand. The State-House, a magnificent building of freestone, is erected on a f >undation of thirteen thousand six hundred and fifty-nine piles. Numerous canals divide the city into about a hundred islands. {Map No. XV.) 382 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II Prince William of Orange, a general of only twenty-two years of age, being placed at the head of the Republic, soon succeeded in de- taching England from the unnatural alliance which she had formed with her ancient enemy : Spain and Austria, awaking to their interests, prepared to send troops to aid the Dutch; and by 1674 nearly all Europe was leagued against the French monarch. 1 1. Louis was now obliged to abandon Holland ; but, in the Span- ish Netherlands, his great generals, Conde and Turenne, turning upon the allied armies, for a while kept all Europe at bay. In the following year, (1675,) Turenne was killed by a cannon ball as he was about to enter Germany ; and although Louis created six new marshals, the whole were not equal to the one he had lost. Soon after, Conde retired, disabled by age and infirmity ; and with the loss of her great generals the valor of France, on the land, for a while slumbered. But at this time there appeared a seaman of talent and heroism, named Duquesne, who, being sent to succor Messina, which had revolted against Spain, defeated the fleet of De Ruyter in a terrible naval battle within sight of Mount HCtna. The Dutch admiral himself was among the slain. In the second battle, in 1677, Duquesne almost annihilated the Dutch fleet. Under a grateful monarch this man might have become high admiral of France ; but Louis was growing bigoted with his years, and his faith- ful servant was reproached for being a Protestant. “ When I fought for your majesty,” replied the blunt sailor, “ I never thought of what might be your religion.” His son, driven into exile for ad- hering to the reformed faith, carried away with him the bones of his father, determined not to leave them in an ungrateful country. 12. In the meantime conferences took place at Nimeguen • the allies wished peace ; and France and Holland, the original parties in the war, were equally exhausted. At length, in August 1678, the treaty was signed, Louis retaining most of his conquests in the Spanish Netherlands, — all French Flanders in fact, as well as Franche- Comte. pain, from whom these possessions were obtained, assented to the treaty ; for the imbecile monarch of that country knew not what towns belonged to him, nor where was the frontier line of what he still retained of the Spanish Netherlands. “Here may be seen,” says Voltaire, “ how little do events correspond to projects. Hol- land, against which the war had been undertaken, and which had nearly perished, lost nothing nay, even gained a barrier ; while the Chap. IV/| SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 383 other powers, that had armed to defend and guarantee her indcpen dence, all lost something.” 13. The years which followed the peace of Nimeguen were the most prosperous for France ; and formed the zenith of the reign of Louis XI Y. All Europe had been armed against him, and success had more or less crowned all his enterprises. He assumed to him- self the title of Great ; and one of his dukes even kept a burning lamp before the statue of the monarch, as before an altar ; the least insult offered by foreign courts to his representatives, or neglect of etiquette, was sure to bring down signal vengeance. In the years 1682 and 1683 Algiers was bombarded, then a new mode of warfare: in 1684 Genoa experienced the same fate because it refused to allow the French monarch to establish a depot within its territory. Even the pope was humbled before the “ Grand Monarch some of the German princes were expelled from their territories ; and in time of peace French maurauding parties devastated the Spanish provinces. Louis increased his navy to two hundred and thirty vessels ; and toward the end of his reign his armies amounted to four hundred and fifty thousand men. But the greatest glories of the reign of Louis were those connected with literature and the arts. Men of letters now, for the first time, began to exert a great influence on the mind of the French nation ; and the familiar names of Molierc, Xta- cine, Boileau, La Fontaine, Bossuet, Massillon, and Fenelon, adorned the age of Louis, and shed on the land the brightness of their fame. In the next century the writings of these men, and of their success- ors, determined the fate of the great monarchy which Louis had built up. 14. The queen of France being dead, towards the year 1685 Louis secretly married Madame Scarron, the widow of the celebrated comic writer, on whom he conferred the title of Madame Be Main- tenon. This woman, who had been educated a Calvinist, and bad abjured her religion, would have made all Protestants do the same ; and it was chiefly through her influence, and that of the royal con- fessor La Chaise, that the king, naturally bigoted, became a bitter persecutor of his Protestant subjects. In 1685 he revoked the edict of Nantes, which had given tolerance to all religions, forbade all ex- ercise of the Protestant worship, and banished from the kingdom, within fifteen days, all Protestant ecclesiastics who would not recant. Afterwards he closed the ports against the fugitives, sent to the gal- leys those who attempted to escape, and confiscated their property 384 MODERN HISTORY. fPART II France lost by these cruel measures two hundred thousand — some say five hundred thousand — of her best subjects ; and the bigotry of Louis gave a greater blow to the industry and wealth of his king- dom than the unlimited expenses of his pride and ambition. 15. The cruelties of Louis to the Protestants roused the hearts of the Germans, Dutch, and English, against him, and accelerated a general war. In 1686 a league was formed at Augsburg by all the German princes to restrain the encroachments of Louis : Holland joined it, — Spain also, excited by jealousy of a domineering neighbor; Sweden, Denmark, and Savoy, were afterwards gained ; and the revolution of 1688, by which William of Holland ascended the throne of England, placed the latter country at the head of the confederacy. But Louis was not daunted by the power of the league : anticipating his enemies, he was first in the field, sending an army against Germany in 1688, which ravaged the Palatinate 1 with fire and sword. He also sent an army into Flanders, one into Italy, ana a third to check the Spaniards in Catalonia ; while at the same time he sent a fleet and an army to Ireland, to aid James II. in re- covering the threne of England. 16. After the first campaign, in which Louis profited little, he gave the command of his armies to new generals of approved talent, and instantly the fortune of the war changed. In 1690 Savoy was overrun by the French marshal Catinat, and Flanders by marshal Luxembourg : the combined squadrons of England and Holland were defeated by the French admiral Tourville, off Beachy Head; 2 and a descent was made on the coast of England. In 1692 the for- tress of Namur 3 was taken by the French, in spite of all the efforts of William and the allies to relieve it ; but during the progress of the siege the French were defeated in a terrible naval battle off Cape La Hogue ; 4 a battle that decided the fate of the Stuarts, and marks the era of England’s dominion over the seas. 1. The Palatinate , by which is generally understood the Lower Palatinate , or Palatinate of the Rhine, was a country of Germany, on both sides of the Rhine, embracing about sixteen hundred square miles, and now divided among Prussia, Bavaria, Baden, Hesse Darmstadt Nassau, &c. That part of it west of the Rhine, and belonging to Bavaria, is still called “ The Palatinate.” The Upper Palatinate, embracing a somewhat larger territory, was in Bavaria, and bordered on Bohemia. Amberg was its capital. (Mrp No. XVII.) 2. Beachy Head is a bold promontory on the southei i coast of England, eighteen miles south-west from Hastings. (Map No. XVI.) 3. Namur is a strongly-fortified town of Belgium, at the function of the Sambre and Meuse, thirty-five miles south-east from Brussels. (Map No. XV.) 4. Cape La Hogue is a prominent headland of France, on the English Channel, eixteoa miles north-west of Cherbourg. ( Map No. XIII.) Ciiap. IY.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURA 385 17. The campaign of 1693 was fortunate for the French, who gained the bloody battle of Nerwinden 1 over king William — defeated the dnke of Savoy in a general action at Marseilles — made progress against the Spaniards in Catalonia — and gained some advantages at se&. But after this year Louis no longer visited his armies in person ; and succeeding campaigns became less fruitful of important and decisive results. France had been exhausted by the enormous exertions of her monarch, and all parties were anxious to terminate at war in which much blood had been shed, much treasure expended, and no permanent acquisitions made. Conferences for peace com- menced in 1696; and in the beginning of 1697 the plenipotentiaries of the several powers assembled at Byswick, 3 a small town in Hol- land. In the treaty, which was signed in September, England gained only the recognition of the monarch of her choice ; while the French king’s renunciation of the Spanish succession, which had been one important object of the war, was not even mentioned. Although in the treaty Louis appeared to make concessions, yet he kept the new frontier that he had chosen in Flanders, whilst the possession of Strasburg 3 extended the French limits to the Rhine. Louis had baffled the most powerful European league ; and although the com- merce of the kingdom was destroyed, and the country exhausted of men and money, while a dreadful famine was ravaging what war had spared, yet at the close of the seventeenth century France still pre- served, over surrounding nations, the ascendency that Richelieu had planned, and that Louis XIV. had proudly won. IV. Cotemporary History. — 1. Besides France, England, Ger- many, and the countries connected with them in wars and alliances, fcbe strictly universal history of this period embraces a range more extended than that of any previous century. On the continent the histories of the leading powers become more and more intermingled 1. Nerwinden is a small village of Belgium, about thirty-three miles south-east from Brussels 2. B.yswick is a small tovm in the west of Holland, two miles south-east from Hague, and Ihirty -fiv6 south-west from Amsterdam. The peace of Ryswick terminated what is known in American history as “ King William’s War,”— a war between the French and the English American colonies, attended with numerous inroads of the Indians, who were in alliance with the French. {Map No. XV.) 3. Strasl'irg is an ancient fortified city on the west bank of the Rhine, in the former prov. •nee of Alsace. It is principally noted for its cathedral, said to have been originally founded by Clo /is, in 504. The modern building, however, was begun in 1015, but not finished till the fifteenth century. Its spire reaches to the extraordinary height of four hundred and sixty-six feet — about seven feet higher than St. Peter’s in Rome, about five feet higher than the great pyramid of TJheops. {Maps Nos. XIII. and XVII.) S 25 386 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II the Northern States are seen growing in importance, and beginning to take part in European politics ; while, abroad, colonies are planted that are soon to assume the rank of independent and powerful nations 2. It was not until after the Reformation that the three Scandi- navian States, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway, came into I. DENMARK, 7 7 / J 7 sweuen, contact with the Southern nations of Christendom, nor AND until the commencement of the “ Thirty Years’ War, 5 NORWAY . . J , in the early part oi the seventeenth century, that they look any active part in the concerns of their southern neighbors, when, under the conduct of the heroic Gustavus Adolphus, Sweden and her allies warred so manfully in the cause of religious freedom Under Gustavus, the glory and power of Sweden attained their greatest height ; and although the successes of the Swedish arms continued under Christina, Charles X., and Charles XI., Swedish history offers little further that is interesting to the general student until the accession of Charles XII. in 1697, the extraordinary events of whose career belong to the next century. 3. The history of Poland, during most of the seventeenth cen- tury, is of less interest to the general reader than that of Sweden, being filled with accounts of unimportant do mestic contentions among the nobility, and of foreign wars with Sweden, Russia, and Turkey, while the mass of the people, in the lowest state of degradation, were slaves, in the fullest extent of the term, and not supposed to have any legal existence. The greatest of the monarchs of Poland was John Sobieski, elected to the throne in 1674, the fame of whose victories over the Turks threw a transient splendor on the waning destinies of his ill-fated country. His first great achievement was the victory of Kotzim, 1 gained, with a com- parative y small force, over an army of eighty thousand Mussulmen, strongly intrenched on the banks of the Dniester, leaving forty thou- sand of the enemy dead in the precincts of the camp. (Nov. 1673.) All Europe was electrified with this extraordinary triumph, the great- est that had been won for three centuries over the infidels. 4. Other victories of the Polish hero, scarcely less important, are recorded in the annals of Poland ; but what has immortalized the name of John Sobieski is the deliverance of Vienna 3 in 1683. A 1. Kotzim is now an important fortress of south-western Russia, situated on thf right bank of the Dniester, in the province oi Bessarabia. The Turks strongly fortified it ir 17x8, but it Was successively taken by the Russians in 1730, 1769, and 1788, {Map No. XVII.) 2. Vienna , the capital of the Austrian empire, is on the southern bank of the Danube, three Hundred and tnirty miles south-east from Berlin and eight hun Ireot miles cona-west trom Cbup. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 387 revolt of tlie Hungarians from tlie dominion of Austria, and au alii ance formed between them and the Turks, had brought an army of nearly three hundred thousand men against the Austrian capital, which was defended by its citizens, and a garrison of little more than eleven thousand men. After an active siege of more than two months, Vienna was reduced to the last extremity. . In the mean- time the Austrian emperor, who had left his capital to make what defence it could against the immense hosts of Turks that poured down upon it, had solicited the aid of the Polish king ; and Sobieski was not long in making his appearance at the head of a small, but resolute army of eighteen thousand veterans. The combined Polish and Austrian forces, when all assembled, amounted to only seventy thousand men, whom the Turks outnumbered more than three to one ; but Sobieski, whose name alone was a terror to the infidels, was at once the Agamemnon and Achilles of the Christian host. 5. Sunday the 12th of September, 1683, was the important day that was to decide whether the Turkish crescent or the cross, was to wave on the turrets of Vienna. At five o’clock in the afternoon Sobieski had drawn up his forces in the plain fronting the Mussul- men camp, and ordering the advance, he exclaimed aloud, “ Not to us, 0 Lord, but to thee be the glory.” Whole bands of Tartar troops broke and fled when they heard the name of the Polish hero repeated from one end to the other of the Ottoman lines. At the same moment an eclipse of the moon added to the consternation of the superstitious Moslems, who beheld with dread the crescent waning in the heavens. With a furious charge the Polish infantry seized an eminence that commanded the grand Vizier’s position, when Kara Mustapha, taken by surprise at this unexpected attack, fell at once from the heights of confidence to the depths of despair Charge upon charge was rapidly hurled upon the already wavering Moslems, whose rout soon became general. In vain the vizier tried to rally the broken hosts. “ Can you not aid me !” said he to the Constantinople. Population about three hundred and seventy thousand. In Roman history Vienna is known as Findabona, (see Map No. VIII.,) and is remarkable as being the place where Marcus Aurelius died. After the time of Charlemagne, margraves or dukes held Vienna till the middle of the thirteenth century, soon after which it came into the possession of the house of Hapsburg. In 1484 it was taken by the Hungarians, whose king, Matthias, made it the seat of his court Since the time of Maximilian it has been the usual residence of the arch-dukes of Austria, and the emperors of Germany. About two miles from the city is Schbnbrunn, the favorite summer residence of the emperor. It was twice occupied by Napo- leon: ‘he treaty of Schbnbrunn was signed in it in 1808, and here the duke of Reichstadt, son of Napoleon, died i i 1832. (Map No TC VII.) 538 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II cham of the Tartars, who pa?sed him among the fugitives. “ I know the king of Poland,” was the reply ; “ and I tell you, that with such an enemy we have no safety but in flight. Look at the sky ; see if God is not against us.” 6. So. sudden and general was the panic among the Turks, that at six o’clock Sobieski entered the camp where a hundred and twenty thousand tents were still found standing ; the innumerable multitude of the Orientals had disappeared ; but their spoils, their horses, their camels, their splendor, loaded the ground. The cause of Chris tianity — of civilization — had prevailed ; the wave of Mussulman power had retired, never to return. But Sobieski received little thanks from a jealous monarch for rescuing him and his country from irretrievable ruin ; and Poland — unhappy Poland ! had saved a serpent from death, which afterward turned and stung her for the kindness. Sobieski died in 1696, in the midst of the ruin that was fast overwhelming his country through the dissensions and clamors of a turbulent nobility, and just in time to save his withered laurels from being torn from his brow by the rude hand of rebellion. With him the greatness of his native land may be said to have ended. 7. j Russia, at the commencement of the seventeenth cenfcwy, was immersed in extreme ignorance and barbarism ; and al- though a glimmering of light dawned upon her during die reign of Alexis, who died in 1677, yet the great epoch in the history of Russia is the reign of Peter the Great, whose genius first opened to its people the advantages of civilization. In 1689, this prince, then only seventeen years of age, became sole monarch of Russia. The vigorous development of his mind was a subject of universal wonder and admiration. Full of energy and activity, he found nothing too arduous to be attempted, and he commenced at once the vast project of changing the whole system of the govern ment, and of reforming the manners of the people. His first exer tions were directed to the remodelling and disciplining of the army and the improvement of his resources ; and from the model of a smah yacht on the river which runs through Moscow, he constructed tht first Russian navy. In 1694 he took from the Turks the advan tageous port of Azof, 1 which opened to his subjects the commerce ol 1. The sea of Azof, the Palus Matotis of the ancients, communicates by the narrow strait of Venicale, (an. Cimmerian Bosporus ,) with the north-western angle of the Black Sea. Th*‘ port of Azof is at the m >uth of the Don, at the north-eastern extremity of the sea ol Azof The town, anciently called Tatiais , a* 1, in the middle ages, 7 ana, once tad an extensive bade but is now fast falling into decay. Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURA. 3-89 the Black Sea. This acquisition enlarged his views, and he com menced a system of internal improvements, which had for it3 ob- ject, by connecting the waters of the Dwina, : the Volga, 2 and the Bon, to open a water communication between the Baltic, Black, and Caspian Seas. A few years later he laid, near the shores of the Gulf of Finland, the foundations of St. Petersburg, 3 a city which he designed to be the emporium of Northern commerce and the capital of his dominions. 8. Being convinced of the superiority of the natives of Western Europe over his own barbarous subjects, in 1697 he sent out to Italy, Holland, and Germany, two or three hundred young men, to learn the arts of those countries, particularly ship building and navigation ; and in the following year he himself left his dominions, as a private individual, to procure knowledge by his own observation and experi- ence. He visited Amsterdam, where he entered himself as a coni’ mon carpenter in one of the principal dockyards, laboring and liv ing like the other workmen, and demanding the same pay : he also went to England, where he examined the principal naval arsenals; and after a year’s absence returned home, greatly improved in mechanical science, and accompanied by numerous artisans whom he had engaged to aid him in the great design of instructing his subjects in the arts of more civilized nations. The chief political acts of the reign of this truly great man belong to the history of the next century. 9. In the sixteenth century Turkey , during the reign of Solyman the Magnificent, the cotemporary of the emperor Charles V., had become the most powerful empire in the world, IV ’ TURKEY * reaching from the confines of Austria on the west, to the banks of the Euphrates on the east, and extending over Egypt on the south. Other able princes, who succeeded Solyman, with Mussul- man pride held all the rest of the world in scorn, and the Ottoman arms continued to maintain their ascendency over those of Christen- dom until the latter part of the seventeenth century, when, in 1683 s the famous Sobieski, king of Poland, totally defeated the army em- 1. The Dwina here mei tioned rises near the sources of the Volga, and empties into th*» Gulf of Riga, in the Baltic, nine miles below Riga. Another river of the same name falls into the White Sea, thirty-five mile 3 below Archangel. 2. The Volga , or Wolga , the largest river of Europe, has its sources in central Russia, and to mouth in the Caspian Sea. It is the great artery of Russia, and the grand route of the in- ternal traffic of that empire ; but it is said that its waters are decreasing in depth, and that aandbanl* s are becoming serious obstacles to its navigation. 3. St. Petersburg , the modern capital of Russia, and one of the largest and finest cities of Europe, is situated at the mouth of the river Neva, at its entrance into the Gulf cf Fimand. 390 MODERN HISTORY . [Part H ployed in the liiege of Vienna. This event marks the era of the decline of the Ottoman power. A powerful league formed between Austria, Russia, Poland, and Venice, followed upon the defeat of the Ottoman forces at Vienna, and in 1687 the Turks were finally driven out of Hungary, and dispossessed of the greater portion of Southern Greece. In 1697, while this war continued, they sustained a total defeat by the famous Prince Eugene, in the battle of Zenta,' in which they lost thirty thousand men. The treaty of Carlowitz* in 1699, completed the humiliation of the Porte ; a Transylvania,* Sclavonia, 4 and Hungary, being preserved to the emperor of Austria , Podolia, 6 with other portions of the Ukraine,® remaining in the pos- session of Poland, while Russia retained her conquests on the Black Sea. Morea, or Southern Greece, was ceded to Venice. 10. The political history of Italy , during the seventeenth century, is of trifling importance, but the social condition of its V« ITALY ° A people merits a passing notice. The Reformation had destroyed the political influence of the pope, who was reduced to the rank of a petty sovereign over the small territory embraced in the “ States of the Church while Spam, mistress of the fairest prov- inces of the peninsula, as well as of its two large and beautiful islands, inflicted upon the country numerous evils which made the people at once poor and miserable. The effects of Spanish rule are faithfully characterized by a Milanese writer, who forcibly depicts the wretchedness of the fertile and once populous valley of Lom- bardy. “ The Spaniards,” he remarks, “ possessed central Lombardy for a hundred and seventy-two years. They found in its chief city 1. Zcnta is a small town of Southern Hungary, on the Theiss, a northern branch of the Dan- ube, two hundred and forty miles south-east from Vienna. (In history the name of this town is variously spelled Zenta, Zentha, Zeuta, and Zeutha.) (Map No. XVII.) 2. Carlowitz is a town of Austrian Sclavonia, on the southern bank of the Danube, about fifty miles south of Zenta. ( Map No. XVII.) 3. Transylvania is the most eastern province of the Austrian empire, lying east of Hungary, and north of the Turkish province of YVallachia. It is divided principally among three dis- tinct races, — the Magyar, the Szekler or Siciili, and the Saxon. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Sclavonia, a province of the Austrian empire, usually regarded as forming a part of Hua gary, has Hungary on the north, and the Turkish provinces of Bosnia and Servia on the south. ( Map No. XVII.) 5. Podolia , now a province of south-western Russia, lies along the eastern bank of the Dniester. It was long governed by its own princes ; but, in 1569, it was united to Poland. It has belonged to Russia since 1793. (Map No. XVII.) 6. The Urkaine, (a word signifying “ the frontier,") was an extensive country in the south eastern part of Russian Poland, now forming the Russian provinces of Podolia, Kiev, Charkow, and Poltava. Kiev, on the Dnieper, was the chief town. (Map No. XVII.) a. Porte— the Ottoman court, so called from the gate of the sultan’s palace where justice is administered ; as the Sublime Porte. L. porta , Fr. porte, “ a door or gate.” Chap IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 391 three hundi ed thousand souls : they left in it scarcely a third of that number. They found in it seventy woollen manufactories : they left in it no more than five. They found agriculture skilful and flour- ishing : before the province was wrested from them they had passed laws which made emigration a capital crime.” The Spanish gov- ernors of the provinces looked upon the conquered countries as es- tates calculated to fill their own and the royal coffers ; and not only was the nation drained of its treasure, but of its blood also. The flower of the people, draughted by thousands into the Spanish armies, perished in the wars of France, Germany, and the Netherlands. 11. But numerous as were the evils which flowed from the admin- istrative oppression of the Spaniards, they were light when compared with *he fearful corruption in morals that pervaded the whole system of society. An insidious licentiousness, under the garb of gallantry, had been introduced by the Spaniards, while the spirit of the people, kindled into frenzy by Castilian fancies about knightly honor, but no longer ennobled by personal courage, or manly self-respect, made Italy, for many generations, infamous as the scene of poisonings and issassinations. Bisings and revolutions of the people were frequent ; during nearly the whole period of the seventeenth century the coasts were continually infested by Turkish and Algerine corsairs; the fields were ravaged; houses, villages, and whole towns were burned; and thousands were carried away into slavery ; while, in the interior, robbers were scarcely less destructive, large troops of whom plun- dered, or exacted ransoms, and more than once resisted successfully battalions of regular soldiers. Such is the mournful picture pre- sented by Italy, the land of Roman greatness and renown, during the seventeenth century. 12. The principal events, to which we have not already al- luded, that mark the history of the Spanish penin- VJ sula during the seventeenth century, are the expulsion Spanish of the Moors, the revolt of Portugal, and the ac- PKNINSULA knowledgment of the independence of Holland. Twice during the sixteenth century, the Moors, or Moriscos, had risen against their Christian masters ; they had been dispersed, from Granada, among the other Spanish provinces, and compelled, against their will, to receive Christian baptism. Tranquillity could scarcely be hoped from so arbitrary a measure ; and the Moriscos, thirsting for revenge, entered into a correspondence with the African princes, whom they urged to invade the peninsula, promising tc rise on the 392 MODERN HISTORY. [Fa*th first signal. This circumstance becoming known, the expulsion of the whole borly was decreed, and the cruel mandate was carried into execution, although not without open resistance in several of the provinces. (1610.) In all, no fewer than six hundred thousand of the most ingenious and industrious portion of the community were forcibly driven from their homes, while large numbers, by making a profession of Christianity, were permitted to remain. This was ‘a blow no less fatal to the prosperity of Spain, than the revocation of the edict of Nantes was to a sister kingdom. 13. Portugal had been united to Spain in 1580, partly by con- quest, and partly in accordance with the wishes of a portion of its nobility ; but the union failed to give satisfaction to the people of the former country. Finding themselves ground to the dust by intoler- able taxes and forced loans, their complaints disregarded, their per- sons insulted, and their prosperity at an end, in 1640 they organized a general revolt, and the sway of Spain over Portugal was forever broken, by the election, to the throne, of the duke of Braganza, 1 with the title of John IV. To complete the humiliation of Spain, eight years later, in the treaty of Munster, 2 she was compelled to acknowledge the in- dependence of Holland, after having maintained against her a warfare of eighty years’ duration, only interrupted by a brief truce of twelve years from 1609 to 1621; and even during this period, hostilities did not cease in the Indies. The disasters that were befalling Bo man Catholic Spain were fast overwhelming that proud monarchy with disgrace and ruin, while the new Bepublic of Holland was taking its place, as a free and independent State, among the most powerful nations of Europe. The treaty of Westphalia, signed the same year, 1648, secured to Holland internal tranquillity, by recon- ciling the conflicting interests of her own people, and guaranteeing the enjoyment of civil and religious liberty, — one of the noble aims and results of Christian civilization. 14. The history of the Asiatic nations in the seventeenth ?entury, vii merits but little notice. During this period a series of Asiatic imbecile tyrants ruled over Persia. Their reigns were nations, generally peaceful, but the higher classes were enervated 1. Braganza is a town at the north-eastern extremity of Portugal. In 1442 it was erected Into a duchy, and in 1G40, John, eighth duke of Braganza, ascended the Portuguese throne under the title of John IV. His descendants continue to enjoy the crown of Portugal, and have also acquired that of Brazil. The town and surrounding district of Braganza still belong to the king of Portugal as the duke of Braganza. ( Map No. XIII.) 2. Munster , a town of Westphalia, is ninety-live miles north-east from Aix-la-chapelle. The trea.y of Munster was a part of that of Westphalia. See We tphalia, p. 3G0. ( Map No. XVIIJ Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 393 by luxury, ami the martial spirit of the people suffered so much from inaction, that early in the following century the Affghans, a warlike people on the confines of India, invaded the kingdom, and placed the royal diadem on the head of their chief Mahmoud. In 1644 an important revolution was terminated in China, by which the Manchoos, a race sprung from the expelled Mongols and the eastern Tartars, established themselves firmly in the empire, after a war of twenty-seven years’ duration. Happily for the country, Shunchy, the first emperor of the Manchoo-Tartar dynasty, showed himself a generous and enlightened monarch ; and his son and successor Kang-hy, who had the singular fortune to reign sixty years, was one of the most illustrious sovereigns that ever ruled the country, — the Chinese historians ascribing to him almost every virtue that can adorn a throne. 15. In the early part of the seventeenth century the great Mogul empire of Asia, having northern Hindostan for the seat of its central power, and the Persian dominions for its western limits, gradually declined in greatness until, in 1659, the famous Aurungzebe succeed- ed to the throne, by the imprisonment of his father. Under this prince, who ruled with the most tyrannical cruelty, establishing Mo- hammedanism throughout his dominions by a rigorous persecution of the Hindoos, and the destruction of their temples, the Mogul em- pire was extended and consolidated; but on his death, in 1707, it experienced a rapid decline, and was soon broken into fragments. 16. The seventeenth century marks the era of the establishment of the principal Dutch, Spanish, French, and English ym cqlo colonies in the New World, and on the coasts of Asia nial estab- and Africa. Near the close of the preceding century the L1SHMENTS - Dutch had founded the colony of Surinam 1 in South America, ana m 1607 they gained a footing in the East Indies by capturing, from the Portuguese, the Moluccas 2 or Spice Islands, which they continued k:> lnld against all competitors. A few years later they founded New Amsterdam, now New York. In 1619 they founded Batavia, . Surinam, or Dutch Guiana, is on the north-eastern coast of South America, having French Guiana on the east, and English Guiana on the west. 2. The Moluccas, of which Amboyna is the principal, are a cluster of small islands rerth of Australia or New Holland, anil between Celebes and New Guinea. They are distinguished chiefly for the production of spir.es, particularly nutmegs and cloves. When in 1511 the Por- tuguese discovered these islands, the Arabians were already settled there. The Portuguese had almost the entire monopoly of the spice trade till the beginning of the seventeenth century, when the Dutch took he islands from them. Since 179G the Moluccas have been twice coo- out red by the English, but by the peace of Paris in 1815 they were restored to the Dutch. 394 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II in tlie island of Java; — about the same time they wrested the Jap- anese trade from the Portuguese. In 1650 they seized and colonized the Cape of Good Hope, which had previously been claimed by the English, and six years later they expelled the Portuguese from the island of Ceylon. 1 The Dutch adopted, in their colonial regulations, a more exclusive system of policy than other nations ; and this, to- gether with their harsh treatment of the natives, was the principal •Rause of the final ruin of their empire in the Indies. 17 The numerous colonies founded by Spain in the New World during the previous century had now become consolidated into one vast empire, embracing most of the islands of the West Indies, to- gether with the extensive realms of Mexico and Peru, over which the Spanish monarch ruled with the most absolute despotism. The immense wealth derived fram these possessions excited the envy and cupidity of all Europe ; and frequently, during the wars of the sev- enteenth century, the Spanish fleets, laden with the gold and silver of the New World, fell into the hands of the Dutch, French, or English cruisers ; while bands of pirates, or Buccaneers, who had their coverts among the small islands of the West Indies, often plundered the coasts, and roamed at will, the terror of the Spanish seas. 18. The materials for a history of the Spanish possessions in the New World, during nearly three centuries, are exceedingly meagre and uninteresting, treating of little but the same unvarying rule of arbitrary and avaricious viceroys or governors, of commercial re- strictions the most odious and oppressive, and of the miseries of an aboriginal population, the most abject that could possibly be conceived. 19 The French colonization, in the New World, during the sev- enteenth century, embraces only the founding of Quebec, and a few other feeble settlements in the Canadas ; and, at the very close of the century, the landing of two hundred emigrants, and the erection of a rude fort, in Lower Louisiana. Nor was anything importar accomplished by the French, during this period, in the newly discov- ered regions of the Old World. About the middle of the century they attempted to make Madagascar 2 -one of their colonies, a scheme 1. Ceylon is a large island belonging to Great Britain, near the southern extremity of Hin- dostan. The cinnamon tree, which was found only in Ceylon and Cochin-China, is its most valuable production. Extensive ruins of cities, canals, aqueducts, bridges, temples, &.C., show that Ceylon was, at a remote period, a rich, populous, and comparatively civilized country. After Holland had been erected into the Batavian republic in 1795, the English took possession of Ceylon, and at the peace of Amiens, in 1802, it was formally ceded to them. it. Madagascar is a large isiand ofi the eastern coast of South Africa, from which it is sep? Chap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 395 which proved futile on account of the extreme unhealthiness of the island. In 1672 the French purchased the town of Pondicherry, 1 in Hindostan, from its native sovereign, and established there a colony with every reasonable prospect of success ; but the place was several times taken from them by the Dutch and the English, until, finally, it was restored at the treaty of Paris in 1815, and is now the principal French settlement on the Asiatic continent. 2€ In the latter part of the sixteenth century the English began to turn their attention to the commerce of the East Indies ; and in the year 1600 a company of London merchants, known as the London East India Company, obtained a charter from queen Elizabeth, giving to them the exclusive right of trading with those distant countries. During the seventeenth century the London company made little progress in ef- fecting settlements in the Indies ; and at the close of that period, a small part of the island of Java, 2 Fort St. Ghorge at Madras, 3 the island of Bombay, 4 and Fort William erected at Calcutta 5 in 1699, rated by Mozambique Channel. Soon after the peace of 1815 the French formed several small colonies on the eastern coast of the island ; and from 1818 to 1825 the English missionaries had some success in converting the natives ; but since the latter period the missionaries have been forbidden to approach the island, and Madagascar may now be reckoned among the barbarous countries of eastern Africa. 1. Pondicherry is a town of Hindostan, on the south-eastern coast, eighty miles south-west from Madras. Population about fifty-five thousand. The French possessions in India, com- prising Pondicherry, Chandernagore, Karical in the Carnatic, Mail 6 in Malibar, and Yanaon in Orissa, with the territory attached to each, have a total population of about one hundred and sixty-six thousand, of whom one thousand are whites. 2. Java is a large island of the Asiatic archipelago, south of Borneo, belonging principally to the Dutch, and the centre, as well as the most valuable, of their possessions in the East. Area, a little less than that of the State of New York. Population between five and six millions. The Portuguese reached Java in 1511, and the Dutch in 1595. The latter founded Batavia in 1619. In 1811 Java was taken by a British force, and held till 1816, when, in pursuance of the tieaty of Paris, it was restored to the Dutch. 3. Madras is a large city on the south-eastern coast of Hindostan, eight hundred and seventy miles south-west from Calcutta. Population upwards of four hundred thousand. Madras is badly situated, has no harbor, and is almost wholly unapproachable by sea. It was the first acquisition made in India by the British, who obtained it by grant from the rajah of Bijnagur, in 1639, with permission to erect a fort there. The fort was besieged in 1702 by one of Aurung- zebe’s generals ; and in 1744 by the French, to whom it surrendered after a bombardmert of three days. It was restored to the English at the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, and successfully sus’ tuined a memorable siege by the French under Lally in 1758-9 ; since which it has experienced no hostile attack. Madras is the capital of the British presidency of the same name, which embrace* the whole of South Hindostan, extending about five hundred miles north from Cape Comorin. 4. Bombay is built on an island of the same name, on the western coast of Hindostan, ten hundred and fifty miles south-west from Calcutta. Population abcut two hundred and forty thousand. In 1531 Bombay was obtained by the Portuguese from a Hindoo chief: by them it was ceded to Charles II., in 1661, as part of queen Catherine’s dowry; and in 1663 it was transferred, by the king, to the East India Company, at an annual rent of ten pounds sterling- Boon after it realized to the company a revenue of three thousand pound.- a year. Bombay is the capital of the presidency of the same name. 5. Cal :utta , the capital of the British dominions in the East, is situated on the eastern «4de MODERN HISTORY. [Part H 396 the whole inhabited by mly a few hundred Europeans, formed the extent of their East India possessions. Such was the feeble be- ginning, and slow progress, of an association of merchants that “ now rules over an empire containing a hundred millions of subjects, raises a tribute of more than three millions annually, possesses an army of more than two hundred thousand men, has princes for its servants, and emperors pensioners on its bounty.” 21. - The first successful attempt at American colonization by the English was the settlement of Jamestown, in Virginia, in the yeal 1607. This was followed by the settlement of Plymouth in New England, in 1620, by a band of Puritans, who had resolved to seek, in the wilderness of America, that freedom of worship which their native country denied them. During the same century the English formed settlements in all the Atlantic States from Maine to Georgia, the latter only excepted, which was not colonized until the year 1733 ; the Dutch, who had settled New Amsterdam, now New York, were conquered by the English in 1644; and at the same time the Swedes, who had settled Delaware, and had subsequently been re- duced by the Dutch, shared the fate of their masters. The history af the British American colonies, during the seventeenth century .a marked no less by the struggles of the colonists against the natural difficulties of their situation, and by the Indian wars in which they were often involved, than by their noble resistance to the arbitrary and oppressive rule of the mother country. The early colonists, those of New England especially, had left their homes on the other side of the Atlantic, to seek, in the wilds of America, an asylum where they might enjoy unmolested their religious faith and worship ; and they brought with them to the land of their adoption, that spirit of independence, and those principles of freedom, which laid the foundation of American liberty. 22. The early history of these colonies is full of instruction to all, — in its lessons of patient endurance, and unyielding perseverance, ex- alted heroism, individual piety, and public virtue ; but to American citizens it possesses a peculiar interest, as the history of tne develop ment and growth of those principles of free government which sue of the river Hoogly, the most western arm of the Ganges, about one hundred miles from its entrance into the Bay of Bengal. Resident population about two hundred and thirty thousand The English first made a settlement here in 1690, when Calcutta was but a small village, in- habited chiefly by husbandmen. In 1756 a Bengal chief dispossessed the English of their settle* ment, but it was retaken by Colonel Clive in the following year, since v hich it has been quief lj retained by the British, and risen to its present degree of importance. Ohap. IV.] SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 327 ceedmg time has perfected te the happinecL and glory of our country, and the advancement of the cause of freedom throughout the world. In a work of general history like the present we cannot hope to do such a subject justice ; and instead of attempting here a brief and separate compend of our early annals, it will be more satisfactory and useful to refer the student to some of the numerous standard works on Amercan history which are at all times accessible to turn, and with some one of which it is presumable every American youth will early make himself familiar, before he enters upon the study of the general history of nations. 398 MODERN HISTORY [Fart H CHAPTER V, THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY, , WAR OF THE SPANISH SUCCESSION, AND CLOSE OF THE REIGN OF LOUIS XIV. ANALYSIS. 1. Pncie and ambition of Louis XIV. Events that led to the ” war of Ihtf Spanish Succession.” England, Germany, and Holland, declare war against Franck, 1702. — 2. Causes that induced England to engage in the war. The opposing powers. Death of king William. Queen Anne. — 3. Opening of-the campaign by Austria and Eng’and. The French generals.— 4. The campaign of 1702. Naval events. [Cadiz. Vigo Bay.] Events of 1703. — 5. Events of 1704. [Blenheim. Gibraltar.] — 6. Events of 1705 and 170(3. French -osses. [Ramillies. Mons. Barcelona. Madrid.]— 7. Overtures of peace. Campaign of 1707. [Almanza. Toulon.] Events of 1708. [Oudenarde. Brussels.] — 8. Sufferings of the French in the year 1709. Haughtiness of the monarch.— 9. Louis in vain seeks peace with Holland. Battle of Malplaquet. [Malplaquet.] Successes of Louis in Spain. His domestic misfortunes. — 10. Death of the Austrian emperor. Importance of that event. Decline of the war. — 11. Treaty of Utrecht, April 11th, 1713. [Minorca. Newfoundland. Hudson’s Bay territory. St. Christopher. Radstadt. Lisle. Alsace.] — 12. Death of Louis XIV. Character •or the reign of Louis XIV. II. PETER THE GREAT OF RUSSIA, AND CHARLES XII. OF SWEDEN. 1. The north and east of Europe during the war of the Spanish succession. Beginning of the reign of the Russian monarch. — 2. Leading object with the Czar. He is induced to en- gage in a war with Sweden. His allies. [Livonia. Riga.] — 3. Sweden. Reported charactei cf Charles XII. The Swedish council, and declarations of Charles. Change in the king’s character. — 4. Beginning of hostilities against Sweden, in the year 1700. [Sleswick. Holstein. Narva.] Charles humbles Denmark. [Copenhagen.] — 5. The Polish king. Charles marches against Narva. — 6. Signal defeat of the Russians at Narva. Remark of the Czar. Superstition of the Russians.— 7. The course pursued by Peter. Resolution of Charles. — 8. Victories of Charles in the year 1702. [Courland. Warsaw. Cracow.] The Polish king deposed. [Pultusk.] Charles declines the sovereignty of Poland. — 9. Increase of his power and influence. [Borysthenes.] His views, and plans, for the future. — 10. Policy, and gradual successes, of the Czar. [Neva. Ingria.] — 11. March of Charles into Russia, 1707-8. [Srao.ensko.] — 12. Passage of the Desna. [Desna.] Misfortunes of Charles.— 13. Situation of the Swedish army in the winter of 1708-9. Advance of Charles in the Spring. [Pnltowa.]— 14. Siege and Battle of Pultowa. Escape of Charles. [Bender. Campbell’s description of the catastrophe at Pultowa.]— 15. Important effects of the battle of Pultowa.— 16. Warlike views still entertained by Charles. He enlists the Turks in his favor. Treaty between the Russians and Turks. [Pruth.] — 17. Lengthened stay of Charles in Turkey. Return of Charles.— 18. Situation of Sweden on his return. Warlike projects of Charles. Events of 1715. [Stock- holm.] Siege of Stralsund. Irruption into Norway. Project of a union with Russia. Death of Charles, 1718. [Frederickshall.]— 19. Change in Swedish affairs. Peace with Russia. [Nystad.]— 20. Character of Charles the Twelfth. [Dr. Johnson’s description of him.1 -21. Death and character of Peter the Great. III. SPANISH WARS, AND WARS OF THE AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION. 1. Effects of the treaty of Utrecht. European Alliance for guaranteeing the fulfilment of me treaty Spain flnallj compelled to accede to it.— 2. War between England and Spain Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 399 1739. Its causes. — 3. Causes of the war of the Austrian succession. [Pragmatil sanction.] — 4. Claims, and designs, upon the Austrian dominions. The position of England. — 5. Plan of the coalition auainst Austria. Invasion of Austria, 1741. The diet of Frank- fort. [Frankfort.] Maria Theresa and the Hungarians. Events of 1742 and 1743. [Munich. Dettingen] — 6. Successes and revises of Frederic of Prussia, 1744. The Austrian general. — 7. Death of Charles Albert, 1745. Successes of Marshal Saxe. [Fontenoy.] Treaty between Prussia and Austria. Francis I. — 8. Events in Italy in 1745. [Piedmont.] Events of the in- vasion of h noland, 1745-6. [Edinburgh. Preston-pans. Culloden.] Cruelties of the Eng Hah. — 9. Events in America, 1745-6. [Cape Breton.] — 10. Events of 1746-7. Treaty of Aix-laChapelle, Oct. 1748. In what respect the result was favorable to all parties. IV. THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR 1756— 63. 1. rhe eight years of peace that followed the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle. Causes that threatened another war. — 2. East-India colonial difficulties between France and England —3. North American difficulties. Beginning of hostilities in 1754. Braddock’s defeat, 1755. — 4. The connected interests of all the European States. The relations between Prussia and Austria. European Alliances growing out of them. — 5. The threatened danger to Prussia. — 6. First Campaign of Frederic, 1756. — 7. Declarations of war by France and England, 1756. The first campaign. — 8. The opposing forces, 1757. Victory of Frederic at Prague, and defeat at Kolm. [Kolin.] General invasion of Prussia. Defeat of the English in Germany. — 9. Dangerous situation of Frederic. [Berlin.] Recall of the Russian army. Frederic advances into Saxony. — 10. Great victory of Frederic at Rossback. [Rossback.] — 11. Results of the battle. Frederic’s treatment of the wounded and prisoners. — 12. The English and Hanoverians resume their arms. Affairs in Silesia. Victory of Frederic at Lissa. [Lissa.] Anecdote of Frederic. — 13. Results of the campaign of 1757. — 14. Successes of the duke of Brunswick, 1758. Frederic in Silesia — escapes from the Austrians at Olmutz, and marches against the Russians. [Olmutz.] — 15. Battle of Zorndorf. [Zorndorf.] Anecdotes. Action of Hochkirchen. [Hochkirchen.] Results of the campaign. — 16. Losses of the French in India and America.— 17. Opening of the campaign of 1753. Defeat of Frederic at Kunersdorf. [Kunersdorf.] His loss in Bohemia. Result, to the Austrians. — 18. The campaign of the duke of Brunswick. The results on the ocean and in the colonies. — 19. Losses of Frederic in the campaign of 1760. He defeats the enemy at Liegnitz and Torgau. [Liegnitz. Torgau.]— 20. The campaign in Germany.— 21. Alliance between France and Spain. Losses of Spain and France. [Cuba. Manilla. Belleisle. Guadaloupe.] — 22. The campaign of 1761. Coldness of England, and change in the Russian councils. — 23. General peace of 1763. The results, to England — to France — to Prussia. [Honduras.] The military character of Frederic. V. STATE OF EUROPE. THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 1. General peace in Europe. Results of the “Seven Years’ War.” Efforts of Frederic for the good of his people.— 2. France during the closing years of the reign of Louis XV. Accession of Louis XVI. — 3. Condition of Russia. Her war with Turkey and Poland. [Mol- davia and Wallachia.] Dismemberment of Poland, 1773. — 4. State of parties in En land. Taxation. Resignation of the earl of Bute. — 5. The Grenville ministry. The case of Mr Wilkes. — 6 The subject of American taxation. The Stamp Act. — 7. Misfortunes of England m her attempts to coerce the 'Americans. — 8. Oi#’ning of the war with tiie colonies. — 9, European relations of England. Aid extended to the Americans. — 10. Capture of pur- goyne, 1777, and alliance between France and the American States.— 11. Begin- ning of the war between France and England. — 12. War in the West Indies. [Do- minica. St. Lucia.] — 13. Hostilities in the East Indies, and overthrow of the French power there.— 14. War between Spain and England. Events ol 1779. [St. Vincents. Grenada.] — 15. Successes of Admiral Rodney, 1780. English merchant fleet captured by the Spaniards. — 16. The English claim of the right of search. Armed neutrality against England. Principles of the Neutrality. General concurrence in them. — 17. Rupture between England and Holland. — 18.. Capture of St. Eustatia by the English. [St. Eustatia.] — 19. The Spaniards conquer West Florida. The French and English in the West Indies. [Tobago.] Naval battle off the coast of Holland. [Dogger Bank.l— 20. Results of the war between England and 400 MODERN HISTORY. [Pakt II her American colonies. Coi.u nuance of the war in Europe. Siege of Gibraltar, 1781, and de- struction of the Spanish works. — 21. Minorca taken by Spain, 1782. Losses of the English ia the West Indies. [Bahamas.] Naval victory of the English. [Carribee islands.]— 22. Con- tinued siege of Gibraltar. Preparations for an assault. — 23. The assault. — 24. Generous conduc of the British seamen. Results of the assault. — 25. The war in the East Indies. Account of Hyder Ali. [Mysore. Seringapatam.] — 26. Successes of Hyder Ali and his son Tippoo Saib, in 1780. Events of 1781-2. — 27. Tippoo concludes a treaty with the English, 1783. Re- newal of the war, 1790. Defeat and death of Tippoo, 1799. — 28. Treaty of 1782. Genera* treaty of 1783, between England, France, and Spam. Its terms. — 29. Remarks upon the war Cf the Revolution. VI. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. L The Democratic spirit of the American Revolution : — its influence upon Fiench society 2. State of France at the time of the death of Louis XV. — 3. Louis XVI. His character. — 4 Financial difficulties. Efforts of Turgot and Neckar, and the opposition which they en countered. — 5. The system of Calonne, and its results. — 6. Lrienne calls The States-General — 7. Removal of Brienne, and restoration of Neckar. The policy of the court. — 8. The general agitation throughout France. The evils to be complained of. The clergy and the nobility. The philosophic party. The calling of the States-general — a revolutionary measure. Demands of the Commons. Results of the elections. — 9. New difficulty at the opening of the States- general. Its Anal settlement. — 10. Effect of the triumph of the third estate. Revolutionary state of Paris. Attack upon the Bastile, 1789.— 11. Louis throws himself, for support, upon the popular party. — 12. The effect. Revolutionary movements throughout France. Great Political changes. — 13. Two months of quiet. Famine, and mobs, in Paris. The mob at Versailles, and return of the Assembly and royal family to Paris. — 14. Formation of a New Constitution. Marshalling of Parties. The Jacobin club. — 15. Its character, lls leaders. Mirabeau. His character, and death. — 16. The Emigrant Nobility. [Cohlentz.] Attempted escape of the royal family, 1791. The king swears to support the new con- stitution. Dissolution of the “Constituent Assembly.” — 17. The “Legislative Assembly.” Chief parties in it. Growing influence of the Jacobins. — 18. First acts of the legislative assem bly. Object of the Girondists. Demands of the Austrian emperor. War declared against Austria, 1792. Real causes of the war. — 19. Collection of forces, and invasion of France The effects produced in France. — 20. Massacre of the 10th of August. Acts of the As- sembly. Flight of La Fayette. Dumouriez. — 21. Massacres of September. — 22. Victories of the French. [Jemappes. Marseilles Hymn.] — 23. Decree of the National Convention Trial and execut/ n of Louis XVI. [1793.] 24. Fall of the Girondists. — 25. Rule of the Jacobins. — 26. The Reign of Terror. Execution of the queen. Triumph of Infidelity.— 27. Divisions among the Jacobin leaders. Fall of the Dantonists. — 28. War against Europe. — 29. Defection of Du- mouriez. — 30. Fate of Custine. — 31. War on the Spanish frontier. In other quarters. — 32. In- surrection of La Vendee. Victory of the Vendeans at Saumur, and defeat at Nantes. [Saumur.] Repeated defeats of the Republicans. [Torfou.]— 33. Cruelties of the Republicans. The Vendeans cross into Brittany. [Cholet. Chateau Gonthier.]— 34. Closing scenes of the Vendean war. [Granville. Mans. Savenay. The Vendean leaders.]— 35. Insurrections in the south of France. Marseilles and Lyons.— 36. Siege of Toulon. Napoleon Bonaparte. -37. Results of the campaign of 1793. [1794.] 38. Progress of the Revolution after the fall of Danton. — 39. Fall of Robespierre, and end of the Reign of Terror. — 10. Military condition of France. — 41. The English vic- torious AT SEA, AND THE FRENCH ON THE LAND. [Biscay.] — 42. SECOND PARTITION OF PO- LAND. — 43. Third partition of Poland. [1795.] 44. Dissolution of the first coalition against France. Austria, England, and Russia. — 45. Internal condition of France. The New Constitution.— 46. Insurrection in Paris, suppressed by Napoleon.— 47. Military events of 1795. [1796.] 48. Invasion of Germany by Jordan and Moreau.— 49. The Army of Italy. Victo. ries of Napoleon. [Montenotte. Millessimo. Lodi. Arcole. Mantua.]— 50. Disturbance* in England. Spain. English supremacy at sea. French ir vasion of Ireland. [1797.,] 51. Napoleon’s Austrian campaign. Treaty of Campo Fcrmio. [Canrpo F^p Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 401 tnio.] Losses of Italy. 52. Strife of parties, and Establishment of Mii itar-s Despotism in France. [1798.] 53. Preparations for the invasion of England. Expedition to Egypt, — 54. Preparations for tlie expedition. — 55. Surrender of Malta. [Malta.] Storming of Alexandria. — 56. Policy of Napoleon. [The Arab population. Cairo.] Battle of the Pyramids. — 57, Battle of the Nile. — 58. Remarkable energy of Napoleon. Conquest of Upper Egypt, [1799.] Syrian Expedition. — 59. Siege of Acre. [Mount Tabor.] Battle of Mount Tabor. [Nazareth.] — 60. Return of Napoleon to Egypt. Battle of Iboukir. — 61. State of nflairs in Europe. — 62. Napoleon’s return to France. Overthrow of thh Directory. [St Cloud.] Napoleon First Consul Changes of the Revolution. 1, War of the Spanish succession, ind close of the reign oi Louis XIV. — 1. The war which ended in the treaty of Byswick had not humbled the pride of Louis XIV., whose ambition soon involved Europe in another war, known in history as the “War of the Spanish succession.” The immediate events that led to the war were the following. On the death of Charles the Second of Spain, in the year 1700, the two claimants of the Spanish throne were the arch- duke Charles of Austria, and Philip of Anjou, nephew of the French monarch. Both these princes endeavored, by their emissaries, to obtain from Charles, then on a sick bed, a declaration in favor of their respective pretensions ; but although the Spanish monarch was strong- ly in favor of the claims of the arch-duke his kinsman, the gold and the promises of Louis prevailed with the Germany 0 ’ Spanish nobles to induce their sovereign to assign by and hol- will, td the duke of Anjou, the undivided sovereignty of ^ the Spanish dominions. The arch duke resolved to sup- against port his claims by the sword, while the possible and not improbable union of the crowns of France and Spain in the person of Philip, after the death of Louis, was looked upon by England, Germany, and Holland, as an event highly dangerous to the safety of those nations; and on the 1 5th of May, 1702, these three powers declared war against France, in support of the claims of the arch duke to the Spanish succession. 2. It was, doubtless, of very little importance to England, whether an Austrian or a French prince became monarch of Spain ; but when, on the death of the exiled James II., his son was acknowl- edged king of England by the French court, the act was regarded as an insult and a defiance to Great Britain ; the national animosity was aroused, and king William engaged strenuously in the work of forming a league against the ambition of France. England, Holland, and Austria, were the leading powers of the coalition, while France was aided by Bavaria alone. Already William was preparing to 26 402 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II take the field in person at the head of the allies, when a fall from his horse occasioned a fever, which terminated his life in May 1702. Queen Anne, who next ascended the throne of Great Britain, de- clared her resolution to adhere to the policy of her predecessor. 3. The emperor of Austria began the war by pouring into Italy a large army under the command of Prince Eugene, a Frenchman by birth, who had early entered the Austrian service, where he had gained distinction in the wars of the Turks. At the same time the English duke of Marlborough, intrusted with the chief command of tne Dutch and English forces, entered on the campaign in Flanders. To these generals was at first opposed marshal Villars; but the complaints of the elector of Bavaria against him induced that able general to resign his command. Marsin, Tallard, and Villeroy, suc- ceeded him ; but the French generals, brought up under the despotic authority of Louis, who required in his officers the quality of sub- mission as well as the talent for command, were unable to cope with Marlborough and Eugene, who had been bred in a school that en- couraged the development of talent, by allowing a greater indepen dence of character. 4. The campaign of 1702 passed without any remarkable results . ii the Marlborough took a few towns in Flanders, and Eugene campaign in northern Italy, but on the Bhine the French gained ok 1702. gome successes : at sea a combined Dutch and English fleet failed in an attack on Cadiz, 1 but succeeded in capturing and destroying, in Vigo Bay, 3 a French and Spanish fleet that had taken shelter there, laden with the treasures of Spanish America. K ofT 703 TS spring of 1703 the French succeeded in breaking . through the lines. of the allies on the Bhine, thus trans- ferring the seat of the war to the Danube, and making a threatening demonstration against Vienna itself. , 5. In the spring of 1704 Marlborough, abandoning Flanders, marched to the relief of the Austrian emperor, and having joined prince Eugene, on the 13th of August, near the small village of Blenheim, 2 he won a decisive victory ever the French and Bavarians. Each army numbered about eighty 1 Cadiz is an important city and seaport of Andalusia, in southern Spain, sixty miies north- west from Gibraltar. It is a very ancient city, having been founded by the Ca.tnagiuiana. {Map No. XIII.) 2. Vigo Bay is on the western coast of Spain, a little north of Portugal. 3. Blenh rim is a small village of western Bavaria, on the Danube, thirty-three miles nortlv east from Ulm. ( Map No. XVII ) CtliP. V.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 403 thousand man, as 1 the vanquished lost thirty thousand in killed, wounded, and tiken, while all their camp equipage, baggage, and ar- tillery, became the prize of the conquerors. The loss of the latter was about five thousand killed and eight thousand wounded. The results of this battle obliged the French to evacuate Germany al- together, abandon Bavaria, and retire behind the Rhine. In the meantime the war continued in northern Italy ; Portugal joined the coalition ; the arch-duke Charles of Austria, aided by an English force, landed in the Spanish peninsula ; and an English and Dutch fleet, commanded by Sir George Rooke, stormed the important fortress of Gibraltar, 1 of which England has ever since retained the possession. 6. The year 1705 passed away with varied success, the French obtaining many advantages in Italy, while the allies were v EVENTS generally victorious in Spain and on the ocean. In 1706 of a French force again penetrated into Germany ; but the 1,?05 ~ 6 - main army, of about eighty thousand men, commanded by marshal Villeroy, advancing into the Spanish Netherlands, was met by an inferior force under the duke of Marlborough, and utterly routed in the decisive battle of Ramillies. 2 (May 23d, 1706.) The conse- quences of the battle were the loss, to France, of all the Spanish Netherlands, except the fortified towns of Mons 3 and Namur. In 1. Gibraltar , the Calpe of the Greeks, formed, with Abyla on the African coast, the “Pillars of Hercules.” The fortress stands on the west side of a mountainous promontory or rock, pro- jecting south into the sea about three miles, and being from one-half to three-quarters of a mile in breadth. The southern extremity of the rock is called Europa Point. The north side of the promontory, fronting the long narrow isthmus which connects it with the main land, is per- pendicular, and wholly inaccessible. The east and south sides are steep and rugged, and ex- tremely difficult of access, so as to render any attack upon them, even if they were not for- tified, next to impossible, so that it is only on the west side, fronting the bay, where the rock declines to the sea, and the town is built, that it can be attacked with the faintest pros- pect of success. Here the fortifications are of extraordinary extent and strength. The princi- pal batteries are so constructed as to prevent any mischief from the explosion of shells. Vast galleries have been excavated in the solid rock, and mounted with heavy cannon ; and ;om- nunications have been established between the different batteries by passages cut in the rock to protect the troops from the enemy’s fire. At Gibraltar, the Arabians first landed in Spain, in the year 711. It wkj taken from them la 1302: in 1333 Ihey retook it, but were finally deprived of it in 1462 by Henry IV. of Spain. August 4th 1701 the British captured it, since which time it has been repeatedly besieged and assaulted, but without success In 1729 Spain offered two millions sterling for the place, but in vain. The last attempt made for its recovery was by France and Spain combined, in 17''9, during the war with England which grew out of the American Revolution. Eighty thousand barrels of gunpowder were p-ovided for the occasion, and more than one hundred thousand men were employed, by land md sea, against the fortress. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Ramillies is a small village of Belgium, twenty-eight miles south-east from Brussels. (Map No. XV.) 3. Mons is a fortified town of Belgium, thirty-two miles south-west from Brussels. (Ma. No. XV.) 404 MODERN HISTORY. [F fcRT II other quarters the campaign was equally disastrous to Louis. Bar celona 1 2 surrendered to the English ; even Madrid 3 submitted to the allies ; and prince Eugene, breaking through the Fren ch lines at Turin, drove the enemy from Italy. 7. Louis now made overtures of peace ; but the allies, hoping to reduce him lower, would not listen to them. The cam- VI. CAM- _ 7 paignof paign of 1707 in a measure revived his sinking fortunes. 1707. On the plain of Almanza he French won a victory over the allies, as complete as any that had oeen obtained during the war. (April 1707.) This victory established Philip of Anjou on the throne of Spain. In the same year prince Eugene was foiled in an attempt on the port of Toulon. 4 * In the following year, however, (1708,) Marlborough and Eugene defeated a powerful French army near the village of Oudenarde, 6 in Flanders, and recovered Ghent and Bruges, 6 which, a short time before, had been surprised by the French. Again the frontier of France lay completely open. 8. The year 1709 commenced with one of the most rigorous ^ winters ever known. Olives and vines, and many fruit trees perished ; the sown grain was destroyed, and every- thing portended a general famine. The French populace began to 1. Barcelona , the capital of Ca'alonia, is a city and seaport of Spain, on the Mediterranean, three hundred and fifteen miles north-east from Madrid. It is supposed to have been founded by the Carthaginians about two hundred years before the Christian era, and to have been named from its founder Hamilcar Barcino. ( Map No. XIII.) 2. J\Iadrid, the modern capital of Spain, is in the centre of the kingdom, and occupies the site of the ancient Mantua Carpetanorum, a fortified town belonging to the Carpetani. It was af- terwards called Majoritum , and was taken and sacked by the Moors, who gave it its present name. (Map No. XIII.) 3. Jllmanza is a town of Spain in the northern part of the province of Murcia, ninety-three miles north-west from Carthagena. In the battle fought in the neighborhood of this town April 25th, 1707, the French were commanded by the duke of Berwick. The allies, in the in- terest of the arch-duke Charles, lost five thousand men killed on the field, and nearly ten thou- sand taken prisoners. (Map No. XIII.) 4. Toulon , the first naval port in France, is on the Mediterranean coast, thirty-two milea south-east from Marseilles. The town is strongly fortified, and has an excellent harbor. It is wholly indebted for its importance as a great naval port, and strong military position, to Louis XI V., who expended vast sums on its fortifications, and on the arsenal and harbor. (Map No. XIII.) 5., Oudenarde is a town of Belgium thirty-three miles west from Brussels. In the battle of July 11th, 1708, the dukes of Brunswick and Vendome commanded the French army. (Map No! XV.) 6. Bruges is a town of Belgium, seven miles from the sea, and sixty miles north-west from Brussels. At a very early period Bruges was a prosperous seat of manufacturing and com- mercial industry. Throughout the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries it was the central empori- um of the whole t omme; jial world, and, as the leading city of the Ha lseatic confe leracv, had resident consuls aid ministers from every kingdom in Europe. (Map No. XV.) Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 405 clamor from present sufferings, and the dismal prospect before them, but when the French parliament proposed to appoint deputies to visit the provinces, buy corn, and watch over the public peace, the haughty monarch reprimanded them, and told them they had as little to do with corn as with taxation. The magistrates were silent, and desisted from farther interference with the claims of the royal prer )gative. 9 With the finances in disorder, commerce ruined, and agricul- ture at a stand, Louis sought peace with Holland ; but the States, Blighting his envoys and his offers, repaid him all his past insults and pride, and he was compelled to resume the war, or submit to conces- sions degrading to himself and the nation. Again the chief command of the French armies was given to marshal Villars, who fought with the allies the battle of Malplaquet 1 (Sept. 1 1th, 1709) ; but although the latter lost the greatest number of men, the French lost the honor of the day by being driven from the position which they had chosen. The situation of Louis became desperate, when again the successes of his arms in Spain restored him to security and confi- dence ; but domestic misfortune fell upon him, and humbled his pride more than all his military reverses had done. Most of the near relatives of the king were cut off by sudden death, — since at- tributed to the small pox, but then ascribed to the agency of poison. % 10. While these clouds were lowering upon France and her mon- arch, an unexpected event changed the situations and views of all parties. Early in 1711, the death of the emperor of Austria without issue, and the succession of the arch-duke Charles, the claimant of the Spanish crown, to the sovereignty of Austria, threatened a union of the crowns of Spain and Austria in the person of one individual, — ■ an event looked upon with as much dread as the union of France and Spain in the person of Philip of Anjou. From this period the war languished ; and when, by a change in English politics, Marlborough, who had supported, so nobly, the glory of England, was disgraced, and deprived of his command, the influence and support which Eng- land had given to the war were taken away. 11. Conferences opened at Utrecht in the early part of 1712, and on the 11th of April, 1713, the terms of a general peace were assented 1. Malplaquet (mal-plah'-ka) is a small town of France, near the border of Belgium, forty, three miles south-west from Brussels. In the battle fought here Sept. 11th, 1709 — the bloodiest tn the “War of the Spanish succession” — the allies were commanded by Marlborough and Eugene, The French army numbered seventy thousand; the allies eighty thousand, '’'ha allies lost twl bt II merous improvements for civilizing his barbarous subjects. Charles, on the contrary, neglectful of the welfare of his own country, and of the proceedings of the Czar, had resolved never to return home until he had driven from the throne of Poland the newly-elected sovereign, and ally of Peter, Augustus of Saxony. 8. Having wintered at Narva, Charles next drove the Poles and Saxons' from Riga, defeated his enemies on the western bank of the Dwina, overran Courland 1 and Lithuania, entered War- IV VICTORIES 1 1 of charles sa w 2 without opposition, and at length, in July 1702, in the year defeated Augustus in a bloody battle fought on a vast plain between Warsaw and Cracow. 3 A second victory gained by Charles at Pultusk 4 in the following year (May 1st, 1703) completed the humiliation of Augustus, who was formally deposed by the Polish diet, while the crown was soon after given to Stanislaus Leczinski, who had been nominated by the king of Sweden. (January 1704.) Charles, at the head of -a victorious army, might easily have assumed the sovereignty of Poland, to which he was advised by hia ministers, but he declared that he felt more pleasure in bestowing thrones upon others than in winning them for himself. 9. Charles soon reduced the Saxon States, the hereditary domin- ions of the unfortunate Augustus ; his ships were masters of the Baltic ; Denmark, restrained by the late treaty, was prevented from offering any active interference with his plans ; the Herman emperor, engaged in the War of the Spanish succession, was afraid of offend- ing him ; and a detachment of thirty thousand Swedes kept tho Russians in check towards the east : so that the whole region from 1. Courland is a province of Russia, on the Baltic coast, north of the ancient Lithuania, (See Lithuania, p. 312.) 2. Warsaw , the capital of Poland, is on the west bank of the Vistula, six hundred and fifty miles southwest from St. Petersburg, and three hundred and thirty-three miles east from Berlin the Prussian capital. Population, about one hundred and forty thousand. In 1795, in the third partition of Poland, Warsaw was assigned to Prussia: in 1806 it was made the capital of the grand-duchy of Poland ; and in 1815 it became the capital of the new kingdom of Poland, that was united to the crown of Russia, but with a separate constitution and adminis' ration. Warsaw was the principal seat of the ill-fated Polish revolution of 18.°1. See p. 527. (Map No. XVII.) 3. Cracow is on the north bank of the Vistula, one hundred and sixty miles south-west from Warsaw, and two hundred north-east from Vienna. Previously to the seventeenth century Cracow was the metropolis of the kingdom of Poland. Most of the Polish kings, and many other illustrious men, have been buried in the cathedral of Cracow. Among others it contains the tombs of Casimir the Great, of John Sobieski the deliverer of Poland, and of the “ last of «fee Poles,” Kosciusko and Poniatowski. About a mile west of the city is an artificial mound >f earth, one hundred and fifty feet in height, erected to the memory of Kosciusko. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Pultusk is forty miles north of Warsaw, on the western bank of a small tributary of Um V istula. (Map No XVII.) Chat 7.J EIGHTEENTH 3ENTURY. 411 the German Ocean almost to the mouth of the Borysthenes, 1 2 3 and even to the gates of Moscow, was held in awe by the sword of the conqueror. All Europe was filled with astonishment at the arbitrary manner in which he had deposed the king of Poland ; while in tho meantime Charles himself was indulging in the most extravagant views of future conquests and glory. One year he thought sufficient for the conquest of Russia : the pope of Rome was next to feel his vengeance, for having dared to oppose the concession of religious lib srty to the German Protestants, in whose behalf Charles had inter ested himself ; and the youthful hero had even despatched officer* privately into Egypt and Asia, to take plans of the towns, and ex amine into the resources, of those countries. 1 0. The Czar, in the meantime, had not been an idle spectator of the progress of the Swedish conqueror. By keeping large bodies of his troops actively engaged on the Swedish frontiers, he gradually accustomed them to the presence of the enemy, over whom he gained several little advantages ; and having driven the Swedes from both banks of the Neva,’ in the year 1701 he laid the foundations of St. Petersburg, in the heart of his new conquests, and by his judicious measures protected the rising city from the attacks of the Swedish generals. During the year 1704 he gained possession of all Ingria;* the next year he entered Poland at the head of sixty thousand men ; but the advance of Charles from Saxony soon obliged him to retire again towards the Russian territories. 11. In the autumn of 1707, Charles began his march eastward, with the avowed object of the conquest of Russia, driving the Russians back to the eastern banks or the Dnieper, oharles then the dividing line between Russia and Poland. The INTO Czar, seeing his own dominions threatened with war, which must put a stop to the vast plans which he had formed for tb<9 improvement of his people, now offered terms of peace, but Charles intoxicated with success, only replied, “ I will treat at Moscow.” Peter, resolving not to act the part of another Darius, wisely deter- mined to check the career of the invaders by breaking up the roads 1. B0ry3tken.es, see Dnieper, p. 30£. 2. The Neva is the stream by which Lake Ladoga discharges its surplus waters into the Gull of Finland. St. Petersburg is built at its entrance into the Gulf. 3. Ingria was a province extending about one hundred and thirty miles along the snuthen. bank of the Neva and the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland. In 1617 the Swedes took M from the Russians, but in 1700 the latter reconquered a part of it, and in 1703 built St Peters burg within its limits 412 MODE*' N HISTORY. [Past II and desolating the country * /nd Charles, after crossing the Dnieper, and penetrating almost to Hmolensko, 1 found it impracticable to con- tinue his march in the diction of the Russian capital. (1708.) Ilia army, exposed to the risk of famine, and the incessant attacks of the enemy, was slowly wasting away ; yet, instead of falling back upon Poland, he adopted the extraordinary resolution of passing into the Ukraine, ^hither he had been invited by Mazeppa, a Pole by birth, and chie / ’ of the Cossacks, but who had resolved to throw off his al- legiance ',o the Czar, his master. 12. £ march of twelve days, amid almost incredible and unpar nimed hardships, brought the Swedes to the river Desna, 2 where Charles expected to meet his new ally with a body of thirty thousand men ; but, instead of this, he was compelled to force the passage of the stream against a Russian army. The Czar, having been in- formed of the treason of Mazeppa, had disconcerted his schemes by the punishment of his associates ; and the unfortunate chief appeared in the Swedish army rather as a fugitive than as a powerful prince bringing succors to his ally. Charles soon after learned of a still greater misfortune ;hat had befallen' him, the loss of a large convoy and reenforcement expected from Poland. 13. In the midst of one of the severest winters ever known in Europe, (17^8-9) the small Swedish army, now reduced to less than twenty thousand men, found itself in the midst of a hostile and al- most desoVte country, cut off from all resources, and threatened with an attack from nearly a hundred thousand Russians, who were gradually concentrating upon their victims. Yet the iron heart of die Swede did not a moment relent at the sufferings of his soldiers, Although in one day he beheld two thousand of them drop dead be- fore him, from the effects of cold and hunger ; nor had he relinquished the design of penetrating to Moscow. On the opening of spring he advanced to the town and fortress of Pultowa, 3 in the hope of seiz- ing the magazines of the Czar, and opening a passage into the hear* of the Russian territory. 1 4. Toward the end of May Charles invested Pultowa, but while 1. Smolensko is a Russian town on the eastern bank of the Dnieper, two hundred and thirty miles south-west from Moscow. ( Map No. XVII.) 2. The Desna is an eastern tributary of the Dnieper, which enters that river a little above Kiev. ( Map No. XVXs.) 3. Pultowa i? t f"rt Jed town of Russia, on the river Worskla, an eastern tributary of the Dnieper, two hi'-vlrwl miles south-east from Kiev, and four hundred and fifty south-west from Moscow. In conmea 'ration of the victory of Pultowa the Russians have erected a column in dii fi.y, rtriu an obsbs ■ on the field of battle. Chap. V \ EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 413 he was pressing the siege with great vigor, on the 15th of June the Czar appeared before the place with an army seventy thousand strong, and, in spite of the exertions of the q^pultowa. Swedes, succeeded in throwing a strong reenforcement into the place. When Charles discovered the manoeuvre by which this had been effected, he could not forbear saying, “ I sec well that we have taught the Muscovites the art of war ” On the eighth of July a general action was brought on between the two armies, the Czar commanding his troops in person, while Charles, unable to walk, owing to a severe wound he had some days before received in the heel, was carried about the field in a litter, with a pistol in one hand and his drawn sword in the other. The desperate charge of the Swedes broke the Russian cavalry, but the Russian infantry acted with great steadiness, and restored the honor of the day. The Czar received a musket ball through his hat ; his favorite general, Menzi koff, had three horses killed under him ; and the litter in which Charles was carried was shattered in pieces by a cannon ball. But neither the courage nor the discipline of the Swedes could avail against the overwhelming numbers of their antagonists ; and after a dread- ful battle of two hours’ duration the Swedish army was irretrievably ruined. Charles escaped with about thi ee hundred horsemen to the Turkish town of Bender, 1 * abandoning all his treasures to his rival, including the rich spoils of Poland and Saxony. 3 15. Thus in one day the king of Sweden lost the fruits of nearly a hundred victories, and nine years of successful warfare. Nearly 1. Bender is now a Russian town, on the Dniester, in the province of Bessarabia, about fifty- eight miles from the Black Sea. In 1770 the Russians took this town by storm, and reduced it to ashes. Four years later it was restored to Turkey, but was reconquered by the Russians In J809, and was finally ceded to them, with the province of Bessarabia, by the treaty of Bach*, rest, in 1812. (Map No. XVII.) a. The catast •ophe of Pultowa is thus powerfully described by Campbell : “ Oh ! learn the fate that bleeding thousands bore. Led by their Charles to Dnieper’s sandy shore. Faint from his wounds, and shivering in the blast. The Swedish soldier sank and groaned his last ; File after file the stormy showers benumb, Freeze every standard sheet, and hush the drum ; Horseman and horse confessed the bitter pang, And arms and warrior fell with hollow clang : Vet, ere he sank in Nature’s last repose, Ere life’s warm current to the fountain froze, The dying man to Sweden turned his eye, Thought of his home, anti closed it with a sigh. Imperial pride looked sullen on his plight, And Charles beheld nor shuddered at the sight. 414 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II all Europe felt the effects of the battle of Pultowa : ths Saxons called for reverge on a prince who had pillasred and plundered their country : Augustas returned to Poland at the head of a Saxon army, while Stanislaus, knowing it was vain to resist, was unwilling to shed blood in a useless struggle : Denmark, Russia, and Poland, entered into a league against Sweden, and but for the interference of the Ger- man emperor and the maritime powers, the Swedish monarchy would have been rent in pieces. 16. Although Charles was now an exile from his country, relying, for his support, upon the generosity of the Turkish sultan, yet he still en tertained the romantic project of dethroning the Czar, and marching back to Sweden at the head of a victorious army. He endeavored to raise the Turks against his enemies ; and his prospects grew “ bright or dark according as the wavering policy of the Turkish divan was swayed by his intrigues, or by the gold of Russia. At one time the vizier promised to conduct him to Moscow at the head of two hundred thousand men : war was declared against Russia; and the forces of the two nations were assembled on the banks of the Pruth. 1 (July 1711.) Here the Russian army, surrounded by a greatly superior Turkish force, lost, in four days’ fighting, more than sixteen thousand men, when by the ’resolute sa- gacity of the empress Catherine, who accompanied her husband during the campaign, a secret treaty was concluded with the Turkish commander, and Peter was rescued from the same fate that had be- fallen his antagonist at Pultowa. 17. The Swedish monarch continued to linger in Turkey until 1714, still flattering himself that he should yet lead an Ottoman army into Russia. Being at length dismissed by the sultan, and ordered to depart, he still resolved to remain ; and arming his secre- taries, valets, cooks, and grooms, in addition to his three hundred guards, he bade defiance to a Turkish army of twenty-six thousand men. After a fierce resistance, in which many of his -attendants were slain, he was captured, the Turks being careful not to endanger his life. Another revolution in the Turkish divan revived the hopes of Charles, and prolonged his stay ; but when he learned that the Swedish senate intended to create a regent in his absence, and 1, Ti e Pruth , rising in Gallicia, forms the boundary between Bessarabia and Moldavia, and enters he Danube about fifty miles from the Black Sea. By the treaty of Adrianople in 1829, it was stipulated that the Pruth should continue to form the boundary between the Russia# end Turkish territories. ( Map No. XVIIO EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 415 Ohat V.] make peace with Denmark and Russia, his indignation at such pro^ ceedings induced him to return home. He was honorably escorted to the Turkish frontiers ; but although orders ™ had been given that he should be treated in the Austrian and German dominions with all due honor, he chose to travel in the disguise of a courier, and toward the close of November 1714 reached Stralsund, the capital of Swedish Pomerania. 18. At the time of the return of Charles, Sweden was in a truly deplorable condition, — surrounded by enemies — without money, trade, or credit — her foreign provinces lost, and one hundred and fifty thou- sand of her best soldiers slaves in Turkey and Siberia, or locked up in the fortresses of Denmark and Poland. Yet Charles, instead of seeking that ™eace which his kingdom so much needed, immediately issued orders for renewing the war with redoubled vigor. During the year 1715, the Danish and Russian fleets swept the Baltic, and threatened Stockholm ; x and Stralsund, though defended by Charles with his accustomed bravery, was com pelled to surrender after a siege of two months. On the night be fore the surrender Charles made his escape in a small boat, safely passing the batteries and fleets of the allies. In the following year he made an irruption into Norway, but his army was driven back greatly diminished in numbers. His attention was next occupied with the scheme of his favorite minister, Baron Gortz, for uniting the kings of Sweden and Russia in strict amity, and then dictating the law to Europe. The plot embraced the restoration of Stanislaus to the throne of Poland, and Charles was to have the . command of a combined Swedish and Russian army of invasion, for establishing the Pretender. (son of James II.) on the throne of England. .The Czar seemed not averse to the project, and a conference of the ministers of the two nations had already been appointed for making the final arrangements, when the death of the king of Sweden rendered abor- tive a revolution that might have thrown all Europe into a state of political combustion. In the autumn of 1718 Charles had invaded Norway a second time, and laid siege to x ' DEATH Frederickshall ; 3 but while engaged in viewing the works 1 Stockholm, the capital city, and principal commercial emporium of Sweden, is built partly on a number of islands and partly on the main land, at the junction of the Lake Maelar with the Baltic, four hundred and forty miles a little south of west from St. Petersburg. It was founded in the thirteenth century, but was not recognized as the capital till the seventeenth, previously to whicn Upsala had been the seat of the court. ( Map No. XIV.) 2. Frederickshall is a maritime town of Norway, near the north-east angle of the Skager- rack. fifty-seven miles south-east from Christiana. The town spreads irregularly around a p6is 416 MODERN HISTORY. [Part EL in the midst of a tremendous fire from the enemy, he was struck dead by a ball from the Danish batteries. (Dec. 1718.) 19. The death of Charles produced an entire change m the affairs of Sweden. The late king’s sister was declared queen by the volun tary choice of the States of the kingdom ; but the last reign had taught them a severe lesson, and they compelled their new sovereign to take a solemn oath that she would never attempt the establish- ment of arbitrary power. The project of a union with Russia was at once abandoned, and the new government united its forces to those of England against the Czar. For a while the Russian fleet desolat- ed the coasts of Sweden, but in 1721 peace was established between the two powers by the treaty of Nystad. 1 Russia gained thereby a large accession of territory on the shores of the Baltic, and dominion over the Gulf of Finland, which Peter had purchased as a highway of commerce to the ocean, with the toils and perils of twenty years of warfare. 20. Charles the Twelfth, at the time of his death, was little more than thirty-six years of age, one-half of which had been xr. his S p en t amid the turmoil of arms, or wasted in foreign exile. War was his ruling passion; but the only ob- ject of his conquests seemed to be the satisfaction of bestowing their fruits upon others, without any apparent wish to enlarge his own do minions. After all his achievements, nought but the memory of his renown survives him ; for all the acts of his reign sprung from a misdirected ambition, and not one of them was conducive to the per- manent welfare of his country. u He was rather an extraordinary than a great man,” says Yoltaire, “ and more worthy to be admired than imitated. His life ought to be a lesson to kings, how much a pacific and happy government is preferable to so much glory. ” a pendicular rock four hundred feet in height, on which is the strong fortress of Frederickstem, at the siege of which Charles XII. was killed. It was doubted for awhile whether the king met his death by a ball from the fortress, or from n assassin :n the rear ; but there seem to be no good grounds for supposing that treachery had anything to do with the matter. Dr. Johnson has availed himself of the suspicion in his ad? mirable description of the character of the Swedish warrior. The hat, clothes, buff-belt, boota ( &c., which Charles wore when he was shot, are still preserved in the arsenal of Stockholm. 1. Nystad is a town of Finland, on the eastern coast of the Baltic, one hundred and fiftj utiles north-east from Stockholm. a. The following is Dr. Johnson’s description of the character of Charles XII. M On what foundation stands the warrior’s pride, How just his hopes, let Swedish Charles decide. A frame of adamant, a soul of fire, No dangers fright him, and no labors tire ; Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 41 ? 21. The Czar Peter, or, as he is usually called in history, Pet© the Great, died in 1725, seven years after the death of X n. death his great rival the king of Sweden. Through a life of AND 1 , CHARACTER restless activity he labored for the improvement and OF PEXEB prosperity of his country ; and while Charles left behind THE great. him nothing but ruins, Peter the Great may truly be regarded as th< founder of an empire. The ruler of a barbarous people, he earlj gaw the advantages of civilization, and by the measures he adopt ed for reforming his empire he truly merited the epithet of Great Yet it has been truly said of him that although he civilized his sub jects, he himself remained a barbarian ; for the sternness, or rather the ferocity, of his disposition, .spared neither age nor sex, nor his dear- est connexions. So conscious was he of his frailties that he was accus- tomed to say, “ I can reform my people, but I cannot reform myself.” He never learned the lessons of humanity ; and his sublime but un- cultivated genius continually wandered without a guide. It is a high and just aulogium of his character to say that “ his virtues were hia own, and his defects those of education and country.” O’er love, o’er fear, extends his wide domain, Unconquered lord of pleasure and of pain ; No joys to him pacific sceptres yield, War sounds tlie trump, he rushes to the field < Behold surrounded kings their powers combine, And one capitulate, and one resign ; Peace courts his hand, but spreads her charms in vain *, ‘Think nothing gained,’ he cries ‘ till naught remrfin ; On Moscow’s walls, till Gothic standards fly, And all be mine beneath the polar sky.’ The march begins in military state, And nations on his eye suspended wait ; Stern famine guards the solitary coast, And winter barricades the realms of frost : He comes ; nor want, nor cold, his course delay ; Hide, blushing Glory, hide Pultowa’s day. The vanquished hero leaves his broken bands. And shows his miseries in distant lands ; Condemned a needy supplicant to wait While ladies interpose, and slaves debate. But did not chance at length her error mend ? Did no subverted empire mark his end? Did rival monarchs give the fatal wound ? Or hostile millions nress him to the ground 1 His fall was destine- to a barren strand, A petty fortress, an< a dubious hand : He left the name, at which the world grew pam, To paint a moral, or adorn a tale.” 27 418 MODERN HISTORY [Part li III. Spanish Wars, and Wars of the Austrian Succession. — 1. The treaty of Utrecht in 1713, which closed the war of the Spanish succession, had given pacification to southern and west- ~r ern Europe, by defining the territorial limits of the belligerents in such a manner as to preserve that bal- ance of power on which the peace of Europe depended. The in triguing efforts of Spain in contravention of that portion of the treaty by which Philip V. renounced forever all right of succession to the crown of France, induced England and Holland, in 1717, to unite with France in forming a Triple Alliance guaranteeing the ful- filment of the treaty ; but ^during the same year a Spanish fleet, entering the Mediterranean, quickly reduced the island of Sardinia, which had been assigned to Austria ; and in the following year an- other fleet and army captured Sicily, which had been adjudged to the duke of Savoy. These acts of aggression roused the resentment of Austria ; and by her accession to the terms of the Triple Alliance, the Quadruple Alliance was formed, for the purpose of putting a check to the ambition of Spain. A British squadron, under admiral Byng, sailed into the Mediterranean and destroyed the Spanish fleet, whilst an Austrian force passed into Sicily to contest with the Spanish army the sovereignty of that island. The successes of the allies soon compelled even Spain to accede to the terms of the Alliance for pre- serving the peace of Europe. 2. In 1739, however, the general peace was interrupted by a war between England and Spain, growing out of the com- between mercial and colonial difficulties of the two nations. For England a long time Spain, claiming the right of sovereignty over and Spain. geas adjacent to her American possessions, which had been confirmed by successive treaties, had distressed and insulted the commerce of Great Britain by illegal seizures made under the pretext of the right of search for contraband goods; while Britain on the other hand, secretly encouraged a contraband traffic, little to her honor, and deeply injurious to Spain. War was first declared by England : the vessels of each nation in the ports of the other were confiscated ; and powerful armaments were fitted out by the one to seize, and by the other to defend, the Spanish American possess- ions, while pirates from Biscay harassed the home trade of England. 3. While this war continued with various success, a general Euro- pean war broke out, called the “ war of the Austrian succession, 5 ' presenting a scene of the greatest confusion, and eclipsing, by its im Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 419 parlance, the petty conflicts on the American seas. Cnarles VI., em- peror of Austria, the famous competitor of Philip for the throne of Spain, died in the autumn of 1 740 ; and as he had no male issue he left his dominions to his eldest daughter, Maria Theresa, queen of Hungary, in accordance with a solemn of the ordinance called the Pragmatic Sanction, 1 which had AUSTRIAN ° 7 __ SUCCESSION. been confirmed by all the leading States of Europe. This sanction, however, did not secure his daughter, after his death, from the attacks of a host of enemies, who hoped to make good their pretensions, by force of arms, to different portions of her estates. 4 The elector of Bavaria declared himself, by virtue of his descent from the eldest daughter of Ferdinand I., the proper heir of the hereditary Austrian provinces : the elector of Saxony, who was also Augustus III., king of Poland, made the same claims by virtue of a preoeding marriage with the house of Saxony : Spain was anxious to appropriate to herself some of the Italian principalities, and vir- tually laid claim to the whole Austrian succession, while Frederick II., the young king of Prussia, marched suddenly into Silesia, and took possession of that country. France, swayed by hereditary hatred of Austria, sought a dismemberment of that empire ; while England offered her aid to Maria Theresa, the daughter of her ancient ally, to preserve the integrity of the Austrian dominions. 5. The plan of the coalition against the Austrian queen embraced the elevation of Charles Albert, the electoral prince of Bavaria, to the sovereignty of all the German States; .coalition and accordingly, in the summer of 1741, two French against armies crossed the Bhine, and being joined by the Ba- varian forces, seized Prague, made several other important conquests, threatened Vienna, and compelled Maria Theresa to flee from her capital. In a diet held at Frankfort, 2 * * * in Frebruary 1742, the impe- rial crown, through the influence of France and Prussia, was given to Charles Albert In the meantime Maria Theresa, crushed m 1. Pragmatic Sanction There are four ordinances with this title mentioned in history: l£% ll at of Charles VII. of France, in 1438, on which rest the liberties of the Gallican church : 2d, the decree of the German diet in 1439, sanctioning the former : 3d, the ordinance of the Germar emperor Charles VI. in 1740, by which he endeavored to secure the succession to his female descendants, and which led to the war of the Austrian succession ; and 4th, the ordinance by which Charles 111. of Spain, in 1759, ceded the throne of Naples to his third son and his posterity, 2. Frankfort , or Frankfort-on-the-Mayn , is a celebrated commercial city of Germany, on the north bank of the Mayn, eighteen miles north-east from its confluence with the Rhine at Mayence. There is also a Frankfort-on-the-Oder, ninety-five mile3 north-east from Dresden, (Map No. XVII.) 420 MODERN HISTORY. [Part E everything but energy of spirit by the vast array against her, pre gented herself, with her infant son, in the diet of the H ungarian nobles, and having first sworn to protect their independence, de manded their aid in tones that her beauty and her tears rendered more persuasive. The swords of the Hungarians flashed in the air as their acclamations replied, “We will die for our sovereign Maria Theresa !” On the very day that Charles Albert was crowned at Frankfort, Munich, 1 his own capital, fell into the hands of the Aus- trian general ; and while Bavaria was plundered, the new emperor was compelled to live in retirement far from his own dominions. In another quarter fortune was not equally favorable to of P 742-3 ^ ustr i a 5 and Maria Theresa was compelled to purchaso peace of the Prussians by the surrender of Silesia. (June 1741.) This loss was compensated, however, by a successful blockade of Prague, then in the hands of the French, who were at length forced to a disastrous retreat, while England began to take a more active part in the war against France. The losses of France were great on the ocean ; and in 1743 George II. of England, advancing into Germany at the head of a powerful army, defeated the French at Dettin- gen, 2 and compelled them to retreat across the Rhine. (June 1743.) 6. The year 1744 is distinguished by the renewal of hostilities on 1744 P ar ^ ^ rec ^ e ™ c -k> who, having formed an alliance with the king of France, entered Bohemia at the head of seventy thousand soldiers, and in the beginning of September sat down before Prague, which soon surrendered, and with it a garrison of eighteen thousand men. But misfortunes rapidly succeeded this brilliant beginning of the campaign ; the illness of Louis XV., king of France, prevented the promised diversion on the side of the Rhine ; and Frederick was eventually compelled to retreat to his own do- minions, with the loss of twenty thousand men. The king of Prussia acknowledged, in his own memoirs, that no general committed greater faults during the campaign than he did himself : and that the conduct of his opponent, the Austrian general, marshal Traun, was a model of perfection, which every military man would do well to study. 7. The death of Charles Albert, early in January 1745, removed all reasonable grounds for continuing the war ; but the national animosity between England and France prevent 1. Munich is a large German city, the capital of Bavaria, on the Isar, a southern branch ol the Danube, two hundred and twenty miles west from Vienna. It is called the “Athens of south Germany.” (Jllap No. XVII.) 2. Dettingen is a small village of Bavaria, on the Mayn, sixteen miles south east ot Frankfort Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 421 ed the restoration of peace. During the same year, the celebrated French general, marshal Saxe, obtained the victory of Fontenoy 1 over the Austrians, and their Du ,ch and English allies commanded by the duke of Cumberland, and conquered the Austrian Netherlands and Dutch Flanders The king of Prussia conducted a successful cam- paign in Silesia and Saxony, and in December concluded with Austria the treaty of Dresden, which confirmed him in the possession of Si lesia. In the meantime the German States had elected for their emperor Francis I., the husband of Maria Theresa, and in the treaty of Dresden he was formally acknowledged by Frederick. 8. In Italy the combined armies of France, Spain, and Naples 5 obtained important advantages over the Austrians and Sardinians ; and at the close of the campaign they held possession of all Lom- bardy and Piedmont. 2 During the same year, while the king of England was warring with the French in the Netherlands, his own dominions were invaded. The loss of the English at Fon- i i vm. INVA- tenoy seemed to present to Charles Edward, grandson SION 0F of James II., commonly called the Young Pretender, England, a fit opportunity for attempting the restoration of his family to the throne of England. Being furnished by the French monarch with a supply of money and arms, at the head of a small force he landed, in July, on the coast of Scotland, and being joined by many of the Highland clans, on the 16th of September he was enabled to take possession of Edinburgh, 3 and a few days later de- feated the royal forces at Preston Pans. 4 In November he entered 1. Fontenoy is a village of Belgium, in the province of Hainault (a-no), forty-three miles south-west from Brussels. The battle was fought April 30th, 1745. Voltaire’s account of it, in his “ Age of Louis XV.,” is extremely interesting. ( Map No. XV.) 2. Piedmont , ( pied-de-monte , “foot of the mountain,”) the principal province of the Sardinian monarchy, has the Swiss canton of Valais and the Sardinian province of Savoy, on the north, and Savoy and France on the west. Capital, Turin. In 1802 Napoleon incorporated it with France, but it was restored in 1814. 3. Edinburgh, the metropolis of Scotland, county of Mid Lothian, is two miles south of the Frith of Forth, and three hundred and thirty-seven 'miles north-west from the city of London. It is principally built on three parallel ridges running east and west. At the western extremity of the central ridge, which is terminated by a precipitous rock four hundred and thirty-four feet above the level of the sea, is the castle ; and a mile distant, at the eastern extremity of the ridge, is ihe palace of Holyrood, one hundred and eight feet above the same level. The palace has a peculiar interest from the circumstance that the apartments occupied by the unfortunate Queen Mary have been carefully preserved in the state in which she left them. Connected with the palace, on the north, are the ruins of the abbey of Holyrood. Edinburgh is highly celebrated for its literary and educational institutions. ( Map No. XVI.) 4. Preston Pans is a small seaport town of Scotland, on the south shore of the Frith of Forth, seven and a-half miles east of Edinburgh. It derives its name from its having, for a length oned period, had a number of salt work s or pans for the production of salt by tho evaporation *>f sea-water. ( Map No. XVI.) 422 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II, England, and advanced to within a hundred miles of London, but was then compelled to retreat into Scotland, where, after having de- feated th a royal forces a second time, his cause was utterly ruined by the decisive battle of Culloden. 1 (April 1746.) To the disgrace of the English, the surrounding country was given up to pillage and de- vastation. After a variety of adventures Charles reached France in safety; but numbers of his unfortunate adherents perished on the scaffold, or by military execution, while multitudes were transported to the American plantations. 9. During the year 1745 the important French fortress of Louis- burg, on the island of Cape Breton, 2 was captured by IX. EVENTS IX AMERICA. the British and their colonial allies, an event which x. 1 *746-7. vived the spirits of the English, and roused France to a great vindictive effort for the recovery of Louisburg, and the devas- tation of the whole American coast from Nova Scotia to Georgia Accordingly a powerful naval armament was sent out to America in 1746 ; but it was so enfeebled by storms and shipwrecks, and dispirit- ed by the loss of its commander, that nothing was accomplished by it. 10. During the years 1746 and 1747 hostilities were carried on with various success by the French and the Spaniards on one side, and the English, Dutch, and Austrians, on the d ther. By sea the French lost almost their last ship ; but no im- portant naval battles were fought, as the English navy had scarcely a rival. On the continent, northern Italy and the Netherlands were the chief seats of the war. The French were driven from the former, and the Austrians and their allies from the latter. XI. TREATY of aix-la- Trance made frequent overtures of peace, and m Goto- ohapelle, ber 1748 the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle was concluded between all the belligerents, on the basis of a restitution of all conquests made during the war, and a mutual release of prison- ers without ransom. The treaty left unsettled the conflicting claims 1. Culloden, or Culloden Moor , is a heath in Scotland, four miles east of Inverness, and one hundred and fifteen miles north-west from Edinburgh. The battle of Culloden, fought April 27th, 1746, term’nated the attempts of the Stuart family to recover the throne of England. {Map No. XVI.) 2. The island of Cape Breton, called by the French Isle Royale, is on the south-eastern border of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Louisburg, once called the “ Gibraltar of America,” was a strongly-fortified town, having one of the best harbors in the world. After its capture by general Wolfe in 1758, (see p. 430,) its walls were demolished, and the materials of its buildings were carried away for the construction of Halifax, and other towns on the coast. Only a tew fishermen’s huts are now found within the environs of the city, and so complete is the ruin that it is with t ifficulty the outlines of the fortifications, and of the principal buildings, can b* traced. Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 423 of the English and Spaniards to the trade of the American seas but France recognized the Hanoverian succession to the English throne, and henceforth abandoned the cause of the Pretender. Neither France nor England obtained any recompense for the enormous ex- penditure of blood and treasure which the war occasioned; but in one aspect the result was favorable to all parties, as, by preserving the mity of the Austrian dominion, it maintained the due balance of power in continental Europe. IY. The Seven Years’ War: — 1756-63. a — 1. The treaty ol Aix-la-Chapelle proved to be little better than a sus- r EIQHT pension of arms. A period of eight years of nominal years of peace that followed did not produce, in the different rEACE ‘ States of Europe, the desired feeling of united firmness and security • but all seemed unsettled, and in dread of new commotions. Tw< causes, of a nature entirely distinct, united to involve all rT Christendom in a general war. The first was the long of another standing colonial rivalry between France and England ; WAR< and the second, the ambition of the Great Frederick of Prussia, and the jealousy with which the court of Austria regarded the increase of the Prussian monarchy. 2. Immediately after the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, difficulties arose between France and England respecting their colonial possess- ions in India. Several years previous to the breaking out of the European war, the forces of the English and French East India companies, having taken part, as auxiliaries, in the wars between the native princes of the country, had been engaged in a course of hos tilities at a time when no war existed between the two nations. 3. More serious causes of quarrel arose in North America. The French possessed Canada and Louisiana, one commanding the mouth of the St. Lawrence, the other that of the Mississippi ; while the in tervening territory was occupied by the English colonists. The limits of the American colonial possessions of the two nations had been left undefined at the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, and hence dis- putes arose among the colonists, who did not always arrange their controversies by peaceful discussion. The French made settlements at the head of the Bay of Fundy in Nova Scotia, claiming the ter a That part of the war waged in America between France and England is better known in American history as tha “ French and Indian war.” Although hostilities began, in .he colonies, In 1754, no formal declaration of war was made by either France or England until ibe breaking ooi c4 the seueral European war in 1750. 424 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II rifcory as a part of New Brunswick; while, by extending a frontier line of posls along the Ohio river, they aimed at confining the British colonies to the Atlantic coast, and cutting IXI BEGIN" ' 0 ning of them off from the rest of the continent. In 1754 the hostilities English Colonial authorities began hostilities on the IN ° ' Ohio, without waiting for the formality of a declaration of war : in the following year the French forts at the head of the Bay of Fundy were reduced by colonel Monckton ; but the English general, Braddock, who was sent against Fort Du Quesne, on the Ohio, was defeated with a heavy loss, and his army was saved from total destruction only by the courage and conduct of major Wash- ington, who commanded the provincial troops. 4. These colonial difficulties were the prominent causes of enmity between France and England ; but such were now the bonds of in- terest and alliance that united the different European States, that the quarrel betwixt any two led almost inevitably to a general war. A cause of war entirely distinct from the foregoing was found in the relations existing between Prussia and Austria. Maria Theresa was still dissatisfied with the loss of Silesia, and Frederick, too clear- sighted not to see that a third struggle with her was inevitable, abandoned the lukewarm aid of France, and formed an alliance with England, (Jan. 1756,) an event which altogether changed the exist- ing relations between the different States of Europe. Prussia was IV thus separated from her old ally France, and England European from Austria, while France and Austria, nations that alliance. j ia( j k een enemies for three hundred years, found them- selves placed in so close political proximity that an alliance between them became indispensable to the safety of each. Augustus III., king of Poland and also elector of Saxony, allied himself with Aus- tria for the purpose of ruining Prussia ; the empress Elizabeth of Iiussia, entertaining a personal hatred of Frederick, who had made her the object of his political satires, joined the coalition against him, while the latter could regard Sweden in no other light than that of an enemy in the event of a general war. 5. Thus Austria, Iiussia, France, Sweden, and Poland, had all united against one of the smaller kingdoms, which was deprived of all foreign resources, with the exception of England ; and the latter, in a continental war, could give her ally but little effective aid. Austria looked with confidence upon the recovery of Silesia ; th* partition of Prussia was already planned, and the day,* of the Prua Chap. V.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 425 Sian monarchy appeared to he already numbered ; but in this most unequal contest the superiority of Frederick as a general, and the discipline of his troops, enabled Prussia to come out of the war with increased power and glory. 6. Frederick, without waiting for the storm that was about to burst upon him, marched forth to meet it, to the surprise ^ FIRSX of his enemies, who were scarcely aware that he was campaign ok arming. In the month of August, 1756, he entered fre^umuok, Saxony at the head of seventy thousand men, blockaded the Saxon army, and cut off its supplies, defeated an army of Aus trians that advanced to the relief of their allies, and finally com pelled the Saxon forces, now reduced to fourteen thousand men, to surrender themselves prisoners, (Oct. 1756,) many of whom he forced to enter the Prussian service. Thus the result of the first campaign of Frederick was the conquest of all Saxony. 7. It was not till the month of May and June 1756, that England and France issued their declarations of war against each other, al- though hostilities had for some time previously been carried on be- tween their colonies. France commenced the war by an expedition against the island of Minorca, then in possession of the English ; and that important fortress surrendered, although admiral Byng had been sent out with a squadron for the relief of the place. In xYmerica the English had planned, early in the season, the reduction of Crown Point, Niagara, and Fort Du Quesne, but not a single ob- ject of the campaign was either accomplished or attempted. 8. At the beginning of the campaign of 1757 it was estimated that the armies of the enemies of Frederick, on foot, and preparing to march against him, exceeded seven hundred thousand men, while the force which he and his English allies could bring into the field amounted to but little more than one third of that number. Frederick, having succeeded in deceiv'ir * the Aus- trians as to his real intentions, began the campaign by invading Bo- hemia, where, at the head of sixty-eight thousand men, he fought and won the celebrated and sanguinary battle of Prague, (May 6,) against an army of seventy-five thousand Austrians. Dearly, how- ever, was the victory purchased, as twelve thousand five hundred Prussians lay dead or wounded on the field of battle. Seeking to follow up his advantage, in the following month Frederick experi- enced a severe check, being defeated by the greatly superior foroe 426 MODERN HISTORY. (Taut II of marshal jDaun at Kolin, 1 in consequence of which the Prussians were forced to raise the siege of Prague, and evacuate Bohemia. The Austrians and their allies, after this unexpected victory, resumed operations with increased activity : a Russian army of one hundred and 1 wenty thousand men invaded Prussia on the east ; seventeen thousand Swedes entered Pomerania ; and two powerful French armies crossed the Rhine to attack the English and Hanoverian allies of Prussia commanded by the duke of Cumberland. The latter, being defeated, was compelled to sign a disgraceful convention by which his army of thirty-eight thousand men was reduced to a state of in- activity. 9. The loss of his English allies at this juncture was a most griev ous blow to the king of Prussia. While he held the Austrians at bay in Lusatia, Saxony, whence the Prussians drew their supplies, was opened to the French; the Russians were advancing from the east, and already the Swedes were near the gates of Berlin, 2 when the sudden recall of the Russian army, owing to the serious illness of the Russian empress, illumined the troubled path of Frederick with a glimmering of hope, which promised to lead him on to better fortune. After having in vain tried to give battle to the Austrians, he suddenly broke up his camp, and by rapid marches advanced into Saxony, to drive the French out of that country. 10. Early in November, Frederick, at the head of only twenty thousand men, came up with the enemy, whose united forces amount- ed to seventy thousand. After some manoeuvring he threw his little army into the low village of Rossback, 3 the heights around which, covered with batteries, served at once to defend his position, and conceal his movements. Here the French and their allies, antici- pating a certain victory, determined to surround him, and thus, by making him prisoner, at once put an end to the war. To accomplish this object they advanced by forced marches, with sound of trumpet ; anxious to soe if Frederick would have the courage to make a stand 1. Kolin is a small town of Bohemia, thirty-seven miles a little south of east from F/figue The battle of Kolin, fought June 18th, 1757, was the first which Frederick lost in the beven Years’ War. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Berlin , the capital of the Prussian States, and the ordinary residence of the monarch, Is on the river Spree, a branch of the Elbe, in the province of Brandenburg, one hundred and sixty mites south-east from Hamburg. Berlin is one of the finest cities in Europe, and is called the Athens of the north of Germany. (Map No. XVII.) 3. Rossback is near the western bank of the river Saale, in Prussian Saxony, about twenty miles south-west from Leipsic, and consequently near the battle-fields of Leipsic, Jena, ind Lutzen. The banks of the Saale are fully immortalized by carnage. (Map No. XVII.) CflAP. V J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 427 against them. The morning of the 5th of November Frederick spent in reconn litering the enemy, and learned their plans for envel oping him ; but he kept his forces perfectly quiet until the afternoon without allowing a single gun to be fired, when, giving his orders, and suddenly concentrating the greater part of his troops to one point, he hurled them, column after column, in one irresistible tor rent upon the foe Never before had the French encountered such rapidity of action : they were completely overwhelmed and routed before they could fiven form into line ; and in less than half an hour the action was decided. “ It was the most inconceivable and com- plete route and discomfiture,” says Voltaire, u of which history makes any mention. The defeats of Agincourt, Cressy, and Poitiers, were not so humiliating.” 11. The French fled precipitately from the field of battle, and never stopped until they had reached the middle States of Germany while many only paused when they had placed the Rhine between themselves and the victors. Seven thousand prisoners, and three hundred and twenty officers of every rank, including eleven generals, fell into the hands of the king, while the loss of the Prussians amounted to only five hundred in killed and wounded. Frederick caused the wounded among the prisoners to be treated with the greatest humanity and attention. The officers of distinction, who were taken prisoners, he invited to sup with him. He told them he regretted he could not offer them a more splendid entertainment, “ but gentlemen,” said he, “ I did not expect you so soon, nor in so large numbers.” 12. The victory of Rossback had recovered Saxony, and, what was equally important, it gave an opportunity to the English and Hanoverian troops to resume their arms, which they did on the ground of the alleged infraction of the convention by the French general. Still the affairs of Prussia were gloomy in the extreme, for during the absence of Frederick from Silesia, that province had been overrun by the Austrians, and the Prussians had been defeated in several battles. Frederick returned thither in December with thirty thousand men, and on the 5th of that month was met, oil the vast plain of Lissa, 1 by the Austrian force of ninety thousand men *. The Lissa here mentioned is a small town of Silesia, fourteen miles west of Bresiau the capital of the province, and about one hundred and seventy-five miles south-east from Berlin. Ihe battle was fought in the plain between Lissa and Breslau. There is another and large’ .own of Lissa in Posen, fifty-five miles north-west from Breslau. ( Map No. XVII.) 428 MODERN HISTORY. Past 13. exactly one month after the battle of Rossback. Here Frederick had recourse to those means by which he had often been enabled to double his power by the celerity of his manoeuvres. Having succeed- ed in masking the movements of his troops, by taking possession of some heights near the field of battle, and causing a false attack to be made on the Austrian right, he fell suddenly upon their left and routed it before the right could be brought to its support. The eon- sequent disorder^was communicated to the whole Austrian army, and in the course of three hours Frederick gained a most complete vic- tory. The Austrians lost seven thousand four hundred men in killed and wounded, twenty-one thousand prisoners, and one hundred and seventeen cannon, while the total Prussian loss was less than five thousand men. In this extraordinary battle superior genius tri- umphed over superior numbers. When Frederick was told of the many insulting things that the Austrians had said of him and his little army, “ I pardon them readily,” said he, “ the follies they may have uttered, in consideration of those they have just committed.” 13. The campaign of 1757 was the most eventful of all those waged by Frederick ; but although he had been forced to risk his fate in eight battles, and more than a hundred partial actions, his numerous enemies failed in their object. The battles of Rossback and Lissa inspired the English people with the greatest enthusiasm for the Prussian army, and the result was a fresh subsidiary treaty entered into with Frederick, by which England agreed to furnish him an annual subsidy of six hundred and seventy thousand pounds, and to send an army into Germany. Mr. Pitt, recently appointed prime minister, entered fully into the views of supporting Frederick, de- claring that “ the American colonies of the French were to be con- quered through Germany.” 14. The campaign of 1758 was opened by Ferdinand, duke of Brunswick, who, by the influence of the king of Prussia, had been appointed commander of the English and Hanoverian troops in Germany. At the head of thirty thousand men he drove a French army of eighty thousand beyond the Rhine, and in a brief campaign of three months, from January to April, took eleven thousand prisoners. Frederick commenced the campaign in March, by reducing the last remaining fortress in Silesia : then he penetrated to Olmutz, 1 in Moravia, but failed in the siege of that 1. Olmutz , the former capital of Moravia, and one of the strongest fortresses of the Austrian empire, is on the small riv?r March or Morava, one hundred and five miles north-east from Chat. V ] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 429 place. Here the Austrians completely surrounded him in the very heart ol their country, hut he effected a retreat as honorable as a victory, and suddenly directed his march against the Russians, who were committing the most shocking ravages in the province of Bran denburg, sparing neither age nor sex. 15. At the head of thirty thousand men Frederick met the enemy, numbering fifty thousand, on the 24th of August, near the small village of Zorndorf, 1 where one of the most sanguinary battles of the Seven Years’ War was fought, continuing from nine o’clock in the morning until ten at night. On the evening of this sanguinary day nineteen thousand Russians and eleven thousand Prussians lay dead and wounded on the field of battle ; but the victory was claimed for the latter The Prussian king in person led 'the last attacks, and so much was he exposed to the fire of the Russians that all his aids, and the pages who attended him, were either killed, wounded, or taken prisoners. The able Austrian general, count Daun, who had often fought Fred- erick, and sometimes with success, had written to the general of the Russians, “ not to risk a battle with a wily enemy, whose cunning and resources he was not yet acquainted with but as the courier who carried this dispatch fell into the hands of the Prussians, Fred- erick himself answered the letter in the following words : — “ You had reason to advise the Russian general to be on his guard against a crafty and designing enemy, whom you were better acquainted with than he was ; for he has given battle, and has been beaten.” At a later period in this campaign count Daun surprised and routed the right wing of Frederick’s troops at Hochkirchen, 2 in Saxony, when nothing but the admirable perfection of the Prussian discipline saved the army from utter destruction. But this reverse could not damp the spirits of Frederick : he drove the Austrians a second time from Silesia ; and then compelled Daun to abandon the sieges of Dresden and Leipsic, and retreat into Bohemia. At the end of the campaign Frederick found himself in possession of the same countries as in the preceding year, while, in addition, northern and central Germany had been recovered from the French. 16. In the meantime the war had been carried on in other quarters Vienna. It was taken by the Swedes in the thirty years’ war, was besieged unsuccessfully by Frederick the Great in 1758, and Lafayette was confined there in 1794. (Map No. XVII.) 1. Zorndorf is a small village of Brandenburg, about twenty miles north-east from Frauk fort on the Oder, and abeut the same distance south-east from Custrim. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Hochkirchen is a small village in the present kingdom of Saxony, (formerly in Lusaua,) Oiirty-seven miles east from Dresden. It is a short distance south-east from Bautzen which was the chief town of Upper Lusatia. (Map No. XVII.) 430 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II between the French and the English. In India the French were generally successful, as they not only preserved their possessions, but wrested several fortresses from their rivals, but they were deprived of all their settlements on the coast of Africa, while in North America they abandoned Fort du Quesne to the English, and were obliged to surrender the important fortress of Louisburg, after a vig- orous- siege conducted by generals Amherst and Wolfe. 17. The campaign of 1759 commenced under favorable auspices for the Prussians, as they succeeded early in the season tiii. 1769 J J in destroying the Russian magazines in Poland, and broke up the Austrian armies in Bohemia ; but in August Frederick himself suffered a greater loss, in the battle of Kunersdorf, 1 than an}' he had yet experienced. At the head of only forty-eight thou sand men he attacked the combined Russian and Austrian force ot ninety-six thousand, defended by strong intrenchments, but he was defeated with the loss of more than eighteen thousand men in killed and wounded. The Russian and Austrian loss was nearly sixteen thousand ; in allusion to which, the Russian general, writing to the empress an account of the battle, said : “ Your majesty must not be surprised at the greatness of our loss. It is the custom of the king of Prussia to sell his defeats very dear.” At a later period of the campaign Frederick rashly exposed fourteen thousand of his troops in the defiles of Bohemia, where they were surrounded by the Aus trians, and, after a valiant resistance, compelled to surrender, when only three thousand of the number remained unwounded. Yet, after all the reverses which the Prussians sustained, the only permanent acquisition made by the Austrians was Dresden, for Frederick’s vigor and rapidity of movement rendered even their victories fruitless. 18. The campaign of Ferdinand of Brunswick against the French during this year, was more successful than that of the king of Prussia, On the 1st of August he attacked the French army of seventy thou- sand men near Minden, 2 and obtained a complete victory, which lone prevented the French from gaining possession of the king of England’s Hanoverian dominions. On the ocean and in the colonies the results of the year 1759 were highly favorable to the English. The French fleets were destroyed; the English gained a decided 1. Kunersdorf ia a small village of the province of Brandenburg, a short distance south of Frankfort-^n-the-Oder, and on the eastern bank of the river, fifty-five miles south-east from Berlin. The battle fought near this town is sometimes called the battle of Frankfort. 2. Min ten is a Prussian town in Westphalia, on the west bank of the Weser, near the Has overian frontier, thirty-five miles south-west from Hanover. ( Map No. Y VII.) Chap V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 431 preponderance in India ; while the conquest of Canada was achieved by the gallant Wolfe, who fell in the moment of victory before the walls of Quebec. 19. After a winter spent in futile attempts at negotiation, the most vigorous preparations were made by all parties for ^ the campaign of 1760. It opened with a continuation of misfortunes to Prussia, — with the loss of nearly nine thousand men surrounded and taken prisoners by the Austrians, — with an unsuc- cessful attempt on Dresden by Frederick himself, and the surrender of an important fortress in Silesia. For the space of a year Fred- erick had met with almost continual reverses, but, still undaunted and undismayed, his transcendent talents never shone to greater ad- vantage than when brought into action by the rigors of fortune. At the very moment when he was surrounded with overwhelming forces of Russians and Austrians, to the number of one hundred and seventy- five thousand men, and his ruin seemed inevitable, his genius saved him, and converted what appeared the certainty of defeat into a series of brilliant victories. While his enemies were preparing to attack him in his camp, he suddenly fell upon one of their divisions at Liegnitz 1 and almost annihilated it before the others were aware that he had changed his position. (Aug. 16th.) In November he at- tacked the intrenched camp of marshal Daun at Torgou, 2 having previously declared to his generals his determination to finish the war by a decided victory, or perish, with his whole army, in the at- tempt. The battle was perhaps the bloodiest fought during the whole war, but the impetuosity of the Prussians was irresistible, and the result recovered to Frederick all Saxony, except Dresden, and compelled the Austrians, Russians, and Swedes, to evacuate the Prussian dominions. 20. The campaign of Ferdinand of Brunswick against the French in northern and western Germany was marked by a great number of skirmishes which fatigued both parties, and in which towns and villages were taken and retaken ; but when it is considered that the hostile armies numbered nearly two hundred thousand men, we are surprised to find that no memorable events occurred. 21. During the year 1760 France and Spain formed an intimate alliance, known by the name of the Family Compact, by which the enemy of either was to be considered the efiemy of both, and neither was 1. Liegnitz is a town of Silesia, on the Katsbach, forty-six miles a little north of west from Breslau. {Map No. XVII.) 2. Torgou is a town of Prussian Saxony, on the west bank of the Elbe, sixty-six miles south- west from Berlin. {Map No. XVII.) 432 MODERN HISTORY. [Part U to make peace without consent of the other. This was an unfortunate act for Spain, whose colonies of Cuba 1 and Manilla, 2 with her ships of war and commerce, soon fell into the hands of England. The English were also successful against the French ; and the latter, be- fore the close of the war, were divested of all their possessions of importance in the East Indies, while Belleisle, 3 4 on the very coast of Francp, was captured, and in the West Indies, Martinico, Guada- loupe,* and other islands, were added to the list of British conquests. 22. The campaign of 1761 was carried on languidly by all parties. The king of Prussia, exhausted even by his victories, was forced to x 1761 aCt ° n ^ ie ^ e ^ eBS ^ ve J the English government, after the accession of George III. to the throne, (Oct. 1760,) had shown, under the counsels of Lord Bute, an ardent desire for peace, even if it were to be obtained by the sacrifice of the Prussian monarch. An event which happened early in 1 762 greatly improved the aspect of Prussian affairs, and more than compensated Frederick for the growing coldness of England towards him. This was the death of Frederick’s implacable enemy, Elizabeth, empress of Bussia, and the accession of her nephew, the unfortunate Peter the Third, who was a warm admirer and most sedulous imitator of the king of Prussia. The Prussian armies withdrew from their former Austrian allies, and ranged themselves under the Prussian standards : Sweden concluded a peace With Prussia ; and even Austria consented to a cessation of hostilities in Silesia and Saxony. 23. In November 1763 the preliminary articles of peace were signed at Paris between England, France, and Spain, of 1763 E w ^ e Prussia and Austria, deserted by their allies, were left to continue the war ; but they also soon agreed to ouspend hostilities, and in the month of February 1763 peace was concluded between all the belligerents. France ceded to England, Canada and Cape Breton, while Spain purchased the restoration of the conquests which had been made from her, by the cession of Florida to England, by giving the latter permission to cut logwood 1. Cuba, the largest of the West India islands, and the mistress of the Gulf of Mexico, still belongs to Spain. 2. Manilla , a fortified seaport city of Luzon, one of the Philippine islands, is the capital of the Spanish settlements in the East. 3. Bellisle is an island west of France, on the coast of Brittany, thirty miles south-west from Vannes. (Map No. XIII.) 4. Martinique and Ouadaloupe belong to the Windward group of the West Indies. Both have frequently changed hands between the French and the English, but both were restored to France in 1815. Martinique was the birth-place of the empress Josephine. Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 433 in the bay of Honduras, 1 and by a renunciation of all claim to the Newfoundland fisheries. But important as these results were to England, they were so much less advantageous than her position might have commanded, that it was said of her, “ she made war likt, a lion, and peace like a lamb.” Of France it was said by Voltaire, that 11 by her alliance with Austria she had lost in six years more men and money than all the wars she had ever sustained against that power had cost her.” By the terms of the treaty between Prussia and Austria, prisoners were exchanged, and a restitution of all con- quests was made; but Frederick still held the much- contested Silesia, a ssmall territory, which had cost the contending parties more than a million of men. The glory of the war remained chiefly . IT . „ * TT XII. MILITARY vrith Frederick, who, at the head of his veteran phalanx, character moving among the masses of Austria, France, and Russia, of and confronting all. still preserved, through an unex- FREDEEUCK * ampled series of victories and reverses, the character of Great. No general ever surpassed him in regularity and rapidity of manoeuvres, in well ordered marches, and in the facility of concentrating masses on the weak side of an enemy. “ Bonaparte effected wonders with ample means; but when reduced to play the forlorn game of Fred erick against united Europe, the great French captain fell, — the Prussian lived and died a king.” V. State of Europe. The American Revolution. — 1. The peace of 1763 gave general tranquillity to Europe, which 1 GENERAi continued until the breaking out of the war between peace in England and her American colonies, called the “ War of Europe. -he American Revolution.” The result of the u Seven Years’ War fas that Prussia and Austria became the principal continental powers ; France, by her subserviency to Austria, her ancient enemy, iOS;t the political ascendency which she had previously sustained , and Britain although abandoning her influence in the European system, and maintaining intimate relations with Portugal and Hoi land only, had obtained complete maritime supremacy. Frederick of Prussia exerted himself successfully to repair the desolation made In his dominions by the ravages of war ; he gave corn, for planting, to the destitute, procured laborers frcm other countries, remitted the taxes for a season, and during the four and twenty years of his 1. Honduras is a settlement adjoining the bay of the same name, on the easte'i coast of ! uoatan. In 1798 it was transferred to England, in accordance with a previous treaty. u 28 434 MODERN HISTORY. [Pa&i XI reign after the peace, he appropriated for the encouragement of agri- culture, commerce, and manufactures, no less than twenty-four millions of dollars ; and this sum he had saved, by his simple and frugal life, from the amount set apart for the maintenance of his court. 2. In the meantime France, during the last years of the reign of the dissolute Louis XV., was declining in power, and sinking into disgrace. While the finances were in a state of utter confusion, and universal misery pervaded the land, there was the same splendor in the court, and the same profusion in ex- penditure, that marked the conclusion of the reign of Louis XIV. Both monarchs were doomed to see their children perish by an un- accountable decay; and on the death of Louis XV. in 1774, n was his youthful grandson, already married to an Austrian princess, who was elevated to the throne. As evidence of the heartlessness that often surrounds a court, it is related that no sooner had Louis XV . breathed his last, than the array of sedulous courtiers deserted the apartments of the deceased monarch, and rushed forth in a tumult- uous crowd to do homage to the rising power of Louis XVI. The first act of this pious prince and of his queen was to fall on their knees and exclaim, “ Our God ! guide and protect us : we are too young to reign.” 3. While the power and greatness of France were declining, Russia was gradually acquiring a preponderating influ- iii. russia. . f J 1 T ° r r i i & i i ence m Lastern Lurope. In 1768 a war broke out be- tween her and Turkey, which resulted in a series of defeats and losses to the latter. Daring this war Russia had taken possession of Moldavia and Wallachia, 1 which she was extremely desirous of retaining ; but Austria opposed it, lest Russia should become too powerful ; and as the latter was at the same time engaged in a con- test with a confederacy of Polish patriots under the pretence of at- tempting to restore tranquillity to Poland, it was thought best that she should retain a portion of the Polish territory instead of the conquered Turkish provinces. But even this would destroy the bal- ance between the three great eastern powers of Ohristen- bermknt of dom ; and, to restore the equilibrium, Prussia and Aus- foland. tr * a mus t have a share also ; and thus was accomplished 1. Moldavia and Wallachia are two contiguous provinces of Turkey, embracing the ancient Dacia. ( Map No. IX.) They are in reality under the protection of Russia. Wallachia lie* along the northern bank of the Danube, and Moldavia immediately west of the river Pruth. iJtfap No. XVII' Chap. V.j EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 435 the iniquitous measure of a dismemberment of Poland, and the di- vision of a large portion of her territory between Hussia, Prussia, and Austria. (1773.) 4. At the time of the conclusion of the peace of 1 763 a strong feel ing of animosity existed between the two great parties in y gTATE of , England, — the whigs and the tories, — the latter of whom parties in had been taken into favor and rewarded with the chief ENGLAN1) - offices of government soon after the accession of George the Third, A long and expensive war had increased the national debt, and ren dered additional taxes necessary, while the bulk of the nation very naturally thinking that conquests and riches ought to go hand in hand, were induced to believe that administration arbitrary and op- pressive which loaded them with new taxes immediately after the great successes which had attended die British arms. The indiscre- tion of the ministry, in levying the taxes upon certain important ar- ticles of domestic manufacture, threw the kingdom into an almost universal ferment, and compelled the resignation of the earl of Bute, who was at the head of the tory administration. 5. The earl of Bute was succeeded by Mr. Grenville, and as he also was a tory, and was considered but the passive instrument of the late minister, he inherited all the unpopularity of his predecessor. One of his first acts was the arrest and prosecution of Mr. Wilkes, a member of parliament, who, in a paper called the North Briton, had asserted that the king’s speech at the opening of parliament,, which he affected to consider as the minister’s, contained a falsehood. On a hearing before the judges of the common pleas, it was decided that the commitment of Mr. Wilkes was illegal, and that his privi leges, as member of parliament, had been infringed by the ministry Mr. Wilkes was subsequently outlawed by the Commons, on his fail ing to appear to answer the charges against him ; but this extreme severity only increased the agitation, and imbittered Ihe feelings of the opposing parties. At a later period, on a legal trial, the out- lawry of Mr. Wilkes was reversed, and he was repeatedly chosen a member of the Commons, although the house as often rejected him. 6. The augmentation of the revenue being at this time the chief object of the administration, in 1764 Mr. Grenville in- troduced into parliament a project for taxing the Ameri- VI * AMERICAN r . 1 ° TAXATION. ?an colonies; and early in 1675 the “ Stamp Act” was massed- -an act ordering that all legal writings, together with pam* phlets, newspapers. &c., in the colonies, should be executed on 436 MODF.RN HISTORY. [Part 11 stamped paper, for which a duty should be paid to the crown. The colonies resisted every project for taxing them, on the ground that they were not represented in the British parliament, and that taxation and representation were inseparable ; and a large party in England, consisting mostly of whigs, united with them in maintain- ing this doctrine. The stamp act was soon repealed, but the minis try still avowed the right of the mother country to tax her colonial possessions, and this doctrine, still persisted in, laid the foundation far that contest which at length terminated in the independence of the American colonies. 7. Misfortunes seemed to attend almost every scheme undertaken by England for coercing the Americans into obedience. A bill was passed for depriving the people of New England of the benefits of the Newfoundland fisheries ; and it was thought that this act would throw into the hands of British merchants the profits which were formerly divided with the colonies ; but the Americans refused to supply the British fishermen with provisions, and many of the ships were obliged to abandon, for a time, the business on which they came, and return in quest of supplies. Added to this, a most vio- lent and unprecedented storm swept over the fishing banks ; the sea arose thirty feet above its ordinary level, and upwards of seven hun- dred English fishing boats were lost, with all the people in them, and many ships foundered with their whole crews. When, at the commencement of the war, an immense quantity of provisions was prepared in England for the use of the British army in America, the transports remained for a long time wind-bound ; then contrary winds detained them so long near the English coasts that nearly twenty thousand head of live stock perished ; a storm afterwards drove many of the ships to the West Indies, and others were captured by American privateers, so that only a few reached the harbor of Boston, with their cargoes greatly damaged. The universal distress produced throughout the British- nation by the refusal of the Americans to purchase British goods, completed the catalogue of evils which fol- lowed in the train of ministerial measures, and, by exciting the most violent altercations between opposing parties, seemed to threaten England herself with the horrors of civil war. 8. Passing by the arguments that were used for and against tax- ation — the acts exhibiting the rash confidence and perseverance of the ministers and the crown — the determined opposition of the colo pies — the changes in the English ministry, and the dissensions ba Chap. V.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 437 tween opposing parties in England — we come to the decisive open ing of the war with the British American colonies by the ° . * VII. opbthng skirmish at Lexington, on the 19th of April, 1775. A OF THE WAE revolutionary war of seven years’ duration followed, WITH THK on the American soil, — a war of the weak against the strong — of the few in numbers against the many — but a war successful, in its results, to the cause of freedom. Fortunately for the colonies the war was not confined to them alone ; and as the history of the American portion of it is doubtless already familiar to most of our readers, we proceed to consider the new relations, between England and the other powers of Europe, arising out of the war of the Ameri- can Revolution 9 The continental powers, jealous of the maritime and commercial prosperity of England, and ardently desiring her humili- - . , , VIII. EURO- ation m the contest winch she had unwisely provoked PKAN RELA with her colonies, rejoiced at every misfortune that befel TJONS OF ENGLAND her. The French and Spanish courts, from the first, •gave the Americans the aid of their sympathy, and opened their ports freely to American cruisers, who found there ready purchasers for their prizes ; and although, when England complained of the aid thus given to her enemies, it was publicly disavowed, yet it was evi- dent that both France and Spain secretly favored the cause of the Americans. 10. The capture of the entire British army of general Burgoyne at Saratoga, in October 1777, induced France to throw aside the mask with which she had hitherto endeavored to conceal her intentions ; and in the month of March France and 1778, she gave a formal notification to the British gov- ernment that she had concluded a treaty of alliance, friendship, and commerce, with the American States. France and England now made the most vigorous preparations for the anticipated contest between them ; the English marine force was increased, but the French navy now equalled, if it did not exceed, that of England; nor was France disposed to keep it idle in her ports. 11. Although war had not yet been declared between the two na- tions, in the month of April, 1778, a French fleet, com- manded by Count D’Estaing, sailed from Toulon for America ; and soon after a much larger naval force was FaANCE assembled at Brest, with the avowed object of invading England In June, the English admiral Keppel fell in with and at* IX. ALLIANCE BET WEEN THE AMERI- CAN STATES. X. WAR BETWEEN AND ENGLAND. 438 MODERN HISTORY. [ Part II tacked three Frencli frigates on the western coast of France, two of which he captured. The Fr inch government then ordered reprisals against the ships of Great Britain, and the English went through the same formalities, so that both nations were now in a state of actual war. 12. During the autumn and winter of 1778 the West Indies were the principal theatre of the r.iaval operations of France and England. Tn September, the govern 0/ of the French island of Martinique at- tacked, and easily reduced, the English island of Dominica, 1 where he obtained a large quantity of military stores ; but in the December following the French island of St. Lucia 2 was compelled to submit to the English admiral. Barrington, after an ineffectual attempt to relieve it by the fleet of D'Estaing. 13. While these naval events were occurring on the American coasts, the French and English settlements in the East Indies had also become involved in host ilities. Soon after the acknowledgment of American independence by the court of France, the British East India company, convinced that a quarrel would now ensue between the two kingdoms, despatched orders to its officers at Madras to attack the neighboring post of Pondicherry, the capital of the French East India possessions. That place was accordingly besieged in August, by a force of ten thousand men, natives and Englishmen, and after a vigorous resistant 3e was compelled to surrender in Octo- ber following. Other lossci in that quarter of the globe followed, and during one campaign the French power in India was nearly anni- hilVfl. 1 4. In the year 1779 another power was added to the enemies of England. Spain, under th •>. pretext that her mediation, — (which she had propose, d merely as the forerunner of a rupture) — between had been shghted by England, declared war, and with spain and the cooperation of a French fleet laid siege to Gib- englam). ra ] tar ^ Tjy sea an q land, in the hope of recovering that important for'xcsn. Early in this year a French fleet attacked and captured the Brbbh forts and settlements on the rivers Senegal and Gambia, on the western coast of Africa ; and later in the season the French conqu.ei fid the English islands of St. Vincents 3 and 1. Dominica it oue A A't Windward islands, in the West Indies, between Martinique and the Guadalbr.pc. It x' s restored to England at the peace of 1783. 2. St. Lv \v, is a .so O’ e of the Windward group. At the peace of Paris it was definitively assigned tc Lngl? n) 3. St. 1 • c m' li the central island of the Windward group. By the peace of 1783 it reverted to Great 't in 1 1 . Chap. V.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 43S Grenada 1 in the West Indies; but the count D’Estaing acting in concert with an American force, was repulsed in the siege of Savannah. 15. Early in January 1780, the British admiral Bodney being despatched with a powerful fleet to the relief of Gibraltar, fell in with and captured a Spanish squadron of seven ships of war and a number of transports ; and a fe^f days later he engaged a larger squadron off Cape St. Vincent, and captured six of the heaviest ves- sels and dispersed the remainder. These victories enabled him to afford complete relief to the garrisons of Gibraltar and Minorca, after which he proceeded to America, and thrice encountered the French fleet, but without obtaining any decisive success. In August the English suffered a very heavy loss in the capture of the outward bound East and West India fleets of merchant vessels, by the Span- iards, off the western coast of France. 16. The position which England had taken in claiming the right of searching neutral ships for contraband goods, together with her occasional seizure of vessels not laden with exceptionable cargoes, were the cause of a formidable opposition to her neutrality at this time, by most of the European powers, who united against nil* , ENGLAND. m forming what was called the “ Armed .Neutrality for the protection of the commerce of neutral nations. In these pro- ceedings, Catherine, Empress of Russia, took the lead, asserting, in her manifesto to the courts of London, Versailles, and Madrid, that she had adopted the following principles, which she would defend and maintain with all her naval power: — 1st, that neutral ships should enjoy a free navigation from one port to another, even upon the coasts of belligerent powers, except to ports actually blockaded : 2d, that all effects conveyed by such ships, excepting only warlike stores, should be free : 3d, that whenever any vessel should have shown, by its papers, that it was not the carrier of any contraband article, it ghould not be liable to seizure or detention ; and 4th — it was de- clared that such ports only should be deemed blockaded, before which there ihould be stationed a sufficient force to render the entrance perilous. Denmark, Sweden, Holland, Prussia, Portugal, and Ger many,, readily acceded to the terms of the “armed neutrality;” France and Spain expressed their approval of them, while nothing but fear of the consequences which must have resulted from the re l. Grenada is one of the most southerly of the Windward group. About the year 1650 it #as first coloDiied by the Frenrh, from whom it was taken by the British in 1762. In 1779 it was retaken by the French, but was restored to Great Britain at the peace of 1783 440 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II fusal, induced England to submit to this exposition of the laws of nations, and the rights of neutral powers. 17 . Since the alliance between France and the United States, mutual recriminations had been almost constantly pass- ^betweeT^ big between the English and the Dutch government, the England former accusing the -latter of supplying the enemies ol A ' ND England with naval and military stores, contrary to HOLLAND. c J J treaty stipulations, and the latter complaining that great numbers of Dutch vessels, not laden with contraband goods, had been seized and carried into the ports of England. A partial collision between a Dutch and an English fleet, early in the year 1780, had increased the hostile feelings of the two nations ; and in December of the same year Great Britain declared, and immediately com- menced, war against Holland, induced- by the discovery that a com- mercial treaty was already in process of negotiation between that country and the United States. The Dutch shipping was detained in the ports of Great Britain, and instructions were despatched to the commanders of the British forces in the West Indies, to pro- ceed to immediate hostilities against the Dutch settlements in that quarter. 18 . The most important of these was the island of St. Eustatia,'' a free port, abounding with riches, owing to the vast conflux of trade from every other island in those seas. The inhabitants of the island were wholly unaware of the danger to which they were exj osed, when, on the 3d of February, 1781, Admiral Rodney suddenly ap- peared, and sent a peremptory order to the governor to surrender the island and its dependencies within an hour. Utterly incapable of making any defence, the island was surrendered without any stipu- lations. The amount of property that thereby fell into the hands of the captors was estimated at four millions sterling. The settle- ments of the Dutch situated on the north-eastern coast of South America soon after shared the same fate as Eustatia. 19 . In the month of May the Spanish governor of Louisiana soippieted the conquest of West Florida from the English, by the capture of Pensacola. In the West Indies the fleets of France and England had several partial engagements during the month of April, May, and June, but without any decisive results. In the latter part 1. St. Eustatia is one of the group of the Leeward islands, a range extending north-west of the Windward isles. This island was taken possession of by the Dutch early in the seventeenth tenturv. It has, since then, several times changed hands bet, ween them, the French, and th« English, but was finally given up to Holland in 1814. Chap V- ] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 441 of May a large body of French troops landed on the island of To- bago, 1 2 * which surrendered to them on the 3d of June. In the month of Aigust a severe engagement took place on the Dogger Bank, 4 north of Holland, between a British fleet, commanded by Admiral Parker, and a Dutch squadron, commanded by Admiral Zoutman. Both fleets were rendered nearly unmanageable, and with difficulty T 3gained theii respective coasts. ■20. In the meantime the war had been carried on, during a period of more than six years, between England and her rebellious Ameri- can colonies ; but the latter, guided by the counsels of the immortal Washington, had nobly withstood all the efforts of the most powerful nation in the world to reduce them to submission, and had finally compelled the surrender, at Yorktown, of the finest army England had ever sent to America. After the defeat and surrender of Corn- wallis, at Yorktown, in October, 1781, the war with the United States was considered, virtually, at an end ; but between England and her Eu- ropean enemies hostilities were carried on more vigorously than ever. The siege of Gibraltar was ardently prosecuted by the Spaniards ; and the soldiers of the garrison, commanded by governor Elliot, were greatly incommoded by the want of fuel and provisions. They were also exposed to an almost incessant cannonade from the Spanish bat- teries, situated on the peninsula which connects the fortress with the main land. During three weeks, in the month of May, 1781, nearly one hundred thousand shot or shells were thrown into the town. But while the eyes of Europe were turned, in suspense, upon this im- portant fortress, and all regarded a much longer defence impossible, suddenly, on thft night of the 27th of November, a chosen body of two thousand men from the garrison sallied forth, and, in less than an hour, stormed and utterly demolished the enemy’s works. The damage done on this occasion was estimated at two millions sterling. 21. In the month of February following, the island of Minorca, after a long siege, almost as memorable as that of Gibraltar, sur- rendered to the Spanish forces, after having been in the possession of England since the year 1708. During the same month the former Dutch settlements on the north-eastern coast of South America wero 1. Tobago is a short distance north-east of Trinidad, near the northern coast of South America. It was ceded to Great Britain by France in 1763, but in 1781 was retaken by the ~Tench, who retained possession of it till 1793, since which it has belonged to England. 2. The Dogger Bank is a long narrow sand bank in the North Sea or German Ocean, extend- ing from Jutland, oh the west coast of Denmark, nearly to the mouth of the Humbei, on tha eastern coast of England. U* *42 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II recaptured by tlie French. St. Eustatia had been recaptured in the preceding November. Other islands in the West Indies surrendered to the French, and the loss of the Bahamas 1 soon followed. For these losses, however, the British were fully compensated by an important naval victory gained by Admiral Rodney over the fleet of the Count de Grasse, on the 12th of April, in the vicinity of the Carribee islands. 2 In this obstinate engagement most of the ships of the French fleet were captured, that of Count de Grasse among the number, and the loss of the French, in killed, wounded, and prisoners, was estimated at eleven thousand men. The loss of the English, in- cluding both killed and wounded, amounted to about eleven hundred. 22. During the year 1782 the fortress of Gibraltar, which had so long bid defiance to the power of Spain, withstood one of the most memorable sieges ever known. The Spaniards had constructed a number of immense floating batteries in the bay of Gibraltar ; and one thousand two hundred pieces of heavy ordnance had been brought to the spot, to be employed in the various modes of assault. Besides these floating batteries, there were eighty large boats, mounted with heavy guns and mortars, together with a vast multitude of frigates, sloops, and schooners, while the combined fleets of France and Spain, numbering fifty sail of the line, were to cover and support the attack. Eighty thousand barrels of gunpowder were provided for the occasion, and more than one hundred thousand men were employed, by land and sea, against the fortress. 23. Early in the morning of the 13th of September the floating batteries came forward, and at ten o’clock took their stations about a thousand yards distant from the rock of Gibraltar, and began a heavy cannonade, which was seconded by all the cannon and mor- tars in the Spanish lines and approaches. At the same time tin garrison opened all their batteries, both with hot and cold shot, and during several hours a tremendous cannonade and bombardment was kept up on both sides, without the least intermission. Vbout two o’clock the largest Spanish floating battery was discover 'd to emit smoke, and towards midnight it was plainly seen to be on fire. Other batteries began to kindle ; signals of distress were made ; and boats 1. The Bahamas are an extensive group of islands lying east and south-east from Florida. They have been estimated at about six hundred in number, most of them were clifis and rocks, only fourteen of them being of any considerable size. 2. What are sometimes called the Carribee Islands comprise the whole of the Windward and the southern portion of the Leeward islands, from Anguila on the north to Trinidad o* the south. Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 413 were sent to take 6he men from the burning vessels, but they were interrupted by the English gun boats, which now advanced to the attack, and, raking the whole line of batteries with their fire, com- pleted the confusion. The batteries were soon abandoned to the flames, or to the mercy of the English. 24. At the awful spectacle of several hundred of their fellow soldiers exposed to almost inevitable destruction, the Spaniards ceased firing, when the British seamen, with characteristic humanity, rushed forward, and exerted themselves to the utmost to save those who were perishing in the flames and the waters. About four hundred Span- iards were thus saved, — but all the floating batteries were consumed, and the combined French and Spanish forces were left incapable of making any farther effectual attack. Soon after, Gibraltar was re- lieved with supplies of provisions, military stores, and additional troops, by a squadron sent from England, when the farther siege of the place was abandoned. 25. The siege of Gibraltar was the last act of importance during the continuance of the war in Europe. In the East r # XIV. WAR IN Indies the British settlements had been engaged, during the east several years, in hostilities with the native inhabitants, indies. who were conducted by the famous Hyder Ali, and his son Tippoo Saib, often assisted by the fleets and land forces of France and Hol- land. Hyder Ali, from the rank of a common sepoy, had raised himself, by his abilities, to the throne of Mysore, 1 one of the most important of the kingdoms of ITindostan. His territories, of which Seringapatam' 2 was the capital, bordered on those of the English, which lined the eastern coast of the peninsula ; and as he saw the possess- ions of the Europeans gradually encroaching upon the domains of the native princes, he resolved to unite the latter in a powerful con federacy for the expulsion of the intruders. After detaching one of the powerful northern princes from an alliance with the English, and 1. Mysore, a town of southern Hindostan, and capital of the State of the same name, is three hundred miles north of Cape Comorin, and nine miles south- west from Seringapatam. The Stale of Mysore, comprising a territory of about thirty thousand square miles, is almost entirely surrounded by the territory of the Madras presidency ; and although the government is nomi- nally in the hands of a native prince, it is subsidiary to the government of Madras. From 17G0 to 1799 Mysore was governed by Hyder Ali and Tippoo Saib. 2. Seringapatam is a decayed town and fortress of Hindostan, in the State of Mysore, two nundred and fifty miles south of Madras. It was besieged by the Engl sh on three different occasions : the first two sieges took place in 1791 and 1792, and the third in 1799, on the 4th of May of which year it was stormed by the British and their allies, on which occasion Tippoo was killed, with the greater part of his garrison, amounting to eight thousand men. On an eminence in the suburbs of Seringapatam is the mausoleum of Hyder Ali and Tippoo Sa b. 444 MODERN HISTORY [Part II having introduced the European discipline among his numerous troops as early as 1767 he began the war, which was continued with scarcely any intermission, but with little permanent success on the part of the natives, down to the period of the American war, when the French united with him, and the war was carried on with increased vigor. 26. In the year 1780 Hyder All and his son Tippoo Saib, at the head of an army of one hundred thousand natives, and aided by a body of French troops, fell upon the English forces in the presidency of Madras, and killed or captured the whole of them, — Madras, the capital, alone being saved from falling into their hands. In the following year the English were strongly reenforced, and Hyder Ali, at the head of two hundred thousand men, was defeated in three obstinate battles ; but these successes were ^ L °rrupted by the loss of an English force of three thousand men, which was entirely cut to pieces by Tippoo Saib in the year 1782. 27. On the death of Hyder Ali, in the same year, Tippoo Saib succeeded to the throne, and in the following year, after the restora- tion of peace between France and England, he concluded a treaty with the English, in which the latter made concessions that greatly detracted from the respect hitherto paid to their name in Asia. But this native prince never ceased, for a moment, to cherish the hope of expelling the British from Hindostan. In 1790 he began the war again, but was eventually compelled to purchase peace at the price of one half of his dominions. His last war with the English ter- minated in 1799, by the storming of Seringapatam, his capital, and the death of Tippoo, who fell in the assault. 28. On the 30th of November 1782, preliminary articles of peace were signed between Great Britain and the United States. X of 1782 TY were to be definitive as soon as a treaty between France and Great Britain should be concluded. When the session of parliament opened, on the 5th of December, consid- erable altercation took place in respect to the terms of the provis- ional treaty, but a large majority was found to be in favor of the g>eace thus obtained. The independence of the United States being now recognized by England, the original purpose of France was ac- complish^! ; and all the powers at war being exceedingly desirous of xvi gene P eaco ; preliminary articles were signed by Great Britain, sal rjiEATY France, and Spain, on the 20th of January, 1783. By of 1783. th|g treaty France restored to Great Britain all French fccrauisitions in the West Indies during the war. excepting Tobago, Chap V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 445 ^hib England surrendered to France the important station of St Lucia. On the coast of Africa the settlements in the vicinity of the river Senegal were ceded to France, — those on the G-ambia to Eng- land. In the East Indies France recovered all the places she had lost during the war, to which were added others of considerable im- portance. Spain retained Minorca and West Florida, while East Florida was ceded to her in return for the Bahamas. It was not till September, 1783, that Holland came to a preliminary settlement with Great Britain, although a suspension of arms had taken plan® between the two powers in the J anuary preceding. 20. Thus closed the most important war in which England had ever been engaged, — a war which originated in her ungenerous treat- ment of the American colonies. The expense of blood and treasure which this war cost England was enormous ; nor did her European antagonists suffer much less severely. The United States was the only country that could claim any beneficial results from the war, and these were obtained by a strange union of opposing motives and principles on the part of European powers. France and Spain, ar- bitrary despots of the Old World, had stood forth as the protectors of an infant republic, and had combined, contrary to all the princi- ples of their political faith, to establish the rising liberties of America They seemed but as blind instruments in the hands of Providence, employed to aid in the dissemina-tion of those republican virtues that are destined to overthrow every system of political oppression through- out the world. VI. The French Revolution. — 1 . The democratic spirit which had called forth the war between England and her American colonies, and which the princes of continental Europe had en- couraged and fostered, through jealousy of the power of democratic England, to the final result of American independence, srnuT. was destined to exert a much wider influence than the royal allies . f the infant Republic had ever dreamed of. Borne back to France by those of her chivalrous sons who, in aiding an oppressed people, had imbibed their principles, it entered into the causes which were al- ready at work there in breaking up the foundations of the rotten frame-work of French society, and contributed greatly to hur:y for- ward the tremendous crisis of the French Revolution. 2. At the time of the death of Louis XV., in 1774, the lower ord irs of the French people had been brought to a state of extreme 446 MODERN HISTORY. [PaktU indigence and suffering, by the luxuries of a dissolute and despotici court, during a long period of misrule, in which agriculture was sadly neglected, and trade, commerce, and manufactures, existed but in an infant and undeveloped state. The nobility had been, for a long period, losing their power and their wealth, by the gradual elevation of the middling classes ; and the clergy had lost much of their influ- ence by the rise of philosophical investigation, which was not only attended by an extraordinary degree of freedom of thought, but waa strongly tinctured also with infidelity. 3. Louis XVI., who came to the throne at the age of twenty years, was poorly calculated to administer the government at a -joins xvi ci 'i t ^ ca ^ period, when resolute and energetic measures were requisite. He was a pious prince, and sincerely loved the welfare of his subjects ; but the exclusively religious educa- tion which he had received had made him little acquainted with the world, and he was exceedingly ignorant of all polite learning— even of history and the science of government. Ignorance of politics, weak- ness, vacillation, and irresolution, were the fatal defects in the king’s character. 4. To find a remedy for the disordered state of the French finances, hi fix an- an( ^ decline of public credit, was the first difficulty cial diffi- which Louis had to encounter ; nor did he surmount it culties. un til he found himself involved in the vortex of a Re vo- lition. Minister after minister attempted it, sometimes with partial success, but oftener with an increase of evil. Turgot would have introduced radical and wise reforms by an equality of taxation, and by the suppression of every species of exclusive privilege ; but the nobility, the courtiers, and the clergy, who were interested in main- taining all kinds of abuses, protested against any sacrifices on their part ; and the able minister fell before their combined opposition. Turgot was succeeded by Neckar, a native of Geneva, an economical financier, who had amassed immense wealth as a banker ; but his projects of economy and reform alarmed the privileged orders, and their opposition soon compelled him to retire also. 5. The brilliant, vain, and plausible Calonne, the next minister of finance, promulgated the theory that profusion forms the wealth of a State ; a paradox that was highly applauded by the courtiers. His system was to encourage industry by expenditure, and to stifle discontent by prodigality ; he liquidated old debts by contracting new ones, — paid exorbitant pensions, and gave splendid entertain- JJflAP. •i EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 447 men is; and while the credit of the minister lasted, his resources appeared inexhaustible. Calonne continued the system of loans after the conclusion of the American war, and until the credit of the gov^ ernment was utterly exhausted, when it was found that the annual deficit of the revenue, below the expenditure, was nearly thirty mil- lions of dollars ! General taxation of the nobility and clergy, as well as the commons, was now proposed, and in order to obtain a sanction to the measure, an assembly of the Notables, — the chiefs of the privileged orders, — was called ; but although the assembly at first assented to a general tax, the national parliament defeated the project. 6. Brienne, who succeeded Calonne, becoming involved in a contest with the parliament, which was anxious to maintain the the immunities of the privileged orders, and being unable to states- obtain a loan to meet the exigencies of government, was general. reduced to the necessity of a convocation of the States-General, a great National Legislature, composed of representatives chosen from the three orders, the nobility, the clergy, and the people, but which had not been assembled during a period of nearly two hundred years. 7. When the day came for the payment of the dividends to the public creditors, the treasury was destitute of funds ; much distress was occasioned, and an insurrection was feared ; but the removal of Brienne, and the restoration of Neckar to office, created confidence, while the most urgent difficulties were removed by temporary expe- dients, in anticipation of some great change that was to follow the meeting of The States-General, — the remedy that was now universally called for. The court had at first dreaded the convocation of the States-General, but finding itself involved in a contest with the priv- ileged classes, who assumed all legal and judicial authority, it took the bold resolution of throwing itself upon the representatives of the whole people, in the hope that the commons would defend the throne against the nobility and clergy, as they had done, in former times, against the feudal aristocracy. 8. When it was known that the great assembly of the nation was to be convened, a universal ferment seized the public mind. Social reforms, extending to a complete reorganization of society, became the order of the day ; political pamphlets inundated the country ; politics were discussed in every society ; theories accumulated upon theories ; and, in the ardor with which they were combated and de- fended, were already to be seen the seeds o e those dissensions which 448 MODERN HISTORY. [Fab- 1L afterwards deluged the country with Mood. There was abundance of evil to be complained of, and it was evident that exclusive privi- leges, and the marked division of classes, must be broken down. The clergy held one-third of the lands of the kingdom, the nobility an- other third ; yet the remaining third was burdened with all the ex- penses of government. This was more than could be borne ; yet the clergy, the nobility, and the magistracy, obstinately refused the sur- render of their exclusive privileges, while, on the other hand, the philosophic party, considering the federal republic of America as a model of government, desired to break up the entire frame-work of French society, and construct the edifice anew. Such was the state of France when the assembly of the States-General was called, a measure that was, in itself, a revolution, as it virtually gave back the powers of government to the people. The Third-Estate — the Com mons, comprising nearly the whole nation, demanded that its represent- atives should equal those of the other two classes — the clergy and the nobility. Public opinion called for the concession, and obtained it. The result of the elections conformed to the sentiments of the three classes in the kingdom : the nobility chose those who were firmly attached to the interests and privileges of their order ; the bishops, or clergy, chose those who would uphold the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and v/ho were more inclined to political freedom than the former ; while the commons, or Third-Estate, chose a numerous body of represent- atives, firm in their attachment to liberty, and ardently desirous of extending the power and influence of the people. 9. At the opening of the States-G-eneral, on the 4th of May, 1789, a difficulty arose as to the manner in which the three orders should vote ; the clergy and nobility insisting that there should be three assemblies, each possessing a veto on the acts of the others, while the commons insisted that all should be united in one general assembly, without any distinction of orders. The commons managed with great tact and adroitness, waiting patiently, day after day, fo* the clergy and nobility to join them, but after more than a month had thus passed away, they declared themselves the “ National Assembly,” being, as they asserted, the representatives of ninety-six hundredths, at least, of the nation, and therefore the true interpreters of the national will. The nobles, alarmed by this sudden boldness of . the Assembly, implored the monarch to support their rights ; a coalition was formed between them and the court, but the public mind was against them, and towards the last of June, the ebrgy and the no Chap. V. EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 44S bilitj, constrained by an order of the sovereign himself, took then Beats in the hall of the Assembly, where they were soon lost in an overwhelming majority. “ The family was united, but it ga^e few hopes of domestic union or tranquillity.” 1 0. The triumph of the third-estate had destroyed the moral powei and influence of the government : a spirit of insubordination began to appear in Paris, caused, in some degree, by the pressure of fam- ine; journals and clubs multiplied; declaimers harangued in every street, and directed the popular indignation against the king and his family ; and the very rabble imbibed the tionary intoxicating spirit of politics. When a regiment of state of French troops mutinied, and their leaders were thrown into prison, a mob of six thousand men liberated them ; collisions took place between the populace and the royal guards ; and the former, obtaining a supply of muskets and artillery, attacked the Bas- tile, or state prison of Paris, tore the governor in pieces, and inhu manly massacred the guards who had attempted to defend the place (July 14 th, 1789.) 11. Louis, greatly alarmed, now abandoned the counsels of the party of the nobles, who had advised him to suppress the threatened revolution at the head of his army, and hurrying to the National Assembly, craved its support and interference to restore order to the capital. At the same time he caused the regular troops to be with- drawn from Paris, while the defence of the place was intrusted to a body of civic militia, called the National Guards, and placed under the command of La Fayette, whose liberal sentiments, and generous devotion to the cause of American liberty, had made him the idol of the populace. 12. The union between the king and the National Assembly was hailed with transports of joy by the Parisians, and for a few days it seemed that the revolution had closed its list of horrors ; but there were agents at work who excited and bribed the people to fresh sedi tion. The consequences of the insurrection of the 14tn July extend ed throughout France; the peasantry of the provinces, imitating tht lower orders of the capital in a crusade against the privileged classes, everywhere possessed themselves of arms ; the regiments of the line declared for the popular side ; many of the chateaux of the nobles were burned, and their possessors massacred or expelled, and in a fortnight there was no authority in France but what emanated from the people. These things produced their effect upon the National 29 450 MODERN HISTORf. [Part II Assemb y. Th j deputies of the privileged classes, seeing no escape vi great fr° m ruin but in the abandonment of those immunities political which had rendered them odious, consented to saci ifice changes. ^ w i 10 i e . the clergy followed the example, and in one evening’s session the aristocracy and the church descended to the level of the peasantry ; the privileged classes were swept away, and the political condition of France was changed. (Aug. 4th, 1789.) 13. An interval of two months now passed over without any flagrant scene of popular violence, the Assembly being engaged at Versailles in fixing the basis of a national constitution, and the mu- nicipality of Paris in procuring bread for the lower orders of the Parisians, while the latter, imagining that the Revolution was to fiberate them from almost every species of restraint, were rioting in the exercise of their newly-acquired freedom. Towards the latter part of August the famine had become so severe in Paris, (a natural consequence of the public convulsions, and the suspension of credit,) that mobs were frequent in the streets, and the baker’s shops were surrounded by multitudes clamoring for food, while the most extravagant reports were circu- lated, charging the scarcity upon the court and the aristocrats. The leaders of the populace, artfully fomenting the discontent, instigated the mob to demand that the king and the Assembly should be re- moved from Versailles to the capital ; and on the 5th of October a crowd of the lowest rabble, armed with pikes, forks, and clubs, and accompanied by some of the national guards, marched to Versailles. They penetrated into the Assembly, vociferously demanding bread , — a slight collision occurred between them and some of the king’s body guards, and during the ensuing night they broke into the palace, massacred the guards who opposed them, and had it not been for the opportune arrival of La Fayette and his grenadiers, the king him- self and the whole royal family would have fallen victims. After tranquillity had been partially restored, the king was compelled to eet cut for Paris, accompanied by the tumultuous rabble which had sought his life. The National Assembly voted to transfer its sittings to the capital. The royal family, on reaching Paris, repaired to the Tuilleries, which henceforth became their palace and their prison. 14. Several months of comparative tranquillity followed this out- rage, during which time the formation of the constitution was prose- cuted with activity by the Assembly. The feudal system, feudal services, and all titles of honor, had been abolished. One general Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 451 legislative Assembly bad been decreed : the absolute veto of tbe king had been taken away ; and now the immense prop- vm NEW erty of the church was appropriated to the State, a meas- constito- ure that secured the great financial resources which so TI0I^ • long upheld the Revolution. In the meantime the training, dividing, forming, and marshalling of parties went on. At first, La ^ MARSHAI Fayette, and those who aided him — the moderate friends ling of of liberty — prevailed in the Assembly, satisfied with parties. constitutional reforms, without desiring to overthrow the monarchy But there was another class — the ultra revolutionists — compost d of the factious spirits of the Assembly, who afterwards obtained the control of that body. Having organized themselves into a club, called the club of the Jacobins, from the name of the convent in which they assembled, and gathering members from all classes of society, they held nightly sittings, where, surrounded by a crowd of the popu- (ace, they canvassed the acts of the Assembly and formed public opinion. 15. At one time this club contained more than two thousand five hundred members, and corresponded with more than four hundred affiliated societies throughout France. It was the hot-bed of sedition, and the centralization of anarchy, and it eventually overturned the government, and sent forth the sanguinary despots who established the Reign of Terror. Barnave, the Lameths, Danton, Marat, and Robespierre, were the leaders of the Jacobin faction. Mirabeau, the first master-spirit which arose amid the troubles of the times, — a man of extraordinary eloquence and talent, but of loose principles — ■ who had at first united with the Jacobins, foreseeing the sanguinary excess that already began to tinge the career of the Revolution, at length entered into a treaty with the court to use his great influence in aiding to establish monarchy on a constitutional basis ; but his death, early in 1791, up to which period he had maintained his ascendancy in the Assembly, deprived the king of his only hope of being able to withstand the Jacobin influence in the National Legis lature. Mirabeau had a clear presentiment of the coming disasters. u Soon,’ said he, “ neither the king nor the Assembly will rule the country, but a vile faction will overspread it with horrors.” 16. While the machinations of the Jacobins were convulsing France, the repose of Europe was threatened by the in- x the judicious movements of the emigrant nobility, large emigrant numbers of whom, estimated at seventy thousand, dis- N0BILITy - gusted with the Revolution, had abandoned their country, resol ved to 452 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II seek the restoration of the old gOTornment by the intervention of foreign powers. Collecting first at Turin, and afterwards at Co- blentz, 1 they endeavored to stir up rebellion in the provinces, and solicited Louis to sanction their plans, and join their meditated armaments. Louis, accompanied by his pieen or the and children, attempted to escape secretly to the frontiers, but was s ^°PP e ^ anc ^ brought back a prisoner to his capital. (June 1791.) The Jacobins now argued that he king’s flight was abdication ; and the National Assembly, to ap- pease the popular outcry, provisionally suspended him from his functions, until the constitution, now nearly completed, was presented to him for acceptance. On the 14th of September, 1791, he took the oath to maintain it against civil discord and foreign aggression, and to enforce its execution to the utmost of his power. The Con- stituent Assembly , as that which framed the constitution is often called, after having passed a self-denying ordinance that none of its members should be elected to the next Assembly, declared itself dis solved on the 30th of September, 1791. 17. But the constitution, thus established, could not be permanent, for the minds of the French people were still agitated by the passion for change, and the members of the new Legislative Assembly soon displayed opinions more radical, and divisions more numerous, than their predecessors. The court and the nobility had exercised no in- fluence in the late elections; the uDholders of even a mitigated aris- tocracy had disappeared ; the assembly was thoroughly democratic ; and the only question that seemed to remain for it was the main- tenance or the overthrow of the constitutional throne. The chief parties in the assembly, at its opening were the constitutionalists and the republicans, — the latter were more usually called Girondists, as oheir most celebrated leaders, Brissot Petion, and Condorcet, were members from the department of the Gironde. The constitutional ists would have preserved the throne, while thev stripped it cf it» power ; but the Girondists, enthusiastic admirers of the Americans, despising the vain shadow of royalty, longed for republican institu- tions on the model of antiquity. The Jacobins, who were anarchists, men without principles, and attached to no particular form of gov 1. Coblent ? , (the Conjluentes of the Romans,) is a Prussian town in the pro-ipce ">f the Rhine, at the confluence of the Rhine and Moselle. Since the wurs of Napolc &n it has beea singly fortified, and is now deemed one of the principal bu warks of German] on the side a* Ftpac*. K .Uap No, XVII.) Chap. V ] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 453 eminent, possessed at first little influence in the assembly, but direct- ing the passions of the populace, and possessing the means of rousing at pleasure the strength of the capital, they soon acquired a prepon- derating influence that bore down all opposition, and crushed the more moderate revolutionary party of the Girondists. 18. The legislative assembly commenced its sittings by confiscating the property of the emigrants, and denouncing the penalties of treason against those refractory priests who refused to take the oath to sup- port the constitution ; but the king refused to sanction the decrees, It was the great object of the Girondists to involve the kingdom in foreign war ; and the warlike preparations of the Austrian emperor and the German princes, evidently designed to support the emigrants, rendered it an easy matter to carry out their designs. JWhen an open declaration of his objects was demanded of the Austrian em- peror, he required as a condition on which he would discontinue his preparations, that France should return to the form and principles of government which existed at the time of the commencement of the constituent assembly. Against his own judgment the king yield ed to the force of public opinion, and on the 20th of iii • i n xn. war April, 1792, war was declared against the court oi declared Vienna. It must be admitted that the war which arose against from so feeble beginnings, but which at length involved • the world in its conflagration, was not provoked by France, but by the foreign powers which unjustly interposed to regulate the laws And government of the French people. 19. While the strife of parties continued in Paris, producing con fusion in the councils of the assembly, and increasing anxiety and alarm in the mind of the king, a formidable force was assembling on the German frontier with the avowed object of putting down the Revolution, and restoring to the king the rights of which he had been deprived. The king of Prussia and the emperor of Austria engaged to cooperate for this purpose ; and their united forces were placed under the command of the Duke of Brunswick, who, towards the end of July, entered the French territories at the head of a hun- dred and forty thousand men. The threatening manifesto which he issued roused at }nce the spirit of resistance throughout every part of France ; the demagogues seized the occasion to direct the popular fury against the court, which was accused of leaguing with the enemy ; and the two prominent factions, the Girondists and Jacobins, com- 454 MODERN HISTORY. [Part Ii. bined to overturn the monarchy, each with tht view of advancing its own separate ambitious designs. 20. The dethronement of the king was now vehemently discussed in all the popular assemblies ; preparations were made in Paris for a general revolt ; and soon after midnight on the morning of the lOtli of August, an infuriate mob attacked and pillaged the massacre P a ^ ace J massacred the Swiss guards, and forced tho of the king and royal family to seek shelter in the hall of ~ the National Assembly. The .assembly protected the person of the king, but, yielding to the demands of tho conquering populace, passed a decree suspending the royal functions, dismissed the ministers, and directed the immediate convocation of a National Convention. La Fayette, then in command of the army on the eastern frontier, having in vain endeavored to keep his troops firm in their allegiance, and being outlawed by the assembly, fled into the Netherlands, but was seized and imprisoned by the Aus- trians. Dumouriez, who had adhered to the assembly, succeeded to the command, and made energetic preparations to resist the coming invasion. 2 1 . The massacre of the 1 0th of August was soon followed by xiv massa an0 ^ er more frightful atrocity. The prisons of ore of Paris had become filled with suspected persons ; and the September. i ea( j ers 0 f the Jacobins, now occupying the chief places in the magistracy, in order to diminish the number of their internal enemies planned the massacre of the prisoners. Accordingly, at three o’clock on the morning, of the 2d of September, a band of three hundred hired assassins, accompanied by a frantic mob, entered the prisons, and began the work of death. In the court yard of the first prison four and twenty priests were hewn in pieces because they refused to take the revolutionary oath. In some instances the assassins, stained with gore, established tribunals to try their victims, and a few minutes, often a few seconds, disposed of the fate of each ndividual. The massacres continued from the 2d to the 6th of September, and during this period more than five thousand persons perished in the different prisons of Paris. A committe of the mu- nicipality of Paris, declaring that a plot had been formed by the pris- oners throughout France to murder all the patriots of the empire, in- vited the other cities to imitate the massacres of the capital, but, fortunately, none obeyed the summons. 22. While these shocking excesses were perpetrated in the capital, Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 455 the armies of Prussia and Austria, which had invaaed the French territories, met with a signal repulse. Dumouriez, pursuing his suc- cesses, crossed the Belgian frontier, and on the 6th of November gained the battle of Jemappes, 1 which gave him possession of all the Austrian Netherlands. With so much rapidity and decision did Dumouriez execute the skilful movements of the army, that the allies soon found there was no want of able generals among the French At tho battle of Jemappes, the enthusiasm and martial spirit of the French, displaying themselves in all their brilliancy, bore down all obstacles, and redoubt after redoubt was stormed and taken, to tho chant of the Marseilles Hymn. a 23. The National Convention, which had succeeded the Legislative Assembly, inflamed by this first great victory of the Revolution, pub- lished a decree offering the alliance of the French to every nation that desired to recover its liberties, — a decree which was equivalent to a declaration of war against all the monarchies of Europe. One step further was necessary to complete the Revolution, and ^ A XV TRIAL that was the death of the kind-hearted and unfortunate AND EXE ou- monarch. On the ridiculous charge of having engaged ti on of in a conspiracy for the subversion of freedom, on the LOUIS XVL 26th of December Louis XVI. was brought before the Convention, and, after a trial which lasted twenty days, was declared guilty, and condemned to death by a majority of twenty-six votes out of seven hundred and twenty-one. Nearly all of those who had voted for his death subsequently perished on the scaffold, during the sanguinary “ reign of Terror,” which soon followed. On the 21st of January, 1793, Louis was led out to execution. He met death with magna- nimity and firmness, amid the insults of his cruel executioners. His fate will be commiserated, and his murderers execrated, so long as justice or mercy shall prevail on the earth. 1. Jemappes (zhem-map) is a small village of Belgium, near Mons, forty- four miles souths west from Brussels. The Duke de Chartres, afterwards Louis Philippe king of the French, •cted as the lieutenant of Dumouriez during the battle of Jemappes, and by his intrepidity at the head of a column aided essentially in winning the day. a. The famous Marseilles Hymn , the national song of the French patriots and warriors, was composed by Joseph Rouget de l’lsle, (roozhd de leel,) a young engineer officer, early in the French Revolution. It was at first called the “ Offering to Liberty,” but received its present tame because it was first publicly sung by the Marseilles confederates in 1792. Both the woras and the music are peculiarly inspiriting. So great was the influence of this song over the ex- citable French, that it was suppressed under the empire and the Bourbons ; but th< Revolution of 1830 called it up anew, and it has since become again the national song of the F ench people. 456 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 24. The Girondists, who had been the first to fan the flame of revolution, were the first to suffer by its violence. Ardent xvi. fall republicans in principle, but humane and benevolent in oi the their sentiments, they had not desired the death of the ^iroindists. king, but they could not restrain the mad fury of the Jacobins. The latter, a base faction in the convention, taunted the former, with having endeavored to save the tyrant : their partisans* throughout Paris, roused the feelings of the populace against the Girondists : a powerful insurrection a deprived the convention of its liberty : thirty of the leading members of the Girondist party were given up and imprisoned ; and those who had not the fortune to es- cape from Paris were brought to trial, condemned, without being heard in their defence, and speedily -executed, 13 and all for no other crime than having tried to prevent the execution of the king, to avenge the massacres of September, and to allay the desolating storm of violence and crime that was spreading terror and dismay over their country. 25. After the fall of the Girondists, the victorious Jacobins, at the head of whom were Danton, Marat, Robespierre, and their: asso ciates, obtained control of the “ Committee of Public Safety,” a for- midable Revolutionary tribunal, in which was vested the whole power of the convention and of the government. Some opposition was indeed made, by the magistracies of the cities and towns throughout a great part of France, to this central power, and at one time seventy departments were in a state of insurrection against the convention ; but the vigorous measures of the Parisian Revolutionists soon broke this formidable league. Revolutionary committees, radiating from the central Jacobin power in Paris, extended their network over the whole kingdom ; and these committees, having the power of arrest- ing the obnoxious and the suspected, and numbering more than five hundred thousand individuals, often drawn from the very dregs of society, held the fortunes and lives of every man in France at their disposal. 26. The prisons throughout France were speedily filled with vie- xvir the ^ ras ’ f° rce d loans were exacted with rigor ; Terror way reign of made the order of the day ; and the guillotine* was put terror. j n requisition to do its work of death. The queen was • Guillotine— so called f*om the name of the inventor — is an engine or machine for be 'heading persons at a stroke, a. May Ust. b. Oct. 31st. Chap. Y.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 457 brought to the scaffold, a and the dauphin, thrown into prison, ere long fell a victim to the barbarous neglect of his keepers. Irrellgion and impiety raised the.r heads above the mass of pollution and crime* the Sabbath was abolished by law : the sepulchres of the XVIII TaI _ kings of France were ordered to be destroyed, that every umph of memorial of royalty might be blotted out ; and the 1NiriDELITT * leaders of the municipality of Paris, in the madness of atheism, pub- licly expressed their determination “ to dethrone the king of Heaven as well as the monarchs of the earth..” As the crowning act of this drama of wickedness, the Goddess of Reason, personified by a beauti- ful female, was introduced into the convention, and declared to be the only divinity worthy of adoration : — the churches were closed — religion everywhere abandoned — and on all the public cemeteries was placed the inscription, “ Death is an Eternal Sleep.” 27. After the downfall of the Girondists and the party attached to a constitutional monarchy, divisions arose among the Jacobin leaders. The sanguinary Marat had already fallen by the dagger of the devoted heroine, Charlotte Corday, who voluntarily sacrificed her XIX FALL own life in the hope of saving her country. The more ok the moderate portion of the Revolutionary leaders, Danton, DANT0NIsrs - Camille Desmoulins, and their supporters, who had so recently roused the populace against the Gironde, were ere long charged with show- ing too much clemency , and brought to the scaffold. b The Repub- lican Girondists had sought to 'prevent the Reign of Terror — the Dantonists to arrest it ; and both perished in the attempt. There- after there seemed not a hope left for France. The revolutionary excesses everywhere increased : those who kept aloof from them were suspected, and condemned ; and the power of Death was relentlessly wielded by such a combination of monsters of wickedness as the world had never before seen. 28. Having pursued the internal history of the Revolution down to the fall of the Dantonists in March 1794, we resume the narra tive of affairs at the beginning of 1793. The death of xx w Louis XVI., which derives its chief importance from against the principle which the revolutionists thereby proclaimed, KU1 - 0I,JS - excited profound terror in France, and feelings of astonishment and indignation throughout Europe. France thereby placed herself in avowed and unrelenting hostility to the established governments of the neighboring States; and it was universally felt that the period had a. Oct. lGth, 1793. b. March 5th, 1794. 458 MODERN HISTORY. [Pam 11 now arrived when she must conquer the coalition of thrones, or perish under its blows, The convention did not wait to be attacked, but forthwith, on various pretexts, declared war against England, Spain, and Holland, and ordered the increase of the armies of the republic to more than five hundred thousand men. 29. Early in 1793 the English and Prussians combined to check the progress of the French in Holland, and on the 18th of March Dumouriez was defeated in the battle of Neerwinde. Soon after this repulse, the French general, disgusted with the excesses of the revolutionists in Paris, and .finding himself suspected by both Giron- dists and Jacobins, entered into a negotiation with the allied generals for a coalition of forces to aid in the establishment of a constitutional monarchy in France ; but his army did not share his feelings, and being denounced by the convention, and a price set upon his head, he was obliged to take refuge in the Austrian lines. 30. After the defection of Dumouriez, Custine was appointed to the command of the north, then severely pressed by the allies near Valenciennes ; but being unable to check the progress of the enemy, he was deprived of his command, ordered to Paris, and, soon after, condemned and executed on the charge of misconduct. The revolu- tionary government, seeing no merit but in success, placed its gen- erals in the alternative of victory or death, and employed the terrors of the guillotine as an incentive to patriotism. The fall of Valen- ciennes seemed to open to the allies a way to Paris, but, pursuing in- dependent plans of aggrandizement, they injudiciously divided their forces, and before the close of the year, were driven back across the frontier. 31. Early in the same year Spain had despatched an army of fifty- five thousand men for the invasion of France by the way of the Pyrenees ; but although the French, who advanced to meet them, were driven back, the campaign in that quarter was characterized by i no event of importance. In the meantime, in the west of France, the insurrectionary war of La Vendee was occupying the troops of the convention ; and on the side of Italy the allies were ai *ed by the revolt of Marseilles, Lyons, and Toulon. 32. In La V endee, a large district bordered on the north by the xxi insur an d on the west by the ocean, containing eight rection of hundred thousand souls, the Royalists, embracing nearly la vendee. entire population, had early taken up arms in the cause of their church and their king. This district soon became the Chap V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 459 theatre of innumerable conflicts, in which the undisciplined peasantry of La Vendee at first had the advantage, from their peculiar mode of fighting, and the nature of their country On the lOth of June, 1793, they obtained a great victory at Saumir, 1 2 where their trophies amounted to eighty pieces of cannon, ten thousand muskets, and eleven thousand prisoners ; but on the 29th of the same month they were defeated in their attempt on Nantes, where their brave leader Cathelineau was mortally wounded. During the summer two inva- sions of the country of the Vendeans was made by large bodies of the republican troops under skilful .generals, who were defeated and driven back with severe loss. The convention, at length aroused to a full sense of the danger of this war, surrounded La V endee with an army of two hundred thousand men, who, by a simultaneous advance, threat- ened a speedy extinction of the revolt. But the republican troops who had penetrated the country were cut off in detail — the veterans of Kleber were defeated near Torfou, 3 and before the close of Sep- tember the Vendean territory was freed from its invaders. 33. Again the convention made the most vigorous efforts to sup- press the insurrection. Their forces penetrated the country in every direction, and, with unrelenting and uncalled-for cruelty, burned the towns and villages that fell into their hands, and put the inhabitants, of every age and sex, to the sword. Defeated a in the battle of Cholet, 3 and their country in the possession of their enemies, a large portion of the surviving Vendeans, with their wives and chil- dren, crossed the Loire into Brittany, with the hope of obtaining assistance from their countrymen in that quarter. In the battle of Chateau Gonthier, 4 fighting with the courage of despair, they gained a decisive victory over the Republican forces, whose loss amounted to twelve thousand men and nineteen pieces of cannon. This victory was gained on the very day w len the orator Barrere announced in the convention, “ the war is ended, and La Vendee is no more.” Great then war? the conste aation in Paris when it was known that the Republican army was dispersed, and that nothing remained to prevent the advance of the Royalists to the capital. 1. Saumur is on the southern bank of the Loire, in the former province of Anjou, one hundred tnd fifty-seven miles south-west from Paris. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Tor f on was a small village in the northern part of La Vendee, a short distance scutl -east from Nantes. (Map N >. XIII.) 3. Cholet (sho-l&) is nearly forty miles south-east from Nantes. (Map No. XIII ) 4. Chateau Oonthier is sixty miles north-east from Nantes. (Map No. XIIL) a Oct. 17th, 1793. 460 MODERN HISTORY. [Part 1J 34. Bui the Vendeans were divided in their councils. Induced by the hope of succors from England, they directed their march to the coast, and, after laying siege to Granville, 1 where they expected the cooperation of the English, were at length compelled to retreat, with heavy loss. Defeated a at Mans,* an 1 having experienced a final overthrow b at Savenay, 3 they slowly melted away in the midst of their enemies, fighting with unyielding courage to the last. Oat of nearly a hundred thousand who had crossed the Loire, scarcely three thou- sand returned to La Yendee, and most of these fell by the hands of their pursuers, or, brought to a hasty trial, perished on the scaffold. 0 35. The discontents in the south of France against the measures of the convention first broke out in open insurrection at XXII. INSUR- ill-. , rection in Marseilles, which was soon reduced to submission, while the south a large proportion of the inhabitants fled to Toulon. In of France. mean tj me Lyons had revolted. During four months it was in a state of vigorous siege ; and sixty thousand men were employed before the place at the time of its surrender in October, 1793. All the houses of the wealthy were demolished, and nearly the entire city destroyed. In the course of five months after the surrender of the place, more than six thousand of the citizens suffered death by the hands of the executioners, and more than twelve thou- sand were driven into exile. 36. On the fall of Lyons the Republican troops immediately marched to the investment of Toulon, whose defence was assisted by an English and Spanish squadron. The artillery of the besiegers was commanded by a young Corsican, Napoleon Bonaparte, who re- mained faithful to France, in which he had been educated. By his 1. Granville is a fortified seaport town of France, on the western coast of Normandy, one hundred and eighty miles west from Paris. Granville was bombarded and burned by the Eng- .ish in 1695, and was partly destroyed by the Vendean troops in 1793. {Map No. XIII.) 2. Mans is situated on the left bank of the river Sarthe, a northern tributary of the Loire, me hundred and twenty miles south-west from Paris. (Map No. XIII.) 3. Savenay is a town on the northern bank of the Loire, twenty-two miles north-west f r on* Nantes. Here the Vendeans fought with the courage of despair, and their guard, protectiug t crowd of hapless fugitives— the aged, the wounded, women and children — continued to resist, with their swords and bayonets, long after all their ammunition had been expended, and until they all fell under the fire of the Republicans. (Map No. XIII.) a. Dec. ICth, 1793. b. Dec. 22d, 1793. c. The most prominent of the Vendean leaders were Larochej acquelin, Bonchamps, Caihe* lineau, Ltscure, D’Elbe, Stofflet, and Charette. Nearly all of these, and most of their families, jierished in this sanguinary strife, or on the scaffold. Among those who were saved by the courageous hospitality of the peasantry were the wives of Larochejacquelin and Bonchamps, who, after escaping unparalleled dangers, lived to fascinate the world by the splendid story of their husbands’ v rtues and their own misfortunes. Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 461 exertions a fort commanding the harbor was taken, and the places being thuj rendered untenable, was speedily evacuated a by the allies, who carried away with them more than fourteen thousand of the wretched inhabitants — being so many saved from the vengeance of the Revolutionary tribunals. 37. Thus terminated the memorable campaign of 1793. In the midst of internal dissensions and civil war, while France was drenched with the blood of her own citizens, and the world stood aghast at the atrocities of her “ Reign of Terror,” the national councils had shown uncommon military talent and unbounded energy. The invasion, on the north, had been defeated ; the Prussians had been driven back from the Rhine ; the Spaniards had recrossed the Pyrenees ; the English had retired from Toulon ; and the revolt of La Vendee had been extinguished ; whilt an enthusiastic army, of more than a mil- lion of men, stood ready to enforce and defend the principles of the Revolution against all the crowned heads of Europe. [1794.] 38. The fall of Dan ton and his associates, which occurred in the early part of 1794, b was followed by unqualified submission to the central power of Paris, from every part of France. For a time the work of proscription had been confined to the higher orders; but when it had descended to the middling classes, and when, even after all the enemies of the Revolution had been cut off, there seemed no limit to its onward course, humanity began to revolt at the cease- less effusion of human blood, and courage arose out of despair. 39. In the convention itself, which, long stupefied by terror, had become the passive instrument of Robespierre and his xxm fajll associates, a conspiracy against the tyrant was at length of robes- formed among those whose destruction he had already 1>IERKE ’ ANn ° _ J END OF THK planned, — not of the good against the bad, but a con- reign op spiracy of one set of assassins against another : his ar- terror. rest was ordered : he was declared out of the pale of the law ; and, after a brief struggle, he was condemned, with twenty of his associates, by the same Revolutionary Tribunal which he himself had esiao- lished, and sent to the scaffold, where he perished amid the exulting shouts of the populace. On the following day sixty of the most ob- noxious members of the municipality of Paris met the same f*te. Thus terminated that Reign of Terror, which, under the cloak of Republican virtue, had not only overturned the throne and the aliar and driven the nobles of France into exile, and her priests into cw> u Dec. 20th, 1793. b. March 5th See i> 462 MODERN HISTORY. [Pabt II fcivity, but which had also shed the blood of more than a million of her best citizens.* « 40. The fall of Robespierre placed the direction of public affairs in the hands of more moderate men ; but the genius of Carnot still controlled the military operations, which were conducted with remark able energy and success. In consequence of the extinction of civil employments, and the forced requisition on the people, the wholo talent of France was centered in the army, whose numbers, by the be- ginning of October, 1794, amounted to twelve hundred thousand men After deducting the garrisons, the sick, and those destined for the service of the interior, there remained upwards of seven hundred thousand ready to act on the offensive ; — a greater force than could then be raised by all the monarchies of Europe. The French territory resembled an immense military camp, and all the young men of the country seemed pressing to the* frontier to join the armies. 41. England, at the head of the allies in the war against France, xxiv the ma( ^ e preparations that were considered “ unparalleled;” English and it was soon easy to see that the latter was destined victorious i} ecome irresistible on land, and the former to acquire the french the dominion of the seas. In the early part of the season on land, {be French were dispossessed of all their West India possessions ; the island of Corsica, in the Mediterranean, was cap- tured ; and on the 1st of June, a French fleet of twenty-six ships o l the line was defeated, and six vessels taken by the English admiral Howe, off the western coast of France. But numerous victories on the land far more than compensated for these losses ; and the cam- paign was one of the most glorious in the annals of France. At the beginning of the year the allies were pressing heavily on all the frontiers : at its close, the Spaniards, defeated in Biscay 1 and Cata- lonia, were suing for peace : the Italians, driven over the Alps, were trembling for the fate of their own country : the allied forces had everywhere recrossed the Rhine : Holland had be^n revolutionized 1. Biscay is a district of northern Spain, on the Bay of Biscay, and adjoining France. It comprises Biscay Proper, Alava, and Guipuzcoa,— the three Basque provinces. The Basques have a peculiar language, which is undoubtedly of great antiquity. Some have attempted to trace it, as a dialect of the Phoenician, to the Hebrew. It has some similarity to the Hungarian and Turkish. {Map No. XIII.) * The Republican writer, Prudhomme, gives a list of one million, twenty-two thousand three hundred and fifty-one persons, who suffered a violent death during this period, of whom more than eighteen thousand perished by the guillotine. In his enumeration are not included the massacres at Versailles— in the prisons, &c. — nor those shot at Toulon and Marseilles. Chap. Y.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 463 and subdued ; and the English troops had returned home or had fled for refuge into the States of Hanover. 42. The failure of the allies in the campaigns of 1793 and 1794 was in great part owing to a want of cordial cooperation xxv second among them, occasioned by the prospect held out to partition .Russia, Prussia, and Austria, of obtaining a further share OF POLAND - in the -partition of ill-fated Poland. While Poland was a prey to civil dissensions, it was invaded in 1792 by Russia, and early in the following year by Prussia ; and the result was a second partition of the Polish territory among the invading powers, with the concurrence and sanction of Austria, — the king of Prussia assigning as reasons for his treachery and disregard of former treaties, that the “ danger- ous principles of French Jacobinism were fast gaining ground in that country.” 43. Scarcely had this iniquitous scheme been consummated, when the patriots of Poland, with Kosciusko at their head, arose against their invaders, whom they drove from the country. But xxyf THIRD Poland was too feeble to contend successfully against partition the fearful odds that were brought against her. Kosciusko 0F P0LAND - was defeated, wounded, and taken prisoner % by the Russians; and the result of the brief struggle was the third and last partition of Poland, among Russia, Prussia, and Austria. To effect this un- hallowed object, Austria and Prussia had withdrawn a portion of their troops from the French frontiers, and thus the time was allowed to pass by, when a check might have been given to French ambition. [1795.] 44. The first coalition against the French Republic, formed in March 1793, embraced England, Austria, ’ ° 7 1 XXVII. DIS- Prussia, Holland, Spain, Portugal, the two Sicilies, the solution of Roman States, Sardinia, and Piedmont ; but the successes THE F1RST \ 1 COALITION of France in the campaign of 1794 led to the dissolution against of this confederacy early in 1795. The conquest of Hoi- fiance. land decided the wavering policy of Prussia, which now, by a treaty of peace, agreed to live on friendly terms with the Republic, and not to furnish succor to its enemies ; and before the first of August, Spain also, completely humbled, withdrew from the coalition ; and thus the whole weight of the war fell on Austria and England. Russia had indeed already become a party to the war against France, but her alliance was as yet productive of no results, as the attention of the Empress Catherine was wholly engrossed in securing the im- mense territories which had fallen to her by the partition of Poland. 464 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II 45. During the year 1 795 the reaction against the Deign of Terror was general throughout France : the Jacobin clubs were broken up, the Parisian populace disarmed, and many of the prominent mem- bers of the Revolutionary tribunals justly expiated their crimes on xxvm sca ff°ld- A s y e f tlm powers of government were new CON* centered in the National Convention ; hut the people now stitiJtion. p e g ail demand of it a constitution, and the surrender ot the dictatorship which it had so long exercised. A constitution was formed, by which the legislative power was divided between two Councils, appointed by delegates chosen by the people, that of the Five- Hundred, and that of the Ancients , the former having the power of originating laws, and the latter that of passing or rejecting them. The executive power was lodged in the hands of a Directory of five mem- bers, nominated by the council of Five-Hundred, and approved by that of the Ancients. 46. This constitution was to be submitted to the armies of the people for ratification : but the convention, composed of the very men who had at first directed the Revolution, who had xxix. insur- # ’ rection in voted for the death of the king, and the execution of the paris. Girondists, «and who had finally overthrown the tyrant Robespierre, still unwilling abruptly to relinquish its power, decreed that two-thirds of their number should have a seat in the new legis- lative councils. This measure met with great opposition, and caused intense excitement. Although the armies, and a large majority of the people, accepted the constitution, a formidable insurrection against the convention broke out in Paris, headed by the Royalists, compris- ing many of the best citizens, and supported by the Parisian National Guard numbering thirty thousand men, but destitute of artillery. The convention, hastily collecting to its support a body of five thou- sand regular troops assembled in the neighborhood of Paris, placed them under the command of General Barras, who intrusted all his military arrangements to his second in command, the young artillery officer who had distinguished himself in the reduction of Toulon — - Napoleon Bonaparte. The latter was indefatigable in making pre- parations for the defence of the convention, and when his little band was surrounded and attacked by the Parisians, he replied at once by a discharge of cannon loaded with grape shot, firing with as much spirit as though he were directing his guns upon Austrian battalions. In a few hours tranquillity was restored ; and this was the last in- surrection of the people in the French Revolution. Tne new gov EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 465 Chap Y.] eminent being established, the convention, which had passed through so many stormy scenes, and had experienced so great changes in sentiment, determined to finish its career by a signal act of clemency, and after having abolished the punishment of death, and published a general amnesty, it declared its mission of consolidating the Repub- lic accomplished, and its session closed. (Oct. 26th, 1795.) 47. The military events of 1795 were of much less importance than those of the two former years. England indeed maintained her supremacy at sea ; but the Austrians barely sustained themselves in Italy ; and success was evenly balanced on the side of Germany t while a general lassitude, and uncommon financial embarrassments, the result of the recent extraordinary revolutionary exertions, pre- vailed throughout France. [1796.] 48. In the spring of 1796 the French Directory sent three armies into the field ; that of the Sambre and xxx IJfVA _ Meuse, 1 under Jourdan, numbering seventy thousand sion of men ; that of the Rhine and Moselle, under Moreau, GKRMANY * numbering seventy-five thousand ; and the army of Italy under Bona- parte, numbering forty- two thousand. Jourdan and Moreau made successful irruptions into Germany, but they were stopped in their mid-career of victory by the Arch duke Charles of Austria, one of the ablest generals of his time, and eventually compelled to retreat across the Rhine. 49. The operations- of the army of Bonaparte in Italy wero more eventful. Although opposed by greatly supe- xxxj the rior forces, the indefatigable energy and extraordinary army of military talents of the youthful general crowned tbe lTALY - campaign with a series of brilliant victories, almost unparalleled in the annals of war. Napoleon, on assuming the command, found his army in an almost destitute condition, maintaining a doubtful contest on the mountain ridges of the Italian frontier. Rapidly forcing his way into the fertile plains of the interior, he soon compelled the king of Sardinia to purchase a dishonorable peace, subdued Piedmont, conquered Lombardy, humbled all the Italian States, and defeated, and almost destroyed, four powerful armies which Austria sent against him. The battles of Montenotte 2 and Millessimo, 3 the terrible pas- 1. Sambre and Mease. The Sambre unites with the Meuse at Namur. (Map No. XV.) 2. April 11-12, 179G. Montenotte is a mountain ridge near t' c Mediterranean, a short di» Uuice west from Genoa. 3. April 13-14. Millessimo is a small village twenty-eight miles west from Genoa. V* 436 MODERN HISIORY. [Paet II sage of the bridge of Lodi, 1 2 3 the victory of Arcole,* and fall of Man tua* — in fine, the brilliant results of the campaign, excited the utmost enthusiasm throughout France, and Napoleon at once became the favorite of the people. The councils of government repeatedly de creed that the army of Italy had deserved well of their country * and the standard which Napoleon had borne on the bridge of Areola was given to him to be preserved as a precious trophy in his family. 50. England had for some time been greatly agitated by a division xxxii Dig. opinion respecting the policy of continuing the war tttrbances against France ; important parliamentary reforms were in England. demanded -a party spirit became extremely violent ; and on several occasions the country seemed on the brink of revolution. b Added to these internal difficulties, in the month of August, 1796, Spain concluded a treaty 0 of alliance, offensive and defensive, with France, and this was followed, in the month of October , d by a formal declaration of war against Great Britain. Still, England maintained her supremacy at sea, and greatly extended her conquests in the East and West Indies,® while a powerful expedition f which France had prepared for the invasion of Ireland was dispersed by tempests, and obliged to return without even effecting a landing. 1. May 10th. The bridge of Lodi crosses the Adda, twenty miles south-west from Milan. rov/ly escaped the fury of the populace. A crisis in money matters ccmpels the Bank of Eng- land to suspend cash payments, Feb. 1797. Discontents in the navy, and mutiny of the channel fleet, April, 1797. Second mutiny, May and June, and blockade of the Thames. c. Of San Ildefonso. d. Oct. 2d. e. St. Lucia, Essequibo, and Demarara, in the West Indies, were reduced in May, 1796, and early in the same year Ceylon, the Malaccas. Cochin, Trincomalee, &c., in he East Indies. The Cape of Good Hope had been previously taken by the English. f. The French fleet under Hoche, carrying twenty-fi -e thousand land forces, sailed Dec. 15th, 1796. A formidable conspiracy existed in Ireland to t\ row off the English yoke and establish A republican government, and alliance with France. Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 467 [1797.’] 51. Early in the spring of 1797, Napoleon, after stimi* lating the ardor of his Soldiers by a spirited address, a in which he recounted to them the splendid victories which napoleon’s they had already won, set out from Northern Italy b at Austrian the head of sixty thousand men, in several divisions, to carry the war into the hereditary States of Austria. Opposed to him was the Arch duke Charles at the head of superior forces, only a part of which, however, could be brought into the field at the be- ginning of the campaign. Rapidly passing over the mountains, Na- poleon drove his enemies before him, and was ready to descend into the plains which spread out before the Austrian capital, when pro- posals of peace were made and accepted ; and in less than a month after the first movement of the army from winter quarters, the pre- liminaries of a treaty between France and Austria were signed.® The final treaty was concluded at Campo treaty of Formio 1 on the 17th of October following. Spain and campo _ Holland suffered severely in this war : Austria was re- FORMI °- numerated for the loss of Mantua by the cession of Venice; while France obtained a preponderating control over Italy, and her frontiers were extended to the Rhine. Thus terminated the brilliant Italian campaigns of Napoleon. Italy was the greatest sufferer in these contests. “ Her territory was partitioned ; her independence ruined, her galleries pillaged ; — the trophies of art had followed the car of victory ; and the works of immortal genius, which no wealth could purchase, had been torn from their native seats, and violently trans- planted into a foreign soil.” d 52. During these events of foreign war, the strife of parties was raging in France. In the elections of May, 1797, the Royalists pre- vailed by large majorities, and royalist principles were boldly advo- cated in the legislative councils, — so great a change had been pro- 1. Campo Formio is a small town and castle of northern Italy, near the head of the Adriatic, ffhe negotiations for this peace were carried on by the Austrians at Udine, a short distance aorth-east of Campo Formio, and by Bonaparte at the castle of Passeriano. The treaty wa* dated at Campo Formio, because this place lay between Udine and Passeriano, although the ambassadors bad never held any conferences there. (. Map No. XVII.) a “You have been victorious,” said he, “ in fourteen pitched battles and seventy combats s you have made one hundred thousand prisoners, taken five hundred pieces of field artillery, two thousand of heavy calibre, and four sets of pontoons. The contributions you have levied on the vanquished countries have clothed, fed, and paid the army ; you have, besides, added thirty millions of francs to the public treasury, and you have enriched the museum of Pari* with three hundred masterpieces of the works of art, the produce of thirty centuries.” b. March 10th. c. April 9th, at Judemberg. d. Alison. 468 MODERN HISTORY. [Part 1L XXXV. ESTAB LISHMENT iluced in public opinion by the sanguinary excesses of the Revolution But the vigilance of the Revolutionary party was again aroused, and the Directory, who were the Republican leaders, becoming alarmed for their own existence, but being assured of the support of the army, determined upon decisive measures. On the night of the 3d of September, twelve thoasand troops, of military under the command of Augereau, and with the concurring nT F rance su PP or t °f Napoleon, were introduced into the capital; the Royalist leaders, and the obnoxious members of the two councils, were seized and imprisoned; and when the Parisians awoke from their sleep, they found the streets filled with troops, the walls covered with proclamations, and military despotism established.* 1 Tie Directory now took upon themselves the supreme power, while *heir opponents were banished to the pestilential marshes of Guiana. 1 53. The year 1798 opened with immense military preparations [1798] f° r the invasion of England, the only power then xxxvi. pre- a t war with France. Unusual activity prevailed, not PARATIONS • «/ i / for the in- only in the harbors of France and Holland, but also of vasion of Spain and Italy : all' the naval resources of France were England. re q U i s iti 0 n, and an army of nearly one hundred and fifty thousand men was collected along the English Channel, under the name of the Army of England, the command of which was given to Napoleon. But the hazards of the expedition induced Na- poleon to direct his ambitious views to another quarter, and, after xxxvii considerable difficulty, he persuaded the Directory to expedition give him the command of an expedition to Egypt, a to egypt. p r evince of the Turkish empire. The ultimate objects of Napoleon appear to have been, not only to conquer Egypt and Syria, but to strike at the Indian possessions of England by the overland route through Asia, and after a series of conquests that should render- his name as terrible as that of Ghenghis Khan or Tam- erlane, establish an Oriental empire that should vie with that of Al- xander 54. Filled with these visions of military glory, Napoleon sailed from Toulon on the 19th of May with a fleet of five hundred sail, carrying about forty thousand soldiers, and ten thousand seamen He took with him artisans of all kinds ; he formed a complete col- lection of philosophical and mathematical instruments ; and about 1. French Guiana. See Surinam, p. 393. a. Called the Revolution of the eighteenth Fructidor. Chap. V.] EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 460 a hundred of the most illustrious scientific men of France, reposing impiwit confidence in the youthful general, hastened to join the ex- pedition, whose destination was still unknown to them. 55. The fleet first sailed to Malta, 1 which quickly surrendered * its almost impregnable fortresses to the sovereignty of France, — the way having been pre! iously prepared by a conspiracy fomented by the secret agents of Napoleon. Fortunate in avoiding the fleet of the English admiral Nelson, then cruising in the Mediterranean, the ar- mament arrived before Alexandria on the first of July, and Napo- leon, hastily landing a part of his forces, marched against the city, which he took by storm before the dismayed Turks had time to make preparations for defence. 56. With consummate policy Napoleon proclaimed to the Arab population b that he had come to protect their religion, restore their rights, and punish their usurpers, the Mamelukes ; and thus he sought, by arming one part of the people against the other, to 1. Malta. (See also p. 152.) On the decline of the Roman empire Malta fell under the do- minion of the Goths, and afterwards of the Saracens. It was subject to the crown of Sicily from 1190 to 1525, when the emperor Charles V. conferred it on the Knights Hospitallers of St. John, who had been expelled from Rhodes by the Turks. In 1565 it was unsuccessfully be- sieged by the Turks; the knights, under their heroic master Valette, founder of the city called by his name, finally compelling the enemy to retreat with great loss. In 1798 it fell into the hands of Napoleon ; but the French garrisons surrendered to the English, Sept. 5th, 1800. The treaty of Paris, in 1814, annexed the island to Great Britain. a. June 12th, 1798. b. The population of Egypt at this time, consisting of the wrecks of several nations, was composed of three classes ; Copts, Arabs, and Turks. The Copts, the ancient inhabitants of Egypt, a poor, despised, and brutalized race, amounted at most to two hundred thousand. The Arabs, subdivided into several classes, formed the great mass of the population : 1st, there were the Sheiks or chiefs, great landed proprietors, who were at the head of the priesthood, the magistracy, religion, and learning: 2d, there was a large class of smaller landholders ; and, 3d, the great mass of the Arab population, who, as hired peasants, by the name of fellahs, in a condition little better than that of slaves, culf’vated the soil for their masters ; and 4th, the Bedouin tribes, or wandering Arabs, children of the desert, who would never attach them- selves to the soil, but who wandered about, seeking pasturage for their numerous herds of cattle in the Oases, or fertile spots of the desert on both sides of the Nile. They could bring Into the field twenty thousand horsemen, matchless in bravery, and in the skill with which their horses were managed, but destitute of discipline, and fit only to harass an enemy, not to fight him. The third race was that of the Turks, who were introduced at the time o f the con- pie3t of Egypt by the Sultans of Constantinople. They numbered about two hundred thousand, and were divided into Turks and Mamelukes. Most of the former were engaged in trades and handicrafts in the towns. The latter, who were Circassian slaves purchased from among the handsomest boys of the Circassians, and carried to Egypt when young, and there trained to the practice of arms, were, with their chiefs and owners, the beys, the real masters and tyrants of the country. The entire body consisted of about twelve thousand horsemen, and each Mameluke had two fellahs to wait upon him. “ They are all splendidly armed : in their girdles are always to be seen a pair of pistols and a poniard ; from the saddle are suspended another pair of pistols and a hatchet ; on one side is a sabre, on the other a blunderbuss and the servant on foot carries i. carbine ” 470 MODERN HISTORY. [Paht IL aeuti alize tlieir neans of resistance. Leaving three thousand sol* diers in garrison at Alexandria, he set out on the 6th of July for Cairo 1 at the head of thirty thousand men. After some XXXVIII. ~ battle of skirmishing on the route with the Mamelukes, on the the 21st of the month he arrived opposite Cairo, on the west pyramids. g .^ e w here Mourad Bey had formed an in- trenched camp, defended by twenty thousand men, while on the plain, between the camp and the pyramids, were drawn up nearly ten thousand Mameluke horsemen. Napoleon arranged his army in five divisions, each in the form of a square, with the artillery at the angles, and the baggage in the centre ; but scarcely had ho made his dispositions, when eight thousand of the Mameluke horse men, in one body, admirably mounted and magnificently dressed, and rending the air with their cries, advanced at full gallop upon the squares of infantry. Falling upon the foremost division, they were met by a terrible fire of grape and musketry, which drove them from the front round the sides of the column. Furious at the unexpected resistance, they dashed their horses against the rampart of bayonets, and threw their pistols at the heads of the grenadiers, but all in vain, — the tide was rolled back in confusion, and the survivors fled towards the camp, which was quickly stormed, its artillery, stores, and baggage were taken, and the “ Battle of the Pyramids” was soon at an end. The victors lost scarcely a hundred a men in the action, while a great portion of the defenders of the camp perished in the Nile ; and, of the splendid array of Mameluke horsemen that had so gallantly borne down upon the French columns, not more than two thousand five hundred escaped with Mourad Bey into Upper Egypt. 57. A few days after the battle of the Pyramids, Napoleon expe- xxxix rienced a severe reverse by the destruction of his fleet battle of which he had left moored in the Bay of Aboukir near the nile. Alexandria. On the morning of the 1st of August the Biitish fleet, under the command of Admiral Nelson, appeared off 1. Cairo (ki’-ro) the modem capital of Egypt, and the second city of the Mohammedai world, is near the eastern bank of the Nile, about twelve miles above the apex of its delta, and one hundred and twelve miles south-east from Alexandria. Population variously estimated at from two hundred and fifty to three hundred thousand. Cairo is supposed to have been founded about the year 970, by an Arab general of the first Fatimate caliph. The neighbor- hood of Cairo abounds with places and objects possessing great interest, among which are th/> pyramids, and the remains of the city of Heliopolis, the On of the scriptures. (Map No. XII.) a. “ Scarcely a hundred killed and wounded.”— Thiers. “ The victors hardly lost two hua tired men : _a the actioi i.” — Alison. Chap. V.J EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 47 the harbor, and on the afternoon of the same day tne attack was commenced, several of the British ships penetrating between the French fleet and the shore, so as to place their enemies between two fires. The action that followed was terrific. The darkness of night was illumined by the incessant discharge of more than two thousand cannon ; and during the height of the contest the French ship L’Orient, of one hundred and twenty guns, having been for some timo on fire, blew up with a tremendous explosion, by which every ghip in both fleets was shaken to its centre. The result of this fa mous “ Battle of the Nile” was the destruction of the French naval power in the Mediterranean, the shutting up of the French army in Egypt, cut off from its resources, with scarcely the hope of return, the dispelling of Napoleon’s dreams of Oriental conquest, and the revival of the coalition in Europe against the French republic. Turkey declared war ; Russia sent a fleet into the Mediterranean ; the king of Naples took up arms ; and the emperor of Austria, yield- ing to the solicitations of England, recommenced hostilities. 58. Notwithstanding the loss of his fleet, and the storm that was arising in Europe, Napoleon showed no design of abandoning his conquests. With remarkable energy he established mills, foundries, and manufactories of gunpowder throughout Egypt, and soon put the country in an admirable state of defence. Upper Egypt was con- quered by a division under Desaix, who penetrated beyond the ruins of Thebes ; and finally, in the early part of February, [1799] 1799, Napoleon, leaving sixteen thousand men as a re- xl. Syrian serve in Egypt, set out at the head of only fourteen thou- EXPEDlr,0:NT sand men for the conquest of Syria, where the principal army of the Sultan was assembling. On the 6th of March, Jaffa, the Joppa of antiquity, the first considerable town of Palestine, was carried by storm, and four thousand of the garrison who had capitulated were mercilessly put to death — an eternal and ineffaceable blot on the memory of Napoleon. 59. On the 16th of March the French army made its appearance be- fore Acre, where the Pacha of Syria had shut himself up with all his treasures, determined to make the most des- XLr ‘ SIEGE perate resistance. He was aided in the defence of the place by an English officer, Sir Sidney Smith, who commanded a small squadron on the coast. Foiled in every attempt to take the place by storm, Napoleon was finally compelled to order a retreat, after a siege of more than two months, having in the meantime, with 472 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II only six thousand of his veterans, defeated an army of thirty thou sand Oriental militia in the battle of Mount Tabor. 1 On the mom* ing of that battle Kleber had left Nazareth 2 to make an attack on the Turkish camp near the Jordan, but he met the advancing hosts in the plain in the vicinity of Mount Tabor. Throwing his little army into squares, with the artillery at the angles, he bravely main- battle ta ^ ne( ^ unequal combat for six hours, when Napoleon, of mount arriving on the heights which overlooked the field of bat- tabor. tie, au( j distinguishing his men by the steady flaming spots amid the moving throng by which they were surrounded, an- nounced, by the discharge of a twelve pounder, that succor was at hand. The arrival of fresh troops soon converted the battle into a complete rout ; the Turkish camp, with all its baggage and ammuni- tion, fell into the hands of the conquerors, and the army which the country people called “ innumerable as the sands of the sea or the stars of heaven” was driven beyond the Jordan and dispersed, never again to return. 60. Napoleon reached Egypt on the 1st of June, having lost more than three thousand men in his Syrian expedition ; but scarcely had he restored quiet to that country, when, on the 11th of July, a body of nine thousand Turks, admirably equipped, and having a numerous pack of artillery, landed at Aboukir Bay, having been transported XLI1I thither by the squadron of Sir Sidney Smith. Napoleon battle of immediately left Cairo with all the forces which he could aboukir. comman d 5 and although he found the Turks at Aboukir strongly intrenched, he did not hesitate to attack them with inferior forces. The result was the total annihilation of the Turkish army, — five thousand being drowned in the Bay of Aboukir, two thousand killed in battle, and two thousand taken prisoners. 61. By some papers which fell into his hands, Napoleon was now, for the first time, informed of the state of affairs in Europe. Early in the season the allies had collected a force of two hundred and fifty housand men between the German ocean and the Adriatic, as a bar- rier against French ambition ; and fifty thousand Russians, under the veteran Suwarrow, were on the march to swell their numbers. To this vast force the French could oppose, along their eastern frontiers, 1. Mount Tabor is twenty-five miles south-east from Acre, and fifty-three north-east from Je- rusalem. It is the mountain on which occurred the transfiguration of Christ.— Matthew, xviL 2, and Mark, ix. 2. {Map No. VI.) 2. Nazareth, a small town of Palestine, celebrated as having been the early residence of the founder of Christianity, is seventy miles north-east from Jerusalem. ( Map No. Vi.) Chap V.l EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. 473 and scattered over Italy, an army of only one hundred and seventy thousand. In Italy the united Russians and Austrians gradually gained ground until the French lost all their posts in that country except Genoa : many desperate battles were fought in Switzerland, but victory generally followed the allied powers, while, in Germany, the French were forced back upon the Rhine : Corfu had been con- quered by the Russians and English, and Malta was closely block- aded. 62. When Napoleon was informed of these reverses of the French arms, his decision was immediately made, and leaving Kleber in com- mand of the army of Egypt, he secretly embarked for France. After a protracted voyage, in which he was in constant fear of being cap- tured by British cruisers, he landed at Frejus 1 2 on the 9th of Octo- ber, and on the 18th found himself once more in Paris. The most enthusiastic joy pervaded the whole country on account of his returu. The eyes, the wishes, and the hopes of the people, who were dissatw* fied with the existing state of things, were all turned on him : men of all professions paid their court to him, as one in wnose hands were, already, the destinies of their country : the Directory alone distrusted and feared him. 63. Napoleon, perceiving that the French people had grown weary of the Directory, and relying on the support of the army, concerted, with a few leading spirits, the overthrow of overthrow the government. As preliminary measures, the Council ok the of the Ancients was induced to appoint him commander n ** ECrOKT - of the National Guard and of all the military in Paris, and to de- cree the removal of the entire Legislative body to St. Cioua,' i under his protection ; but the Council of Five Hundred, alarmed by ru- mors of the approaching dictatorship, raised so furious an opposition against him, that Napoleon was in imminent danger. As the only resource left him, he appealed to his comrades in arms, and on the 9th of November, 1 799, a body of grenadiers entering the Legisla- tive hall by his orders, cleared it of its members; and thus military 1. Frejus is a town of south-eastern France, in a spacious plain, one mile from the Mediter- ranean, and forty-live miles north-east from Toulon. Napoleon landed at St. Raphael, a small fishing village about a nile and a-half from Frejus. Frejus was a place M' importance in the time of Julius C«esar, who gave it his own name. (Map No. XIII.) 2. St. Cloud is a delightful village six miles we«t from Paris, containing ft _ovrl castle and magnificent garden, which were much embellished by Napolecn. Napoleon choaa Su Cloud for Lis residence ; hence the expression cabinet of St. C/^ua. t 'nder tho former government the phrase was, cabinet of VtrsaiUes % or cabinet of the Tui/arie*. #74 MODERN HISTORY. [I'ART 11 force was left triumphant in the place of the constitution and the laws. A new constitution was soon formed, by which leon first the executive power was intrusted to three' consuls, ot consul, -whom Napoleon was the chief. The “ First consul,” as R apoleon was styled, was in everything but in name a monarch. Nol only in Paris, but throughout all France, the feeling was in favor of the new government ; for the people, weary of anarchy, rejoiced at the prospect of repose under the strong arm of power, and were as unanimous to terminate the Revolution as, in 1789, they had been to commence it. The Revolution had passed through all its changes ; — monarchical, republican, and democratic ; it closed with the mili- tary character ; while the liberty which it strove to establish was im- molated by one of its own favorite heroes, on the altar of persona- ambition Chap. YIJ NINETEENTH CENTURY. 475 CHAPTER VI. THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. SECTION I. THE WARS OF NAPOLEON. ANALYSIS. [Events of the year 1800.] 1. Napoleon’s proposals for peace. Rejected by the British government. — 2. Military force of Great Britain and Austria. Situation of France. Effect of Napoleon’s government — 3. Disposition of the French forces.- --4. Successes of Moreau. [Engen. Moeskirch.] Massena is shut up in Genoa. Napoleon passes over the Great St. Bernard. [Great St. Bernard.] — 5. Surprise of the Austrians. Napoleon’s progress. Victory of Marengo. [Marengo.] — 6. Efforts at negotiation. Malta surrenders to the British. — 7. Oper- ations of the French and Austrians in Bavaria. [Hohenlinden.] Passage of the Splugen by Macdonald. [Splugen.] Armistice. Peace of Luneville. [Luneville.] — 8. Maritime confed- eracy against England. Its effect. Previous orders of the Danish and Russian governments. 9. [Events of 1801.] England sends a powerful fleet to the Baltic. Battle of Copenhagen, — 10. The Russian emperor Paul is strangled, and succeeded by Alexander. Dissolution of the League of the North. — 11. The French army in Egypt. Capitulation. General peace. [Amiens.] 12. [Events of 1802, the year of Peace.] Internal Affairs of France. Napoleon mada consul for life. — 13. Conduct of Napoleon in his relations with foreign States. Holland — the Italian republics— the Swiss cantons. Attempt to recover St. Domingo. [Historical account of St. Domingo.]— 14. Circumstances leading to a renewal of the war in 1803. Hostile acts of England and France. 15. First military operations of the French, in the year 1803. [Hanover.] Preparations foi the invasion of England. — 1 6. Rebellion in Ireland. Conspiracy against Napoleon early in 1804. The affair of the Duke D’Enghien. [Baden.] — 17. Hostile acts of England against Spain- The latter joins France. — 18. Napoleon, emperor, May, 1804 — crowned by the pope — anointed sovereign of Italy, May, 1805. 19. New coalition against France. Prussia remains neutral. Beginning of the war by Aus« tria. — 20. The French forces. Napoleon victorious at Ulm. [Ulm.] English naval victory of Trafalgar. [Trafalgar.] Additional victories of Napoleon, and treaty of Presburg, Dec. 1805 [Austerlitz.] [1806.] 21. Conquests of the English. [Mahrattas. Buenos Ayres ] Napoleon rapidly ex- tends his supremacy over the continent. The affairs of Naples, Holland, and Germany. — 22. Circumstances which led Prussia to join the coalition against Napoleon. — 23. Napoleon’s victo- ries over the Prussians. He enters Berlin. [Jena. Auerstadt.] — 24. The Berlin decrees. Na- poleon in Poland. Battle of Pultusk. Battle of Eylau, Feb. 1807. Fall of Dantzic. [Eylau. Dantzic.]— 25. Battle of Friedland. [Friedland. Niemen.] The treaty of Tilsit. Losses suf- fered by Prussia. [Tilsit. Westphalia.]— 26. Circumstances that led to the bombardment of Copenhagen, by the English fleet. Denmark joins France. Portuguese affairs. The French in Lisbon. [Rio Janeiro. Brazil.]— 27. The designs of Napoleon against the Peninsular mon- archs. Affairs of Spain, 1808. Godoy — abdication of the Spanish monarch, and his son Ferdi- nand. Joseph Bonaparte becomes king of Spain, and Murat king of Naples. — 28. Resistance of the Spaniards and beginning of the Peninsular war. — 29. Successes of the Spaniards at Cadiz, Valencia, Saragossa, and Baylen. [Baylen. Ebro.]— 30. War in Portugal, and evacuation of that country by the French forces. [Oporto. Vimiera. Cintra.]— 31. Napoieon takes the field in person, and the British are rapidly diiven from Spain. [Reynosa. Burgee. Tudela. Corunna.] 476 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II [1809.] 32. Austria suddenly renews the war. Victories of Napoleon, whc enters Vienna in May ; and peace with Austria in October. [Eckmuhl. Aspern. Wagram.] — 33. War with the Tyrolese. British expedition to Holland. Continuance of the war in the Spanish penin- sula. Difficulties between Napoleon and the pope. — 34. Napoleon’s divorce from Josephine and marriage with Maria Louisa of Austria, 1810. Effects of this marriage upon Napoleon’s futuis prospects. His conduct towards Holland. Sweden. His power in the central parts of Europe. Jealousy of the Russian emperor. — 35. Continuance of the war in the Spanish penin- sula. Wellington and Massena. [Ciudad Rodrigo. Busaco. Torres Vedras.]— 30. The pe- ninsula war during the year 1811. [Badajoz. Albuera.] 37. Events of the peninsular war from the beginning of 1812 to the retreat of the Trench across the Pyrenees. [Salamanca. Vittoria.] 38. Nai*olkon’s Russian Campaign, 1812. Events that led to the opening of a war with Russia. The opposing nations in this war. — 39. The “ Grand Army” of Napoleon. The op- posing Russian force. — 40. Napoleon crosses the Niemen, June 1812. Retreat of the Russians. Early disasters of the French army. [Wilna.] — 41. Onward march of the army. Battle of Smolensko. Entrance of the deserted city.— 42. Napoleon pursues the retreating Russians, who make a stand at Borodino. [Borodino.] The evening before the battle. — 43. Battle of Borodino, Sept. 7th.— 44. Continued retreat of the Russians, who abandon Moscow. The city, on the entrance of the French. The burning of Moscow. Napoleon begins a retreat Oct. 19th. —45. The horrors of the retreat.— 40. Napoleon at Smolensko. He renews the retreat Nov. . 4th. Battles of Krasnoi, and passage of the Beresina. [Krasnoi. Beresina.] Marshal Ney. Napoleon abandons the army, and reaches Paris, Dec. 18th. His losses in the Russian campaign. 47. War between England and the United States of America. Mexico. The war in the Indian seas. [1813.] 48. Napoleon’s preparations for renewing the war. Prussia, Sweden, and Austria. Battles of Lutzen and Bautzen. Armistice, and congress of Prague. [Bautzen.]— 49. War re- newed Aug. 16th. Austria joins the allies. Battles. [Culm. Gross-Beren. Katsbach. Den- newitz.] Battles of Leipsic, and retreat of the French. Losses of the French. Revolts. Wellington. [1814.] 50. General invasion of France. Bernadotte and Murat. Energy and talents of Na- poleon. The allies march upon Paris, which capitulates. Deposition, and abdication, of Napo- leon. Treaty between him and the allies. [Elba.] Louis XVIII. Restricted limits of France. [1815.] 51. Congress of Vienna, and Napoleon’s return from Elba. Marshal Ney. All France submits to Napoleon. — 52. Napoleon in vain attempts negotiations. Forces of the allies ; of Napoleon. — 53. Napoleon’s policy, and movements. Battles of Ligny, Quatre Bras, Wavre, and Waterloo. Second capitulation of Paris. Napoleon’s abdication— attempted escape to America — exile— and death. 54. First objects of the allies. Return of Louis XVIII. Execution of Ney, and Labedoyere. Fate of Murat.— 55. Second treaty of Paris. Its terms. Restoration of the pillaged treasures of art. 1. As soon as Napoleon was seated on the consular throne 01 [18001 •F rance he addressed to the British government an able l events of communication, making general proposals of peace. To the year this a firm and dignified reply was given, ascribing the evils which afflicted Europe to French aggression and French ambition, and declining to enter into a general pacification until France should present, in her internal condition and foreign policy, firmer pledges than she had yet given, of stability in her own government, and security to others. The answer of the British gov- ernment forms the beginning of the second period of the war — thai in which it was waged with Napoleon himself, the skilful director of all the energies of the French nation. 2. War being resolved on, the most active measures were taken Chap. YL] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 477 on bota sides to prosecute it with vigor. The land forces, equipped militia, and seamen of Great Britain, amounted to three hundred and seventy thousand men, and Austria furnished two hundred thou- sand. France seemed poorly prepared to meet the coming storm. Her armies had just been defeated in Germany and Italy ; her treasury was empty, and her government had lost all credit ; the af- filiated Swiss and Dutch republics were discontented ; and the French people were dissatisfied and disunited. But the establishment of a firm and powerful government soon arrested these disorders ; tho finances were established on a solid basis; the Yendean war was amicably terminated ; Russia was detached from the British alli- ance ; many of the banished nobility were recalled ; confidence, en- ergy, and hope, revived ; and the prospects of France rapidly bright- ened under the auspices of Napoleon. 3. At the opening of the campaign the French forces were dis- posed in the following manner. The army of Germany, one hundred and twenty-eight thousand strong, under the command of Moreau, was posted on the northern confines of Switzerland and north along the west bank of the Rhine : the army of Italy, thirty-six thousand strong, under the command of Massena, occupied the crest of the Alps in the neighborhood of Genoa ; while an army of reserve, of fifty thousand men, of whom twenty thousand were veteran troops, awaited the orders of the first consul, ready to fly to the aid of either Moreau or Massena. 4. Moreau, victorious at Engen and Moeskirch, 1 drove the Aus- trians back from the Rhine, and, penetrating to Munich, laid Bavaria under contribution. Massena, after the most vigorous efforts against a greatly superior force, was shut up in Genoa with a part of his army, and finally compelled to capitulate. Napoleon, on hearing the reverses of Massena, resolved to cross the Swiss Alps and fall upon Piedmont. Taking the route by the Great St. Bernard, 2 on the 17th 1. Engen and Moeskirch are in the south-eastern part of Baden, near the northern boundary Of Switzerland. {Map No. XVII.) 2. Great St. Bernard is the name given to a famous pass of the Alps, leading over the mountains from the Swiss town of Martigny to the Italian town of Aosta. In its highest part it rises to an elevation of more than eight thousand feet, being almost impassable in winter and very dangerous in spring, from the avalanches. Near the summit of the pass is the famous hospital founded in 9G2 by Bernard de Menthon, and occupied by brethren of the orde* of St. Augustine, whose especial duty it is to assist and relieve travellers crossing the mountains. In the mid3t of the tempests and snow storms, the monks, accompanied by dogs of extraordi- nary Bize and sagacity, set out for the purpose of tracking those who have lost their way. If they find the body of a traveller who has perished, they carry it into the vault of the dead, where it remains lying on a table until another victim is brought to occupy the place. Tt ii 478 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II of May his army began the ascent of the mountain. The artillery wagons were taken to pieces, and put on the backs of mules, while a hundred large pines, each hollowed out to receive a piece of artil- lery, were drawn up the mountain by the soldiers. To encourage the men, the music of each regiment played at its head ; and where the ascent was most difficult the charge was sounded. 5. Great was the surprise of the Austrians at beholding this large army descending into the Italian plains. Before the end of the month Napoleon was at Turin, and on the 2d of June, after little opposition, he made his triumphant entry into Milan. On the 14th he was attacked by the Austrian general Melas, at the head of greatly superior forces, on the plains of Marengo. 1 Here, after twelve hours of incessant fighting, victory was decided in favor of the French by the stubborn resistance of Desaix, and the happy charge of the gal- lant Kellerman. General Desaix, who had just arrived from Egypt, fell on the field of battle. The result of the victory gave Napoleon the entire command of Italy, and induced the Austrians to pro- pose a suspension of arms, which, in anticipation of a treaty, was agreed to. 6. The efforts at negotiation were unsuccessful, as no satisfactory arrangements could be made between England and France, and in the latter part of November the armistice was terminated, and hostili ties recommenced. In the meantime Malta, which, during more than two years, had been closely blockaded by the British forces, was compelled to surrender, and was permanently annexed to the British dominions. 7. On the renewal of the war, the Austrian army, eighty thousand strong, under the Archduke John, and the French army, somewha less in number, under Moreau, were facing each other on the eastern confines of Bavaria. The Austrians advanced, and on the 3d of De- then set up against the wall, among the other dead bodies, which, on account of the cold, decay so slowly that they are often recognized by their friends after tne lapse of years. It is impos- ble to bury the dead, as there is nothing about the hospital Lnt naked rocks. Not a tree or ush is to be seen, but everlasting winter reigns in this dreary abode, the highest inhabit place in Europe. When the army of Napoleon crossed the St. Bernard, every soldier received from the monks a large ration of bread and cheese, and a draught of wine at the gate of the hospital : a season- able supply which exhausted the stores of the establishment, but was fully repaid by the Fust Consul before the close of the campaign. The Little St. Bernard , over which Hannibal crossed, is farther west, separating Piedmont from Savoy. The undertaking of the Carthaginian was far more difficult than that of Napoleon. (Map No. XIV.) 1. Marengo is a small village of Northern Italy, in an extensive plais forty-thn© miles south' •rest from Milan. ( Map No. XII.) Chap. VI.J NINETEENTH CENTURY. 479 cember brought on the famous battle of Hohenlinden, 7 in which they were completely overthrown, and driven back with great slaughter. Moreau rapidly pursued the retreating enemy, and penetrated within sixty miles of Vienna, when, at the solicitation of the Austrian gen- eral, an armistice was agreed to on the 25th. In the meantime, in the very heart of winter, the French general Macdonald, at the head of fifteen thousand men, had crossed from Switzerland into the Italian TjtoI, by the famous pass of the Splugen, 2 more difficult than that of St. Bernard. The French. forces in Italy now numbered more than a hundred thousand men, and the speedy expulsion of the Aus- trians was anticipated, when an armistice, soon followed by the peace of Luneville, 3 put an end to the contest with Austria. 51 8. In the meantime Napoleon, with consummate policy, was suc- cessfully planning a union of the Northern powers against England ; and on the 16th of December, 1800, a maritime confederacy was signed by Russia, Sweden, and Denmark, and soon after by Prussia, as an acceding party. This league, aimed principally against Eng- land, was designed to protect the commerce of the Northern powers, on principles similar to the armed neutrality of 1780; but its effect would have been, if fully carried out, to deprive England, in great part, of her naval superiority. The Danish government had previ- ously ordered her armed vessels to resist the search of British cruis- ers ; and the Russian emperor had issued an embargo on all the British ships in his harbors. 9. England, determined to anticipate her enemies, despatched, as soon as possible, a powerful fleet to the Baltic, under the command of Nelson and Sir Hyde Parker. Passing through the Sound under the fire of the Danish batteries, on the 30th of March the fleet came 1. Hohenlinden is a village of Bavaria, nineteen miles east from Munich. (Map No. XVII.) Campbell’s noble ode, beginning, “ On Linden, when the sun was low, All bloodless lay the untrodden snow,” has rendered the name, at least, of this battle, familiar to almost every school-boy. 9. The Pass of the Splugen leads over the Alps from the Grisons to the Italian Tyrol, into ih9 valley of the Lake of Como. It was only after the most incredible efforts that Macdonald succeeded in passing his army over the mountain ; and more than a hundred soldiers, and as many hors< s and mules, were swallowed up in its abysses, and never more heard of. Since 1823 there has been a road over the Splugen passable for wheel carriages. It was built by Austria, at great expense. ( Map No. XIV.) 3. Luneville , in the former province of Lorraine, is on the road from Paris to Strasbourg sixteen miles south-east from Nancy. By the treaty concluded here in 1801, and which Francis was obliged to give his assent to, “ not only as emperor of Austria, but in the name of the German empire,” Belgium and all the left bank of the Rhine were again formally ceded to France, and Lombardy was erected into an independent Stfte, (Maps No. XIII. and XVII.) a. Feb. 9th, 1801. 480 MODERN HISTORY. [Part 1L *0 anchor opposite the harbor of Copenhagen, which was protected by an imposing array of forts, men-of-war, fire- ships, and floating batteries. On the 2d of April Nelson brought his ships into the harbor, where, m a space not exceeding a mile and a half in extent, they were received by a tremendous fire from more than two thousand cannon. The English replied with equal spirit, and after four hours of incessant cannonade the whole front line of Danish vessels and floating batteries was silenced, with a loss to the Danes, of more than six thousand men. The English loss was twelve hundred. Of this battle, Nelson said, “ I have been in one hundred and five engagements, but that of Copenhagen was the most terrible of them all.” 10. While Nelson was preparing to follow up his success by at- tacking the Russian fleet in the Baltic, news reached him of an event at St. Petersburgh which changed the whole current of Northern policy. A conspiracy of Russian noblemen was formed against the Emperor Paul, who was strangled in his chamber on the night of the 24th of March. His son and successor Alexander at once resolved to abandon the confederacy, and to cultivate the friendship of Great Britain. Sweden, Denmark, and Prussia followed his example ; and thus was dissolved, in less than six months after it had been formed, the League of the North, — the most formidable confederacy ever arrayed against the maritime power of England. 11. While these events were transpiring in Europe, the army which Napoleon had left in Egypt, under the command of Kleber, after losing its leader by the hands of an obscure assassin, was doomed to yield to an English force sent out under Sir Ralph Aber crombie, who fell at the head of his victorious columns on the plain of Alexandria.* 1 By the terms of capitulation, the French troop8> to the number of twenty-four thousand, were conveyed to France with their arms, baggage, and artillery. As Malta had previously surrendered to the British, there was now little left to contend for between France and England. To the great joy of both nations preliminaries of peace were signed at London on the 1st of October, and on the 27th of March, 1802, tranquillity was restored through- out Europe by the definitive treaty of Amiens. 1 12. Napoleon now directed all his energies to the reconstruction 1. Amiens. (See p. 279.) The definitive treaty of Amiens was concluded March 27th, 1802 k etween Great Britain, France, Spain, and the Batavian Republic, (Republic of Holland.) a. March 21st, 1801. NINETEENTH CENTURY. Chap VI.] 481 of society in France, the general improvement of the country, and the consolidation of the power he had acquired. By a general amnesty one hundred thousand emigrants were enabled to return : the Homan Catholic religion was re- stored. to the discontent of the Parisians, but to the great joy of the rural population : a system of public instruction was es- tablished under the auspices of the government : to bring back that gradation of ranks in society that, the Revolution had overthrown, the Legion of Honor was instituted, an order of nobility founded on personal merit : great public works were set on foot throughout France : the collection of the heterogeneous laws of the Monarchy and the Republic into one consistent whole, under the title of the Code Napoleon, was commenced ; an undertaking which has deserved- ly covered the name of Napoleon with glory, and survived all the other achievements of his genius ; and finally, the French nation, as a permanent pledge of their confidence, by an almost unanimous vote, conferred upon their favorite and idol the title and authority of con- sul for life. 13. In his relations with foreign States the conduct of Napoleon was less honorable. He arbitrarily established a government in Holland, entirely subservient to his will ; and he moulded the northern Italian republics at his pleasure : he interfered in the dis- sensions of the Swiss cantons to establish a government in harmony with the monarchical institutions which he was introducing in Paris ; and when the Swiss resisted, he sent Ney at the head of twenty thou- sand men to enforce obedience. England remonstrated in vain, and the Swiss, in despair, submitted to the yoke imposed upon them. Napoleon was less successful in an attempt to recover the island of St. Domingo, 1 which had revolted from French authority. Forces 1. St. Domingo , or Hayti, called by Columbus Hispaniola, ( Little Spain,) is a large island of the West Indies, about fifty miles east of Cuba. It was first colonized by the Spaniards, by whose cruelties the aboriginal inhabitants were soon almost wholly destroyed. Their plnca was at first supplied by Indians forcibly carried off from the Bahamas, and, at a later period by the importation of vast numbers of negroes from Africa. About the middle of the six. teenth century the French obtained footing on its western coasts, and in 1691 Spain ceded to France half the island, and at subsequent periods the possessions of the latter were still farther augmented. From 1776 to .1789 the French colony was at the height of its prosperity, but in 1791 the negroes, excited by news of the opening revolution in France, broke out in insurrec- tion, and in two months upwards of two thousand whites perished, and large districts of fertile plantations were devastated. While the war was raging, commissioners, sent from France taking part with the negroes against the planters, proclaimed the freedom of all the blacks who ibould enrol themselves under the republican standard : a measure equivalent to the instant abolition of slavery throughout the island. The English government, apprehensive of danger to its West India possessions from the establishment of so great a revolutionary outpost at w 31 III. EVENTS OF 1802, THE YEAR OF PEACE. 482 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II to the number of thirty-five thousand men were sent out to reduce the island, but nearly all perished, victims of fatigue, disease, and the perfidy of their own government. 14. It soon became evident that the peace of Amiens could not be permanent. The encroachments of France upon the feebler Eu- ropean powers, the armed occupation of Holland, the great accumu- lation of troops on the shores of the British Channel, and the evident designs of Napoleon upon Egypt, excited the jealousy of England t and the latter refused to evacuate Malta, Alexandria, and the Capo of Good Hope, in accordance with the late treaty stipulations, until sat- iv renewal ^factory explanations should be given by the French gov- of the ernment. Bitter recriminations followed on both sides, war, 1803. an q - n mon th of May, 1803, the cabinet of London issued letters of marque, and an embargo on all French vessels in British ports. Napoleon retaliated by ordering the arrest of all the English then in France between the ages of eighteen and sixty years. 15. The first military operations of the French were rapid and successful. The electorate of Hanover, 1 a dependency of England, the entrance of the Gulf of Mexico, and hoping to take advantage of the confusion prevailing in the island, attempted its reduction, but after an enormous loss of men finally evacuated it in 1798. No sooner was the island delivered from external enemies than a frightful civil war en- sued between the mulattoes and negroes, but the former were overcome, and in December 1800 Toussaint Louverture, the able leader of the blacks, was sole master of the French part of the island. Napoleon at first confirmed him in his command as general-in-chief, but finding that he aimed at independent authority, in the winter of 1801 he sent out a large force to reduce the island to submission. During a truce Toussaint was surprised and carried to France, where he died in April 1803. Hostilities were renewed : in November, 1803, the French, driven into a corner of the island, capitulated to an English squadron ; and in January, 1804, the Haytien chiefs, in the name of the people, renounced all dependence on France. Numerous civil wars and revolutions long continued to distract the island. In 1821 that part of the island originally settled by the Spaniards voluntarily placed itself under the Haytien government, which stilt maintains its independence. In 1791 St. Domingo was in a most flourishing condition, but its commerce and industry were seriously interrupted by the bloody wars and revolutions which succeeded. Moreover, it was not to be expected that half-civilized negroes, suddenly loosed from bondage, under a burning tun, and without the wants or desires of Europeans, should exhibit the vigor and industry of the latter. The Haytien government has found it necessary to adopt a “Rural Code,” whkb •makes labor compulsory on the poorer classes, who in return share a portion of the produce cf the lands of their masters. Nominally free, the blacks remain really enslaved. But the island Is beginning to assume a more thriving appearance ; the manners and morals of the people, although still bad, are improving ; and something has been done for public instruction. What are to be the final results of this experiment of negro emancipation, time only can determine. 1. Hanover is a large kingdom of north-western Germany, bounded north by the German Ocean and the Elbe, eatt by Prussia aud Brunswick, south by Hesse Cassel and the Prussian department of the Lower Rhine, and west by Holland. A portion of western Hanover ia almost divided from the rest by the grand-duchy of Oldenburg. (See Map No. XVII.) Thia kingdom is formed out of the duchiis formerly posse ised by several families of the junior branch of the house of Brunwsick. Ernest Augustus, Juke of Brunswick, married. Sophia, a Chap. VI. J NINETEENTH CENTURY. 483 was quickly conquered, and in utter disregard of neutral rights the whole of the North of Germany was at once occupied Tby French troops, while, simultaneously, an army was sent into southern Italy, to take possession of the Neapolitan territories. But these move- ments were insignificant when compared with Napoleon’s gigantic preparations ostensibly for the invasion of England. Forts and bat- teries were constructed on every headland and accessible point of the Channel : the number of vessels and small craft assembled along the coast was immense ; and the fleets of France, Holland, and Spain, were to aid in the enterprise. England made the most vigorous preparations for repelling the anticipated invasion, which, however, was not attempted, and perhaps never seriously intended. 16. The year of the renewal of the war was farther distinguished by an unhappy attempt at rebellion in Ireland, in ^ which the leaders, Bussell and Emmett, were seized, brought to trial, and executed. Early in the following year, 1804, a conspiracy against the power of Napoleon was detected, in which the generals Moreau and Pichegru, and the royalist leader Georges, were implicated. Moreau was allowed to leave the country, Pichegru was found strangled in prison, and Georges was executed Napoleon, either believing, or affecting to believe, that the young Duke D’Enghien, a Bourbon prince then living in the neutral territory of Baden, 1 was concerned in this plot, caused him to be seized and hurried to Vin- cennes, where, after a mock trial, he was shot by the sentence of a court martial : — an act which has fixed an indelible stain on the memory of Napoleon, as not the slightest evidence of criminality was brought against the unhappy prince. 1 7. Owing to the intimate connection that had been formed between the courts of Paris and Madrid, England sent out a fleet in the autumn of 1804, before any declaration of war. had been made, to interrupt the homeward bound treasure frigates of Spain ; and these were captured, 1 with valuable treasure amounting to more than two grand-daughter of James I. of England ; and George Louis, the issue of this marriage, became king of England, with the title of George I., in 1714 ; from which time till 1837, at the death of William IV., both England and Hanover had the same sovereign. On the accession of a female to the throne of Great Britain, the Salic law conferred the crown of Hanover on another branch of the Hanoverian family. During the supremacy of Napoleon, Hanover constituted a part of the kingdom of Westphalia, but was restored to its lawful sovereign in 1813. ( Map No. XVII.) 1. The grand-duchy of Baden occupies the south-western angle of Germany, having Switzer- and on the south, and France and Rhenish Bavaria (the Palatinate) on the west. ( Map No. XVII.) a. Oct. 4th, 1804. <84 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II million pounds sterling. The British government was severely cen- sured for this hasty act. Spain now openly joined France, and de- clared war against England. a • 18. On the 18th of May of this year Napoleon was created, by decree of the senate, “ Emperor of the French;” and on the 2d of December, 1804, was solemnly crowned by the pope, who had been induced to come to Paris for that purpose. The principal powers vi 1805 ^ ur0 P e > exception of Grres.t Britain, recog- nized the new sovereign. On the 26th of May of tho following year he was formally anointed sovereign of Northern Italy. The iron crown of Charlemagne, which had quietly reposed a thou- sand years, was brought forward to give interest to the ceremony, and Napoleon placed it on his own head, at the same time pronouncing the words, “ God has given it me : beware of touching it.” 19. The continued usurpations charged upon Napoleon at length induced the Northern Powers to listen to the solicitations of England ; and in the summer of 1805 a new coalition, embracing Russia, Aus* tria, and Sweden, was formed against France. Prussia, tempted by the glittering prize of Hanover, which Napoleon held out to her, per- sisted in her neutrality, with an evident leaning towards the French interest. The Austrian emperor precipitately commenced the war by invading 1 * the neutral territory of Bavaria ; an act as unjustifiable as any of which he accused Napoleon. The latter seized the oppor- tunity of branding his enemies as aggressors in the contest, and de- clared himself the protector of the liberties of Europe. 20. In the latter part of September, 1805, the French forces, m eight divisions, and numbering oue hundred and eighty thousand men, were on the banks of the Rhine, preparing to carry the war into Austria. The advance of Napoleon was rapid, and everywhere the emmy were driven before him. On the 20th of October, Napoleon having surrounded the Austrian general Mack at Ulm, 1 compelled him to surrender his whole force of twenty thousand men. On the very next day, however, the English fleet, commanded by Admiral Nelson, gained a great naval victory off Cape Trafalgar, 2 over the 1 Ulm is an eastern frontier town of Wirtsmberg, on the western bank of the Danube, sev- enty-six miles north-west from Munich. Formerly a free city, it was attached to Bavaria ia 1803, and in 1810 to Wirtemberg. (Map No. XVII. ) •2. Cape Trafalgar is a promontory of the south-western Voast of Spain, twenty-five miles rorth-west of the fortress of Gibraltar. In the great naval battle of Oct. 21ft, 1805, the Eng- _sh, under Nelson, having twenty-seven sail of the line and three frigates, were opposed by the b. Sept. 9th, 1805. a. Dec. 12th,. 1804. ^ai VT.l NINETEENTH CENTURY. 485 combined Heels of France and Spain ; but it was dearly purchased by the death of the hero. On the 13th of November Napoleon en- tered Vienna, and on the 2d of December he gained the great battle of Austerlitz, 1 the most glorious of all his victories, a which resulted in the total overthrow of the combined Russian and Austrian armies, and enabled the victor to dictate peace on his own terms. b The em- peror of Russia, who was not a party to the treaty, withdrew his troops into his own territories : the king of Prussia received Hanover as a reward of his neutrality ; and Great Britain alone remained at open war with France. 21. While the English now prosecuted the war with vigor on the ocean, humbled the Mahratta 2 powers in India, subdued the Dutch colony of the Cape, and took Buenos Ayres 9 from the Spaniards, Na- poleon rapidly extended his supremacy over the continent of Europe. In February, 1806, he sent an army to take possession of Naples, because the king, instigated by his queen, an Aus- trian princess, had received an army of Russians and English into his capital. The king of Naples fied to Sicily, and Napoleon conferred the vacant crown upon his brother Joseph. Napoleon next placed his brother Louis on the throne of Holland : he erected various dis- tricts in Germany and Italy into dukedoms, which he bestowed on his principal marshals : while fourteen princes in the south and west of Germany were induced to form the Confederation 0 of the Rhine and place themselves under the protection of France. By this latter stroke of policy on the part of Napoleon, a population of sixteen millions was cut off from the Germanic dominion of Austria. 22. In the negotiations which Napoleon was at this time carrying on with England, propositions were made for the restoration of Han- ver to that power, although it had recently been given to Prussia. It French and Spanish fleet of thirty-three sail of the line and seven frigates. Nelson, who war mortally wounded in the action, lived only to be made aware of the de^ action of the enemy’* fleet. {Map No. XIII.) 1. Austerlitz (ows’-terlitz) is a small town of Moravia, thirteen miles southwest of Bruna the capital. ( Map No. XVII.) 2. The Mahrattas were an extens' /e Hindoo nation in the western part of southern Hindostan The various tribes of which the nation consisted were first united into a monarchy about t^« middle of the seventeenth century. 3. Buenos Ayres (in Spanish bwa-noce-i-res,) is a large city of South America, capital of the republic of La Plata. In 181 ) began the revolutionary movements that ended in the emanci- pation of Buenos Ayres and tie States of La Plata from Spain. The declaration of indepen- dence was made on the 9th of.July, 1816* a. Loss of the allies thirty thousand, in killed, wounded, and taken prisoners. Loss of tM French twelve thousand. b. Treaty of Presburg, Die. 27tn, 1805. c. July 12th, 486 MODERN HISTORY [Paai IL was moreover suspected that Napoleon had offered to win the favor of Russia at the expense of his Prussian ally. These, and other causes, aroused the indignation of the Prussians ; and the Prussian monarch openly joined the coalition against Napoleon before his own arrangements were completed, or his allies could yield him any assist- ance. Roth England and Russia had promised him their coopera tion 23. With his usual promptitude Napoleon put his troops in motion, and on the 8th of October reached the advanced Prussian outposts.. On the 14th he routed the Prussians with terrible slaughter in ^he battle of Jena, 1 2 and on the same day Marshal Davoust gained the battle of Auerstadt, 1 in which the Duke of Brunswick was mortally wounded. On these two fields the loss of the Prussians was nearly twenty thousand in killed and wounded, besides nearly as many prisoners. The total loss of the French was fourteen thousand. In a single day the strength of the Prussian monarchy was prostrated. Napoleon rapidly followed up his victories, and on the 25th his vanguard, under Marshal Davoust, entered Berlin, only a fortnight after the commencement of hostilities. 24. Encouraged by his successes Napoleon issued a series of edicts from Berlin, declaring the British islands in a state of blockade, and excluding British manufactures from all the continental ports. He then pursued the Russians into Poland : on the 30 th of November his troops entered Warsaw without resistance; but on the 26th of December his advanced forces received a check in the severe battle of Pultusk. On the 8th of February, 1807, a sanguinary battle was fought at Eylau, 3 in which each side lost twenty thousand men, and both claimed the victory. In some minor engagements the allies had the advantage, but these were more than counterbalanced by the siege and fall of the important fortress of Dantzic, 4 which bad a garrison of seventeen thousand men, and was defended by nine hundred cannon. 1. Jena is a town of central Germany, in the grand-duchy of Saxe Weimar, on the west bans >f the river Salle, forty-three miles south-west from’ Leipsic. The battle was fought between the towns of Jena and Weimar. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Jluerstadt (ow'-er-stadt) is a small village of Prussian Saxony, six miles west of Naumberg, and about twenty miles north of the battle-ground of Jena. (Map No. XVII.) 3. Eylau (i-low) is a village in Prussia proper, op East Prussia, twenty-eight miles south Horn Konigsberg. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Dantzic is an important commercial city, seaport, and fortress, of the province of West Prussia, on the western bank of the Vistula, about three miles from its mouth. Dantzic sur «ndered to the French May 27th 1807. (Map No. XVII.) Chap. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY 487 25. At length, on the 14th of June, Napoleon fought the great and decisive battle of Friedland, 1 and the broken remains of the Russian army fell back upon the Niemen. 2 An armistice was now agreed to : on the 25th of June the emperors of France and Russia met for the first time, with great pomp and ceremony, on a raft in the middle of the Niemen, and on the 7th of July signed the treaty of Tilsit. 3 All sacrifices were made at the expense of the Prussian monarch, who received back only about one-half of his dominions. The elector of Saxony, the ally of France, was rewarded with that portion of the Prussian territory, which, prior to the first partition in 1772, formed part of the kingdom of Poland : this portion was now erected into the grand-duchy of Warsaw. Out of another por- tion was formed the kingdom of Westphalia, 4 which was bestowed upon Jerome Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon ; and Russia agreed to aid the French emperor in his designs against British commerce. 26. Soon after the treaty of Tilsit it became evident to England that Napoleon would leave no means untried to humble that power on the ocean, and it was believed that, with the connivance of Russia, he was making arrangements with Denmark and Portugal for the conversion of their fleets to his purposes. England, menaced with an attack from the combined navies of Europe, but resolving to an- ticipate the blow, sent a powerful squadron against Denmark, with an imperious demand for the instant surrender of the Danish fleet and naval stores, to be held as pledges until the conclusion of the war. A refusal to comply with this summons was followed by a four cays’ bombardment of Copenhagen, and the final surrender* of the fleet. Denmark, though deprived of her navy, resented the hostility of England by throwing herself, without reserve, into the arms of France. The navy of Portugal was saved from falling into the power of France, by sailing, at the instigation of the British, to Rio 1. Friedland. (freed land) is a town of Eaa;, Prussia, on the western bank of the river Ah« (al'-leh) twenty-eight miles south-east fr>rr. Konigsberg, and eighteen north-east 'f Eylau. (Map No. XVII.) 2. The river Niemen (Polish nyem’ en) rises in the Prussian province of Grodno, and, passing through the north-eastern extremity of Prussia, enters a gulf of the Baltic by two channels twenty-two miles apart, and each about thirty miles below Tilsit. ( Map No. XVII.) 3. Tilsit is a town of East Prussia, on the southern bank of the Niemen, sixty miles north- east of Konigsberg. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Westphalia is a name, 1st, originally given, in the Middle Ages, to a large part of Germany • 2d, to a duchy forming a part of the great duchy of Saxony : 3d, to one of the circles of the German empire: 4th, to the kingdom of Westphalia, created by Napoleon: 5th, to the present Pruss’ n province of Westphalia, created in 1815. Most of the present province was embraced in er A of these divisions. See also Note, p 3G0. (Map No. XVII.) 488 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II Janeiro, 1 2 cbe capital of the Portuguese colony of Brazil.* Napoleon had already announced, a in one of his imperial edicts*, that “ the House of Braganza had ceased to reignA and had sent an army under Junot to occupy Portugal. On the 27th of November, the Portu- guese fleet, bearing the prince regent, the queen, and court, sailed for Brazil ; and on the 30th the French took possession of Lisbon. 27, The designs of Napoleon for the dethronement of the Penin- ular monarchs had been approved by Alexander in the conferences of Tilsit; and when Napoleon returned to Paris he set on foot a series of intrigues at Madrid, which soon gave him an opportunity of interfering in the domestic affairs of the Spanish nation, his recent ally. Charles IV. of Spain, a weak monarch, was the dupe of his faithless wife, and of his unprincipled minister Godoy. The latter, ix 1808 secure( ^ Blench interest by the pretended gift of a principality formed out of dismembered Portugal, al lowed the French troops under Murat to enter Spain ; and by fraud and false pretences the frontier fortresses were soon in the hands of the invaders. Too late Godoy found himself the dupe of his own treachery. Charles, intimidated by the difficulties of his situation, resigned b the crown to his son Ferdinand, but, by French intrigues, was soon after induced to disavow his abdication, while at the same time Ferdinand was led to expect a recognition of his royal title from the emperor Napoleon. The deluded prince and his father were both enticed to Bayonne, where they met Napoleon, who soon compelled both to abdicate, and gave the crown to his brother Joseph, who had been summoned from the kingdom of Naples to become king of Spain. The Neapolitan kingdom was bestowed upon Murat as a reward for his military services. 28. Although many of the Spanish nobility tamely acquiesced in this foreign usurpation of the sovereignty of the kingdom, yet the great bulk of the nation rose in arms : Ferdinand, although a prisoner in France, was proclaimed king: a national junta, or council, was 1. Rio Janeiro , the capital of Brazil, is the most important commercial city anc seaport of South America. Population about two hundred thousand, of whom about half are whites, and the rest mostly negro slaves. 2. Prior to 1308 Brazil was merely a Portuguese colony, but on the arrival of the prince regent and his court, accompanied by a large body of emigrants, January 25th, 1808, it was raised ?. kingdom. In 1822 Brazil was declared a kingdom independent of the crown of Portugal. The empire of Brazil, second only in extent to the giant empires of China and Russia, embraces nearly the half of the South American continent; but its population— whites, negroes, and Indians — is less than six millions, of whom only about one million are whites. a. Nov. 13th, 1807. b. March 20th, 1808. Chat. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 48S chosen to direct the affairs of the government ; and the English at once sent large supplies of arms and ammunition to^ their new allies, while Napoleon was preparing an overwhelming force to sustain his usurpation. A new direction was thus given to affairs, and for a time the European war centered in the Spanish Peninsula. 29. In the first contests with the invaders the Spaniards were generally successful. A French squadron in the Bay of Cadiz, pre- vented from escaping by the presence of an English fleet, was forced to surrender : a Marshal Moncey, at the head of eight thousand men, was repulsed in an attack b on the city of Valencia : Saragossa, de- fended by the heroic Palafox; sustained a siege of sixty-threo days ; c and, although reduced to a heap of ruins, drove the French troops from its walls : Cor' dova was indeed taken d and plundered by the French marshal Dupont, yet that officer himself was soon after compelled to surrender at Baylen, 1 with eight thousand men, to the patriot general Castanos. This latter event occurred on the 20tl of July, the very day on which Joseph Bonaparte made his tri umphal entry into Madrid. But the new king himself was soon obliged to flee, and the French forces were driven beyond the Ebro. a 30. In the meantime the spirit of resistance had extended to Por tugal : a junta had been established at Oporto 3 to conduct the gov ernment : British troops were sent to aid the insurgents, and on the 21st of August Marshal Junot was defeated at Vimiera, 4 by Sir Arthur Wellesley. This battle was followed by the convention of Cintra,* which led to the evacuation of Portugal by the French forces. 31. Great was the mortification of Napoleon at this inauspicious beginning of the Peninsular war, and he deemed it necessary to take 1. Baylen is a town of Spain, in the province of Jaen, twenty-two miles north from the city af Jaen. It commands the road leading from Castile into Andalusia. (Map No. XIII.) 2. The Ebro (anciently Iberus) flows through the north-eastern part of Spain, and is the only great river of the peninsula that falls into the Mediterranean. Before the second Punic war U formed the boundary between the Roman and Carthaginian territories, and in the time of Charlemagne, between the Moorish and Christian dominions. ( Map No. XIII.) 3. Oporto , an important commercial city and seaport of Portugal, is on the north bank of tne Douro, two miles fro m its mouth, and one hundred and seventy-four miles north east from Lisbon. (Map No. XIII.) 4. Vimiera is a small town of the Portuguese province of Estremadura, about thirty miier north-west from Lisbon. (Map No. XIII.) 5. Cintra is a small town of Portugal, twelve miles north-west from Lisbon. By the cc> vention signed here Aug. 22d, 1808, the French forces were to be conveyed to France with theii arms, artillery, and property. This convention was exceedingly unpopular in England. (Maj No. XIII.) a. June 14th. c. June 14th, to Aug. 17th. W* b. June 28th. d. June 8th. 490 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II the field in person. Collecting his troops with the greatest rapidity, in the early part of November he was in the north of Spain at the head of one hundred and eighty thousand men. He at once com municated his own energy to the operations of the army : the Span iards were severely defeated at Reynosa, a Burgos, b and Tudela and on the 4th of December, Napoleon forced an entrance into the capital. The British troops, who were marching to the assistance of the Span iards, were driven back upon Corunna, 1 2 * * * and being there attacked while making preparations to embark, they compelled the enemy to retire, but their brave commander, Sir John Moore, was mortally wounded. On the following day the British abandoned the shores of Spain, and the possession of the country seemed assured to the French emperor. 32. A short time before the battle of Corunna Napoleon received despatches 6 which induced him to return immediately to Paris. The Austrian emperor, humbled, but not subdued, and stimulated by the warlike spirit of his subjects, once more resolved to try the hazards of war, while the best troops of Napoleon were occupied in the Spanish Peninsula. On the 8th of April large bodies of Austrian troops crossed the frontiers of Bohemia, of the Tyrol, and of Italy, and soon involved in great danger the dispersed divisions of Napo- leon’s army. On the 17th of the same month Napoleon arrived and took the command in person. Baffling the Austrian generals by the rapidity of his movements, he speedily concentrated his divisions, and in four days of combats and manoeuvres, from the 19th to the 1. Reynoso., Burgos , and Tudela. (See Map No. XIII.) Reynosa is forty-seven miles north- west from Rurgos. Tudela is on the Ebro, one hundred and ten miles east from Burgos. Burgos is one Hundred and thirty-four miles north of Madrid. At Reynosa Blake was defeated by the French under Marshal Victor: at Burgos the Spanish count de Belviaere was over- thrown by Marshal Soult : and at Tudela Palafox and Castanos were beaten by Marshal Lannes. 2. Corunna is a city and seaport of Spain, at the north-western extremity of the kingdom, $ir John Moore was struck down by a cannon ball as ne was animating a regiment to the charge, “ Wrapped by his attendants in his military cloak, he was laid in a grave hastily formed on the ramparts of Corunna, where a monument was soon after constructed over h: uncofflhed remains by the generosity of the French marshal Ney. Not a word was spoken at the melancholy interment by torch light took place : silently they laid him in his grave, white the distant cannon of the battle fired the funeral honors to his memory.” — Alison. This touching scene has been vividly described in one of the most beautiful pieces of poetry in the English language, beginning — “ Not a drum was heard, nor a funeral note, As his corpse to the ramparts we hurried ; Not a soldier discharged his farewell shot O’er the g'ave where our hero we buried ” a. Nov. 10th and 11th. b. Nov. 10th. d, Jan. 16th. 1309 e. Jan 1st, 1809. c. Nov. 2m. Chap VL ] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 49 . 22d inclusive, he completed the ruin of the Austrian army. On the last of these days he defeated the Archduke Charles at Eckmuhl,' and compelled him to recross the Danube. Rapidly following up his victories, he entered Vienna on the 13th of May, and although worsted in the battle of Aspern 1 2 on the 21st and 22d, on the 5th of July he gained a triumph at Wagram, 3 and soon after dictated a peace a by which Austria was compelled to surrender territory containing three and a half millions of inhabitants. 33. During the war with Austria, the brave Tyrolese had seized the opportunity to raise the standard of revolt ; and it was not until two powerful French armies had been sent into their country that they were subdued. The British government also sent a fleet, and an army of forty thousand men, to make a diversion against Napo leon on the coast of Holland; but the expedition proved a failure The war still continued in the Spanish Peninsula, and Sir Arthur Wellesley was sent out by the British government with a large force to cooperate with the Spaniards. In the meantime difficulties had arisen between the French emperor and the Pope Pius VII. : French troops entered Home; and by a decree b of Napoleon the Papal States 0 were annexed to the French empire. This was followed by a bull of excommunication d against Napoleon, whereupon the pope was seized and conveyed a prisoner into France, where he was de tained until the spring of 1814. 34. Near the close of 1809 the announcement was made that Na- poleon was about to obtain a divorce from the Empress Josephine, 1. Eckmuhl is a small village of Bavaria, thirteen miles south of Ratisbon, and fifty-tw® miles north-east from Munich. Marshal Davoust, having particularly distinguished himself In the battle of the 22d, was raised by Napoleon to the dignity of prince of Eckmuhl. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Jlspcrn is a small Austrian village on the eastern bank of the Danube, opposite the island of Loban, about two miles below Vienna. (Map No. XVII.) After two days’ continuous fighting, with vast loss on both sides, Napoleon was obliged to withdraw his troops from tho field, and take refuge in the island of Loban. Marshal Lanncs, one of Napoleon’s ablest gen- erals, was mortally wounded on the field of Aspern, having both his legs carried away by & cannon ball. Napoleon was deeply affected on beholding the dying Marshal brought off the field on a litter, and extended in the agonies of death. Kneeling beside the rude couch, ho wept freely. 3. Wagram is a small Austrian village eleven miles north-east of Vienna. ( Map No. XVII.) In the battle of Wagram each party lost about twenty-five thousand men : few prisoners were taken on either side, and the Austrians retired from the field in good order. The French bulletin, copied by Sir Walter Scott, says the French took twenty thousand prisoners,— now admitted to be a grossly erroneous statement. The retreat of the Austrians, however gave t* Napoleon all the moral advantages of a victory. a. Treaty of Vienna, Oct. 14th. See Note, p. b. May 17th, 1809. d. June 11th 492 MODERN HISTORY. [Part H for the purpose of allying himself with one of the royal families of Europe. To Josephine Napoleon was warmly attached ; but reasons of state policy were, in his breast, superior to the dearest affections xi 1810 ^ 1St marr * a § e having been annulled* 1 by the French senate, early in 1810 he received the hand of Maria Louisa of Austria, daughter of the emperor Francis. This mar- riage, which seemed permanently to establish Napoleon’s power, by uniting the lustre of descent with the grandeur of his throne, was one of the principal causes of his final ruin, as it was justly feared by the other European powers that, secured by the Austrian alliance, he would strive to make himself master of Europe. His conduct towards Holland justified this suspicion. Dissatisfied with his broth- er’s government of that country, he, soon after, by an imperial de- cree, 1 * incorporated Holland with the French empire. In the same year Bernadotte, one of his generals, was advanced to the throne of Sweden. Napoleon continued his career of aggrandizement in the central parts of Europe, -and extended the French limits almost to the frontiers of Russia, thereby exciting the strongest jealousy of the Russian emperor, who renewed his intercourse with the court of London, and began to prepare for that tremendous conflict with France which he saw approaching. 35. The war still continued in the Spanish peninsula. Sir Arthur Wellesley, who had recently been created Lord Wellington, had the chief command of the English, Spanish, and Portuguese forces. On the 10th of July the Spanish fortress of Ciudad Rodrigo 1 surrend- ered to Marshal Massena, but on the 27th of September Massena was defeated in an attack upon Wellington on the heights of Busaco. 3 Wellington, still pursuing his plan of defensive operations, then re- tired to the strongly-fortified lines of Torres Vedras, 3 which defend- 1. Ciudad Rodrigo (in Spanish the-oo-ilad' rod-ree-go, meaning, “ the city Rodrigo,”) is a elrong y-fortified city of Spain, fifty-five miles south-west from Salamanca, in 1812 this city was retaken by Wellington, an achievement which acquired for hi tn the title of Duke of Ciudad Rodrigo from the Spanish government. (Map No. XIII.) 2. Busaco is a mountain ridge starting from the northern bank of the river Mondego a few guiles north-east of Coimbra, and extending north-west about eight miles. On the summit of iha northern portion of this range, around the convent of Busaco, seventeen miles north-east of Coimbra, Wellington collected his whole army of fifty thousand men on the evening of Sep- tember 26th, while Massena, with seventy-two thousand, lay at its foot, determined to force tha passage, which he attempted early on the following morning, but without sue cess. (Map No XIII.) 3. Torres Vedras is a small village on the road from Lisbon to Coimbra, twenty-four mile* Borth-west of the former. The “Lines of Torres Vedras,” constructed by Wellington in 1810, consisted of three distinct ranges of defence, extending from the river Tagus to the Atlantia a. Dec. 15th 1KOO b. July 9th, 1810. Chap Yl. NINETEENTH CENTURY. 493 ed the approaches to Lisbon. Massena followed, but in vain en- deavored to find a weak spot where he could attack with any prospect of success, and after continuing before the lines more than a month, he broke up his position on the 14th of November, and, for the first time since the accession of Napoleon, the French eagles commenced a final retreat. 36. The early part of 1811 witnessed the siege of Badajoz 1 by Marshal Soult, and its surrender to the French on the ^ 10th of March ; but this was soon followed by the battle of Albuera,® in which the united British and Spanish forces gained an important victory. Many battles were fought during the re- mainder of the year, but they were attended with no important results on either side. 37. The year 1812 opened with the surrender of the important fity of Valencia to Marshal Suchet on the 9th of Jan- xm RUSS1AN uarv — the last of the long series of French triumphs in campaign, the peninsula. On the same day Wellington, in another 1812 ‘ quarter, laid siege to Ciudad Bodrigo ; and the capture 3 - of this place by the British arms was soon followed b by that of Badajoz. Wel- lington, following up his successes, next defeated Marmont c in the battle of Salamanca : 3 the intrusive king Joseph fled from Mad- rid, and on the next day the capital of Spain was in the possess- ion of the British army. The concentration of the French forces again compelled the cautious Wellington to retreat to Portugal ; but early in the following year, 1813, he resumed the offensive, — gained Ocean, — the most advanced, embracing Torres Vedras, being twenty-nine miles in length, — the second, about eight miles in the rear of the first, being twenty-four miles, and the third, or “ lines of embarcation,” in the vicinity of Lisbon, designed to cover the embarcalion of the troops if that extremity should become necessary. More than fifty miles of fortifications, bris- tling with six hundred pieces of artillery, and one hundred and fifty forts, flanked with abattis and breastworks, and presenting, in some places, high hills artificially scarped, in others deep and narrow passes carefully choked, and artificial pools and marshes made by damming up the streams, were defended by seventy thousand disposable men. The French force under Massena amounted to about the same number. (Map No. XIII.) 1. Badajoz is a city in the west of Spain, on the eastern bank of the Guadiana, about tw«> fcu^-dred m les south-west of Madrid, and one hundred and thirty-five mile3 east of Lisbon (Map No XIII.) 2. dlbuera is a small town fourteen miles south-east of Badajoz. In the battle of Albuera, fought May 16th, 1811, the allied British, Spanish, and Portuguese troops, were commanded by Marshal Beresford, and the French by Marshal Soult. (Map No. XIII.; 3. Salamanca is a city of Leon in Spain, one hundred and nineteen miles north-west frorr Madrid. It was known to the Romans by the name of Salamantica. During a long period it was celebrated as being the seat of a University, which, in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, was attended by from ten thousand to fifteen thousand students. (Map No. XIII.) b. April 6th. c. July 22< . d. Aug. 11th. a. Jan. I2th. 494 MODERN HISTORY. [Part 11 the decisive battle 1 of Vittoria, 1 and before the close of the campaign drove the French across the Pyrenees into their own territories. 38. During these reverses to the French arms, events of greater magnitude than those of the peninsular war were occupying the per- sonal attention of Napoleon. The jealousy of Russia at his repeat- ed encroachments in Central and Northern Europe has already been mentioned : moreover, the commercial interests of Russia, in com- mon with those of the other Northern powers, had been greatly in- jured by the measures of Napoleon for destroying the trade of Eng- land ; but the French emperor refused to abandon his favorite policy, and the angry discussions between the cabinets of St. Petersburg and Versailles led to the assembling of vast armies on both sides, and the commencement of hostilities in the early part of the summer of 1812. Napoleon had driven Sweden to enter into an alliance with Russia and England ; but he arrayed around his standard the im- mense forces of France, Italy, Germany, the Confederation of the Rhine, Poland, and the two monarchies Prussia and Austria. 39. The “ Grand Army” assembled in Poland for the Russian war amounted to the immense aggregate of more than five hundred thousand men, of whom eighty thousand were cavalry — the whole supported by thirteen hundred pieces of cannon. Nearly twenty thousand chariots or carts, of all descriptions, followed the army, while the whole number of horses amounted to one hundred and eighty-seven thousand. To oppose this vast army the Russians had collected, at the beginning of the contest, nearly three hundred thou- sand men ; but as the war was carried into the interior their forces increased in numbers until the armies on both sides were nearly equal. 40. On the 24th of June, 1812, Napoleon crossed the Niemen at the head of the “ Grand Army,” and entered upon his ever mem- orable Russian campaign. As the enormous superiority of his forces rendered it hopeless for the Russians to attempt any immediate re Bistance, they gradually fell back before the invaders, wasting th country as they retreated. The wisdom of this course soon became apparent. A terrible tempest soon set in, and the horses in the French army perished by thousands from the combined effects of in- Viitoria is a town in the Spanish province of Alava, on the road between Burgos and Bayonne, sixty miles north-east from the former. The battle of Vittoria almost annihilated th« French power .n Spain. (Map No. XIII.) a. June 21st, 1813. t-HAP. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 495 cessant rain and scanty forage : the soldiers sickened in great num- bers ; and before a single shot had been fired twenty-five thousand sick and dying men filled the hospitals ; ten thousand dead horses strewed the road to Wilna, 1 and one hundred and twenty pieces of cannon were abandoned for want of the means of transport. 4L. Still Napoleon pressed onward in several divisions, frequently skirmishing with the enemy, and driving them before him, until he arrived under the fortified walls of Smolensko, where thirty thousand Russians made a stand to oppose him. A hundred and fifty cannon were brought up to batter the walls, but without effect, for the thick- ness of the ramparts defied the efforts of the artillery. a But the French howitzers set fire to some houses near the ramparts; the flames spread with wonderful rapidity, and during the night which followed the battle a lurid light from the burning city was cast over the French bivouacs, grouped in dense masses for several miles in circumference. At three in the morning a solitary French soldier scaled the walls, and penetrated into the interior ; but he found neither inhabitants nor opponents. The work of destruction had been completed by the voluntary sacrifice of the inhabitants, who had withdrawn with the army, leaving a ruined city, naked walls, and the cannon which mounted them, as the only trophy to the conqueror. 42. The division of the army led by Napoleon followed the Russians on the road to Moscow, engaging in frequent but indecisive encounters with the rear guard. When the retreating forces had reached the small village of Borodino, 2 their commander, General Kutusoff, resolved to risk a battle, in the hope of saving Moscow On the evening of the 6th of September the two vast armies took their positions facing each other, — each numbering more than a hundred and thirty thousand men — the Russians having six hundred and forty pieces of cannon^ and the French five hundred and ninety. Napoleon sc ught to stimulate the enthusiasm of his soldiers by recounting to them the glories of Marengo, of Jena, and of Austerlitz ; while a procession of dignified clergy passed through the Russian ranks, be- stowing their blessings upon the kneeling soldiers, and invoking the aid of the God of battles to drive the invader from the land. 1. Wilna , the former capital of Lithuania, is at the confluence of the rivers Wilenka and Wilna, eastern tributaries of the Niemen, about two hundred and fifty miles north-east from Warsaw. Population nearly forty thousand, of whom more than twenty thousand ire Jews. Map No. XVII.) 2. Borodino (bor-o-dee'-no) is a small village about seventy miles scuOi-west from Mosco w i>n the small stream ol the Kolotza, a tributary of the Moskwa. a Aug. 11 lb. 496 MODERN HISTORY. [Past il 43 . At six o’clock on the morning of the 7th a gun fired from the French lines announced the commencement of the battle : the roar of more than a thousand cannon shook the earth : vast clouds of smoke, shutting out the light of the sun, arose in awful sublimity over the scene ; and two hundred and sixty thousand combatants, led on in the gathering gloom by the light of the cannon and musketry engaged in the work of death. The battle raged with desolating fury until night put an end to its horrors. The slaughter was immense, The loss on both sides was nearly equal, amounting, in the aggre gate, to ninety thousand in killed and wounded. The Russian position was eventually carried, but neither side gained a decisive victory. 44. On the day after the battle the Russians retired, in perfect order, on the great road to Moscow. Preparations were immediately made by the inhabitants for abandoning that city, long revered as the cradle of the empire ; and when, on the 14th, Napoleon entered it, no deputation of citizens awaited him to deprecate his hostility, but the dwellings of three hundred thousand persons were as silent as the wilderness. It seemed like a city of the dead. Napoleon took up his residence in the Kremlin, the ancient palace of the czars ; but the Russian authorities had determined that their beloved city should not afford a shelter to the invaders. At midnight on the night of the 15th a vast light was seen to illuminate the most distant part of the city ; fires broke out in all directions ; and Moscow soon exhibited a vast ocean of flame agitated by the wind. Nine-tenths of the city were consumed, and Napoleon was driven to seek a tem- porary refuge for his army in the country ; but afterwards returning to the Kremlin, which had escaped the ravages of the fire, he re- mained there until the 19th of October, when, all his proposals of peace being rejected, he was compelled to order a retreat. 45. The horrors of that retreat, which, during fifty -five days that intervened until the recrossing of the Niemen, was almost one con- tinued battle, exceeded anything before known in the annals of war. The exasperated Russians intercepted the retreating army wherever an opportunity offered ; and a cloud of Cossacks, hovering incessant- ly around the wearied columns, gradually wore away their numbers. But the severities of the Russian winter, which set in on the 6th of November, were far more destructive of life than the sword of the enemy. The weather, before mild, suddenly changed to intense cold : the wind howled frightfully through the forests, or swept over the Chap. VI J NINETEENTH CENTURY 497 plains with resistless fury ; and the snow fell in thick and continued showers, soon confounding all objects, and leaving the army to wander without landmarks through an icy desert. Thousands of the soldiers, falling benumbed with cold, and exhausted, perished miserably in sight of their companions ; and the route of the rear guard of the army was literally choked up by the icy mounds of the dead. In their nightly bivouacs crowds of starving men prepared, around their scanty fires a miserable meal of rye mixed with snow water and horse flesh ; but numbers never awoke from the slumbers that followed ; and the sites cf the night fires were marked by circles of dead bodies, with their feet still resting on the extinguished piles. Clouds of ravens, issuing from the forests, hovered over the dying remains of the soldiers ; while troops of famished dogs, which had followed the army from Moscow, howled in the rear, and often fell upon their victims before life was extinct. The ambition of Napoleon had led the pride and the chivalry of Europe to perish amid the snows of a Russian winter ; and he bitterly felt the taunt of the enemy, “ Could the French find no graves in their own land ?” 46. Napoleon had first thought of remaining in winter quarters at Smolensko ; but the exhausted state of -his magazines, and the con- centrating around him of vast forces of the enemy, which threatened soon to overwhelm him, convinced him that a protracted stay was impossible, and on the 14th of November the retreat was renewed — Napoleon, in the midst of his still faithful guards, leading the ad- vance, and the heroic Ney bringing up the rear. But the enemy harassed them at every step. During the 16th, 17th, and 18th, in the battles of Krasnoi, 1 Napoleon lost ten thousand killed, twenty thousand taken prisoners, and more than a hundred pieces of cannon fell into the hands of the enemy. The terrible passage of the Bere- sina, 2 which was purchased by the loss of sixteen thousand prisoners, and twenty-four thousand killed or drowned in the stream, completed the ruin of the Grand Army. All subordination now ceased, and it was with difficulty that Marshal Ney could collect three thousand men on foot to form the rear guard, and protect the helpless multi- tude from the indefatigable Cossacks ; and when at length the few remaining fugitives reached the passage of the Niemen, the rear guard was reduced to thirty men. The veteran marshal, bearing a musket, and still facing the enemy, was the last of the Grand Army 1. Krasnoi is a small town about thirty miles south-west from Smolensko. (Map No. XVII.} 2. The Beresi".a is a western tributary of the Dnieper. See Map No. XVII. 32 498 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II who left the Russian territory . Napoleon had already abandoned the remnant of his forces, and, setting out in a sledge for Paris, he arrived there at midnight on the 18th of December, even before the news of his terrible reverses had reached the -capital. It has been estimated that, in this famous Russian campaign, one hundred and twenty-five thousand men of the army of Napoleon perished in battle ; that one hundred and thirty-two thousand died of fatigue, hunger, and cold ; and that nearly two hundred thousand were taken prisoners. 47. While these great events were transpiring on the continent of Europe, difficulties arose between the United States of America and Great Britain, which led to the opening of war between those two powers in the summer of 1812. Mexico was at this time passing through the struggles of her first Revolution ; and a feeble war was still maintained between the French and British possessions in the Indian seas ; but these events were of little interest in comparison with that mighty drama which was enacting around the centre of Na- poleon’s power, and which was converting nearly all Europe into a field of blood. 48. Notwithstanding his terrible reverses in the Russian campaign, Napoleon found that he still possessed the confidence of the French nation : he at once obtained from the senate a new levy of three hundred and fifty thousand men — took the most vigorous measures to repair his losses, and, having arranged his dif- ficulties with the pope, on the 15th of April he left Paris for the theatre of war. In the meantime Prussia and Sweden had joined the alliance against him ; a general insurrection spread over the German States ; Austria wavered ; and already the confederates had advanced as far as the Elbe. On the 2d of May Napoleon gained the battle of Lutzen, and a fortnight later that of Bautzen ;* but as these were not decisive, on the 4th of July an armistice was agreed to, and a congress met at Prague to consider terms of peace. 49. As ISapoleon would listen to nothing calculated to limit his power, on the expiration of the armistice, on the 10th of August, war was renewed, when the Austrian en peror, abandoning the cause of his son-in-law, joined the allies. Napoleon at once commenced a series of vigorous operations against his several foes, and with vari- 1. Bautzen (bout-s-m) is a town of Saxony on the 'astern bank of the river Spree, thirtj-tWJ milss north-east f'on Dresden. (Map No. XVII.) Chap. VL] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 49G ous success fought the battles of Culm, 1 Gross-Beren, 2 the Katsbach, 1 and Dennewitz, 4 in which the allies, although not decidedly victorious, were constantly gaining strength. In the first battle of Leipsic, fought on the 16th of October, the result was indecisive / but in the battle of the 18th the French were signally defeated, and on the fol- lowing morning began a retrograde movement towards the Rhine. Pressed on all sides by the allies, great numbers were made prisoners during the retreat ; about eighty thousand, left to garrison th Prussian fortresses, surrendered ; the Saxons, Hanoverians, and Hollanders, threw off the French yoke ; and it was at this time that Wellington was completing the expulsion of the French from Spain. 50. The year 1814 opened with the invasion of France, on the eastern frontiers, by the Prussian, Russian, and Austrian 7 j 77 X y 1814. armies ; while Wellington, having crossed the Pyrenees, laid siege to Bayonne : Bernadotte, the old comrade of Napoleon, but now king of Sweden, was marching against France at the head a hundred thousand men ; and Murat, king of Naples, brother-in-law of the French emperor, eager to secure his crown, entered into a se- cret treaty with Austria for the expulsion of the French from Italy. Never did the military talents of Napoleon shine with greater lustre than at this crisis. During two months, with a greatly inferior force, ae repelled the attacks of his enemies, gained many brilliant victo- ries, and electrified all Europe by the rapidity and skill of his move- ments. But the odds were too great against him ; the enemy had crossed the Rhine, and while, by a bold movement, Napoleon threw himself into the rear of the allies, hoping to intimidate them into a retreat, they marched upon Paris, which was compelled to capitulate before he could come to its relief. Two days later the emperor was formally deposed by the senate, and, on the 6th of April, with a trembling hand, he signed an unconditional abdication of the thrones of France and Italy. By a treaty concluded between him and the allies on the 11th, Napoleon was promised the sovereignty of the 1. Culm, is a small town in the north of Bohemia, at the foot of the Erze-Gebirg mountains, about fifty miles north-west from Prague. On the 30th of August, 1813, the French under Vandamme were utterly overwhelmed by the allied Austrians, Russians, and Prussians, com. manded by Barclay de Tolly. (Map No. XVII.) 2. Oross-Beren (groce-baren) is a small village a short distance soutn of Berlin, and east of Potsdam ( Map No. XVII.) 3. The Katsbach. (kats-back) is a western tributary of the Oder, in Silicia. The battle, or several battles of that name, were fought near the eastern bank of that stream, west of Liegnitz, and fifty-five miles north-west from Breslau. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Dennewitz is a small village of Prussian Saxony, seven miles north-east from Wittembcrg 'Map No. XVII.) 500 MODERN HISTORY. |Pa*t II island of Elba, 1 and a pension of one hundred tin usand j ounds per annum. On the 3d of May, Louis XVIII., returning from his long exile, reentered Paris: to conciliate the French people he gave them a constitutional charter, and soon after concluded a formal treaty with the allies, by which the continental dominions of France were restricted to what they had been in 1792. 51. The final • settlement of European affairs had been left tc a general congress of the ministers of the allied powers, which assem- bled at Vienna on the 25th of September ; but while the conferences were still pending, the congress was thrown into consternation by the announcement that Napoleon had left Elba. An extensive conspira- ^ vi 1815 been formed throughout France for restoring the fallen emperor, and on the 1st of March, 1815, he landed at Frejus, accompanied by only eleven hundred men : — everywhere the soldiery received him with enthusiasm : Ney, who had sworn fidelity to the new government, went over to him at the head of a force sent to arrest his progress ; and on the evening of the 20th of March he reentered the French capital, which Louis XVIII. had left early in the morning. With the exception of Augereau, Mar- mont, Macdonald, and a few others, all the officers, civil and military, embraced his cause ; — at the end of a month his authority was rees- tablished throughout all France ; and he again found himself at the summit of power, , by one of the most remarkable transitions recorded in history. 52. In vain Napoleon now attempted to open negotiations with the allied powers, and professed an ardent desire for peace ; the allies denounced him as the common enemy of Europe, and refused to re- cognize his authority as emperor of the French people. All Europe was now in arms against the usurper, and it was estimated that, by the middle of summer, six hundred thousand effective men could be as- sembled against him on the French frontiers. But nothing which genius and activity could accomplish was wanting on the part of Na- poleon to meet the coming storm ; — and in a country that seemed drained of men and money, he was able, by the 1st of June, to put 1. Elba , (the (Etholia of the Greeks, and the Iloa or Ilia c* the Homans,) is a mountainous island of the Mediterranean, between the Italian coast and Corsica, six or seven miles from the nearest point of the former, and having an area of about one handled end *ifty square miles. It derives its chief historical interest from its having been the residence and e*op : re of Napo- leon from the 3d of May 1814, to the 26th of February 1815. During this ehort period * road was opened between the two principal towns, trade revived, and a now era seemed to dawned upon the island. ( Map No. VIII.) Chap VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 501 on foot an army of two hundred and twenty thousand veterans, who had served in his former wars. 53. His policy was to attack the allies in detail, before their forces could be concentrated, and with this view he hastened across the Belgian frontier on the 15th of June, with a force numbering, at that point, one hundred and twenty thousand men. On the 1 6th he defeated the Prussians, under Blucher, at Ligny, 1 but at the same time Ney was defeated by Wellington at Quatre Bras. 2 The defeat of the Prussians induced Wellington to fall back upon Waterloo, 3 where, at eleven o’clock on the morning of the 18th, he was attacked by Napoleon in person, while, at the same time, large bodies of French and Prussians were engaged at Wavre 3 On the field of Waterloo the combat raged during the day with terrific fury — Napoleon in vain hurling column after column upon the British lines, which withstood his as- saults like a wall of adamant ; and when, at length, at seven in the evening, he brought up the Imperial Guard for a final effort, it was driven back in disorder. At the same time Blucher, coming up with the Prussians, completed the rout of the French army. * The broken host fled in all directions, and Napoleon himself, hastening to Paris, was the herald of his own defeat. Once more the capital capitulated, and was occupied by foreign troops : Napoleon a second time abdicated the throne, and, after vainly attempting to escape to America, sur- rendered himself to a British man-of-war. He was banished by the allies to the island of St. Helena, 6 where he died on the 5th of May, 1. IJgny is a small village on the small stream of the same name, two or three miles north- east of Fleurus, and about eighteen miles east of south from Waterloo. ( Maps Nos. XII. and XV.) 2. Quatre Bras (kah-tr-brah “four arms,”) is at the meeting of four roads about seventeen miies south from Brussels, and nearly ten miles south from Waterloo. (Maps Nos. XII. and XV.) 3. Waterloo is a small village or hamlet of Belgium, nine miles south of Brussels, and on the south-western border of the forest of Soignies. The great road from Brussels leading south to Jharleroi passes through Waterloo, about three-quarters of a mile south of which was the centre of the position of the allies, who occupied the crest of a range of gentle eminences, ex- tending about two miles in length, and crossing the high road at right angles. The French army occupied a corresponding line of ridges nearly parallel, on the opposite side of the valley and about three-quarters of a mile distant. In the valley between these ridges the “ Battle of Waterloo” was fought. (Maps Nos. XII. and XV.) 4. Wavre is a small village on the western bank of a small stream called the Dyle, nine miles k little south of east from Waterloo, and fifteen miles south-east from Brussels. The river Dyle is no', deep, but at the period of the battle it was swollen by the recent heavy rain, and the roads were in a miry state. ( Maps Nos. XII. and XV.) 5. St. Helena is an island of the Atlantic Ocean, belonging to Great Britain, in fifteen deg fifteen min. south lat., and twelve hundred miles west from the coast of Benguela in South Af* rica. Length ten and a-half miles, breadth six and a-half miles. It is a rocky island, the into, rlor of which Is a plateau about fifteen hundred feet above the level of the soa. The highest 502 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL 1821, during one of the most violent tempests that had ever raged on the island — fitting time for the soul of Napoleon to take its de- parture. In his last moments his thoughts wandered to the scenes of his military glory, and his last words were those of command, as he fancied himself at the head of his armies. 54. After the capitulation of Paris, the tranquilization of France, and the future peace and safety of Europe, received the first atten- tion of the allies. Louis XVIII. following in the rear of their armies, entered the capital on the 8th of July; but the French people felt too deeply the humiliation of defeat to express any joy at his restoration. The mournful tragedy which followed, in the exe- cution of Marshal Ney and Labedoyere for high treason in favoring Napoleon’s return from Elba, after the undoubted protection which had been guaranteed them by the capitulation of Paris, was a stain upon the character of the allies ; and although Ney’s treason was beyond that of any other man, to the end of the world his guilt will be forgotten in the broken faith of his enemies, and the tragic interest and noble heroism of his death. The fate of Murat, king of Naples, was equally mournful, but less unjust. On Napoleon’s landing at Frejus he had made a diversion in his favor by breaking his alliance with Austria, and commencing the war; unt the cowardly Nea^oh tans were easily overthrown, and Murat was obliged to seek refuge in France. At the head of a few followers he afterwards made a descent upon the coast of Naples, in the hope of regaining his power ; but being seized, he was tried by a military commission, condemned, and executed. 55. On the 20th of November, 1815, the second treaty of Paris was concluded between France and the allied powers, by which the French frontier was narrowed to nearly the state in which it stood in 1790: twenty-eight million pounds sterling were to be paid by France for the expenses of the war, and a larger sum still for the ountain summit is two thousand seven hundred and three teet in height. Jamestown, the port, at 1 resident e of the authorities, is the only town. Longwood, the residence of Napoleon, stands on tl i plateau, in the middle of an extensive park. After Napoleon’s death the house was for Borne time uninhabited, but was finally converted into a kind of farming establ shment ; and recently, the room in which the conqueror of Austerlitz breathed his last was occupied as a, caruhouse and stable ! Napoleon arrived at St. Helena on the 13th of October, 1815, and there he expired on the 5th Ci May, 1821. His remains, after having been deposited for nineteen years in a humble grav« near the house, were, in 1840, conveyed with great pomp and ceremony to France, wher<\ agreeably to the wish expressed in his lant will, they now repose, in the Hotel des Invalided la *aris Chap VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 503 spoliations which she had inflicted on other powers during her Revo* lution, and for five years her frontier fortresses were to be placed in the hands of her recent enemies ; while the vast treasures of art which adorned the museums of the Louvre — the trophies of a hundred victories — were to be restored to the States from which they had oeen pillaged by the orders of Napoleon. Mournfully the Parisians parted with these memorials of the glories of the consulate and the empire. The tide of conquest had now set against France herself.— her pride was broken — her humiliation complete — and the iron en- tered into the soul of the nation. SECTION II. FROM THE FALL OF NAPOLEON TO THE PRESENT TIME I. THE PERIOD OF PEACE : 1815—1820. ANALYSIS. [Treaties of 1815.] 1. Treaty between Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Eng- ‘and. The “ Holy Alliance.” General accession to it. — 2. Its authorship, objects, and effects. — 3. Condition of Europe. Continued popular excitement, but change in its objects. 4. The social contest in England. Prosperity of England during the war. — 5. Disappointed expectations. Causes of a general revulsion. Scarcity, in 1816. — 6. Other contributing causes — diminished supply of the precious metals, &c. Demands of the Radicals. — 7. Policy of the English government. Reforms granted. Reported conspiracy. — 8. Stringent measures of gov- ernment. The meeting at Manchester. [Manchester.] Continued complaints. Government carries all its important measures. — 9. The piratical States of Northern Africa. [Barbary.] The United States of America and Algiers. — 10. Chastisement of Algiers by an English squadron, in 1816. — 11. Importance of these events. Decline of the Ottoman empire. 12. Situation of France at the time of the second restoration. Change in public feeling against the Bonapartists and Republicans. Punishment of the Revolutionists demanded. — 13. Religious and political feuds. Atrocities. — 14. Demands, and acts, of the Chamber of Deputies ef 1815. Singular position of parties. — 15. Policy of the king and ministry, and coup detox (Koo-da-tah) of Sept. 1816. — 16. Effects of the new measures. 1L REVOLUTIONS IN SPAIN, PORTUGAL, NAPLES, PIEDMONT, GREECE, FRANCE, BELGIUM, AND POLAND: 1820—1831. L Spain. 1. Spain from 1815 to 1820. Grant of a constitution in 1820. The party opposed It it. Action taken by the European powers. — 2. Interference of the French in 1823. Re matnder of the reign of Ferdinand. The course of England and the United States of America. II. Portugal. 1. Situation of Portugal. Revolution of 1820. Opposition to, and sup- pression of, the new constitution. Anarchy. — 2. Don Pedro. Don Miguel’s usurpation. Civil war. Foreign interference, and restoration of tranquillity. III. Naples. 1. History of the kingdom of Naples previous to 1815.— 2. The subsequent rule of Ferdinand. Popular insurrection in July, 1820. Grant of a constitution. Resolution of Russia, Austria, and Prussia, to put down the constitution. [Troppau.1 — 3. Coi duct of Fer«ir uand. [Laybach.] An Austrian army suppresses the Revolution. IV. Piedmont. 1. Account of the Sardinian monarchy. [Sardinia. Tessino] Feelings and 504 MODERN HISTORY. [Part 13 complaints of the Piedmontese,— 2. Insurrection in Piedmont, March 1821. Success of the in eurgents, and abdication of the king. Austrian interference suppresses the Revolution. V. The Greek Revolution. 1. History of Greece from 1481 to 1821. Proclamation of Grecian independence in 1821. Suppression of the Revolution in Northern Greece. [Islarn- ism. Trieste.] — 2. Beginning and spread of the Revolution in the Morea. Proclamation of the Messenian senate. [Kalamatia.] Aid extended to the Greeks. — 3. Rage, and cruelties, of the Turks. Effects produced. — 4. Events on the Asiatic coast, in Candia, Cypress, Rhodes, &c. Successes and retaliatory measures of the Greeks. [Monembasia. Navariuo. Tripolitza.]— 5, Defeat of the Turks at Thermopylae. The peninsula of Cassandra laid waste by them. [Cas- sandra.] The Turks driven from the country to the cities. [1822.] — 6. Acts of the Greek congress. [Epidaurus.] Dissensions and difficulties among the Greeks. — 7. Principal military events of 1822. [Scio. Napoli di Romania.] — 8. Destruction ef Scio. Events in Southern Macedonia. [Salonica.]— 8. Events in Western Greece. The Greek fire-ships. [Tenedos.] Great loss of Turkish vessels. Taking of Napoli di Romania. [1823.] — 9. Events of the war during the year 1823. [Missolorighi.1 The poet Lord Byron. [1824.] — 10. The Turks besiege Negropont, subdue Candia, reduce Ipsara, and attack Samos. The Egyptian fleet. [1825-6.] — 11. Successes of Ibrahim Pacha in the Morea. Siege and fall of Missolonghi. [Salona.] Fate of the inhabitants of Missolonghi. — 12. Danger apprehended from the successes of Ibrahim Pacna, and treaty of London, July 1827. — 13. Allied squadron sent to the archipelago. Battle of Navarino. Rage of the Porte. — 14. French and English army sent to the Morea, 1828. War between Russia and Turkey. [Pruth.] Convention with Ibra- him Pacha. Successes of the Greeks. Retaliatory measures of the sultan. — 15. Protocol of the allies, Jan. 1827. [Cyclades.] Successes of the Russians, and peace of Adrianople. [Balkan Mts.]— 16. Unsettled condition of the country and its subsequent history. VI. The French Revolution of 1830. 1. Beginning of the reign of Charles X. Principles of his government and opposition of the people. The Polignac ministry, 1829. — 2. The royal speech at the opening of the Chambers in 1830. Effects. Reply of the Chambers. Dissolution of the Chambers. — 3. War with Algiers. — 4. Continued excitement in France. Result of the elections. Course pursued by the ministry. The three ordinances of July 26th. Accompany ing report of the ministers. — 5. The course pursued by the public journals. Excitemen. throughout Paris. Apathy of the king and ministers. — 6. Events of the 27th. Marmont. Arming of the people. — 7. On the 28th the riot assumes the aspect of a Revolution. The con test during the day. Its results.— 8. Renewal of the contest on the third day. Defection of the troops of the line, and success of the revolution. Installation of a provisional government. Louis Phillippe elected king.— 9. Alarm of the continental sovereigns. The emperor of Russia. Charles X. and his ministers. VII. Belgium. 1. Effects of the French Revolution upon Europe. Revolution in Belgium. —2. Vain attempts at reconciliation. Declaration of Belgian independence. Protocol of the five great European powers. Selection of a king. [Saxe-Coburg, Gotha.] Siege and sur- render of Antwerp. Prosperity of Belgium. VIII. Polish Revolution. 1. Disposition made of Poland by the congress of Vienna. Al- exander’s arbitrary government of Poland.— 2. The government of Poland under the emperoi Nicholas. Character of Constantine. Effect of his barbarities. Secret societies. [Volhynia.] —3. Revolutionary outbreak at Warsaw, Nov. 1830. A general rising in Warsaw. The pro- visional government.— 4. Fruitless attempts to negotiate. Russian and Polish forces. Opening events of the war.— 5. Night attacks and rout of the Russians. [Bug River.] Conduct of Prussia and Austria.— 6. Battle of Ostrolenka. [Minsk. Ostrolenka.] Death of Diebitsch ana Constantine. Conspiracy at Warsaw.— 7. Dissensions among the Poles. Fall of Warsaw and end of the war. Fate of the Polish generals, soldiers, and nobility. Result. II L ENGLISH REFORMS. FRENCH REVOLUTION OF 1848. REVOLUTIONS IN THE GERMAN STATES, PRUSSIA, AND AUSTRIA. REVOLUTIONS IN ITALY. HUNGARIAN WAR. USURPATION OF LOUIS NAPOLEON. I. English Reforms. 1. England from 1820 to 1830. Reforms obtained in 1828 and 1829. Resignation of the Wellington ministry, 1830. The whig ministry of Earl Grey. Lord Russell’s Reform bill :— lost in the Commons.— 2. Dissolution of Parliament. Result of the new elections. Second defea . of the Reform bill, 183 1. Pop Bar resentment, and riots. [Derby. Bristol.]- a, Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 505 Thiru defeat ol ;be Reform bill. 1832. Resignation of ministers. Causes of their reinstatement, Final passage rf ,he Reform bill. — 4. Important effects of this measure. More intimate union with France. Prosperity of England under the change.— 5. Accession of Victoria to the throne, 1837 ; and her marriage to Prince Albert, 1840. II. French Revolution of 1848. 1. Most important events of the reign of Louis Phillippe. -2. Lafayette’s instrumentality in his election. Anomalous and difficult position of Louis Phillippe. The temporary success of his government.— 3. Discontent of the middle and lower classes.— 4. The political reform ■ banquets of 1847-8. The contemplated banquet for the 22d of Feb., 1848, — forbidden by the government. Measures taken by the opposition deputies. — 5, Announcement of the postponement of the banquet. Popular assemblage dispersed. Dis- turbances in the evening of the 22d.- -6. Renewed disturbances on the morning of the 23d. Demands of the National Guards acceded to. The people fired upon in the evening, — 7. A Thiers’ ministry organized. Proclamation on the morning of the 24th, and withdrawal of the troops. Disarming of the troops, abdication of the king, pillage of the palace, and flight of the king and ministers. — 8. Meeting of the Chamber of Deputies. Adoption of a Republic. — 9. M. Lamartine. General adhesion to the- new government. — 10. The Moderate and the Red Republicans. Their respective principles. Demands upon the government. — 11. Ani- mosities of the two sections of the Republican party. Popular demonstrations. The April elections. The executive committee. — 12. Insurrection of the 15th of May. Its suppression. — 13. Precautionary measures of the government. Insurrection of June — suppressed after a bloody contest. — 14. Cavaignac chief executive. Treatment of the insurgent prisoners. Adop- tion, and character of, the new constitution. III. Revolutions in the German States, Prussia, and Austria. 1. Effects of the recent" French Revolution upon the German States. Events in Baden. — 2. Events at Cologne, Munich, and Hesse-Cassel. [Hanau. Hesse-Cassel.]— 3. Convention at Heidelberg. [Heidel- berg.] Action of the Frankfort diet. Course of Frederick William of Prussia. Saxony and Hanover. Revolt of Sleswick and Holstein. 4 . Excitement in Vienna, caused by the Revolution in Paris. [Galicia. Metternich.] — 5. Opening of the diet of Lower Austria. Commotions and bloodshed. — 6. Concessions of the government, and triumph of the people.— 7. Efforts of government to fulfil its promises. Dif- ficulties that intervened. Rule of the mob. Flight, and return, of the emperor. [Inspruck.] 8. Demands of the Bohemians. A Slavic Congress. Bombardment of Prague, and termination of the Bohemian Revolution. — 9. Hungary at this period. Revolt of the Croats, who are sup- ported by Austria. [Hungary. Croatia.] Second Revolution in Vienna. Flight of the em peror. [Olmutz.] Siege and surrender of Vienna. — 10. The Hungarian army during the siege — 11. Character of the second Revolution in Vienna. Reaction in the popular mind, and triumph of despotism. IV. Revolutions in Italy. 1. Austrian influence and interference in Italian affairs since the fall of Napoleon. [Modena. Parma. Papal-States.]— 2. Election of Pope Pius IX. in 1846. His character and acts. Austria interferes. [Ferrara.] A general rising against Aus- tria. Withdrawal of Austrian troops. [Bologna. Lucca.]— 3. Austrian force in Lombardy. General insurrection throughout Austrian Italy. Charles Albert of Sardinia espouses tlia cause of Italian nationality. Final triumph of the Austrians under Radetsky. An armistice.- 4. Renewal of the war— second triumph of Radetsky, and abdication of Charles Albert - -ft. Blockade and fall of Venice. — 6. Revolution in Naples. [Kingdom of Naples.] War with, md final reduction of, the Sicilians. [Palermo.]— 7. Difficulties of the pope.— 8. His growing unpopularity and flight. [Gaeta.] The Roman Republic instituted.— 9. The pope’s appeal for aid— bow responded — 10. Reduction of Rome by the French army. Return of the pope. Fiie change in him and his people. V. Hi ngarian war. 1 . Immediate cause of the second Revolution in Vienna. Hungarian ano' Croatian war. — 2. Historical account of the Magyars. [Theiss.] Character of the Hun- garian government. — 3. Repeated acknowledgments of its independence.— 4. Ferdinand the Fifth. His means of influence, — and Austrian control over the government of the Hungarians, The two parties in Hungary.— 5. Concessions to Hungary in March, 1848. [Pesth.]— 6. Anarchy and misrule in Hungary.— 7. A more alarming danger to Hungary. Her population. Revolt of Croatia. [Slavonians.] The Serbian revolt. [Serbs.] Actual beginning of the war on the part of Hungary. [Carlowitz. Peterwardein. The Banat.] Austria openly supports the Croatian rebo'li >n.-~ 8. Action of the Hungarian Diet. Defeat of Jellachich near Pesth.— 9. X 506 MODERN HISTORY [Part IL Character, and situation, of Ferdinand, who abdicates the throi e. The Hungarian Diet refuse! to acknowledge his successor. Failure of the attempt at negotiations. — 10. Defection of several of the Hungarian leaders, — but general adherence to Kossuth and the country. Want of arms — but partially supplied. Hungarian force. — 11. Austrian plan of invasion. Austrians enter Pesth, Jan. 1849, and the government retires to Debreczin. Concentration of the Hungarian l'orcep. General Bern. [Debreczin. Comorn. Eperies. Bukowina.] — 12. Loss of Esseck. Bern Is at first repulsed. His final successes. [Esseck. Wallachs. Hermanstadt. Cronstadt. Tem >s war.] — 13. Dembinski. Operations in the valley of the Theiss. [Szegedin. Maros. Ka- polna &c.] Battles of Kapolna. — 14. Gorgey. His victories over the Austrians. [Tapiobieske. Godollo. Waitzen. Nagy Sarlo.] Siege of Buda. [Buda.[ — 15. Constitution for the Austrian empire. Declaration of Hungarian independence. Kossuth governor of Hungary. — 16. Aus- trian and Russian preparations for a second campaign. The Hungarian forces. — 17. Invasion of Hungary in June. [Presburg. Bartfeld.] — 18. Gradual concentration of the enemies of Hungary. [Hegyes.] Barbarities of Haynau. — 19. Gorgey’s retreat to Arad. [Onod. Tokay. Arad.] Want of concert among the Hungarian generals. — 20. Retreat of Dembinski. Defies at Temeswar, and breaking up of the southern Hungarian army. Gorgey’s failure to support Dembinski. His suspected fidelity. Supreme power conferred upon him. — 21. Gorgey’s treason, and surrender of his army, Aug. 13th, 1849. — 22. Previous successes of the Hungarians in the vicinity of Comorn. [Raab.] Surrender of Comorn, Sept. 29th. — 23. Fate of Kossuth, Bern, Dembinski, &c. [Widdin.] — 24. The closing tragedy of the Hungarian war. Fate of the in- ferior officers, Hungarian soldiers, &c. VI. Usurpation of Louis Napoleon. 1. Election of a chief magistrate in France in 1848. The six candidates. Cavaignac, and Louis Napoleon. Election of the latter. Inauguration and oath of office. — 2. History of Louis Napoleon down to the period of his election. [Fortress of Ham.] — 3. His declaration of principles. Jealousy of him. Parties in the Assembly. — 4. Want of confidence between the President and Assembly. Acts of the Assembly. — 5. Pro- posed revision of the constitution. — 6. President’s message of November 1851. Increasing ani- mosity of the Assembly against the President. — 7. An approaching crisis, — how anticipated by Louis Napoleon. Circumstances of the coup d'etat of December 2d. — 8. Meeting, and arrest, of members of the Assembly. The public press. Decree for an election. Insurrection of De cember 4th, suppressed by the military. — 9. Result of the elections of December. The new constitution. Louis Napoleon President for ten years. Assumes the title of emperor. I. THE PERIOD OF PEACE: 1815—1820. 1. On the day of the signing of the treaty of Paris, another was concluded between Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Eng- * an< *> d es ig ne d as a measure of security for the allied powers, and declaring that Napoleon Bonaparte and his family should be forever excluded from the throne of France. On the same day a third treaty, of notorious celebrity, called l ’ The Holy Alliance,” was subscribed by the emperors of Russia and Austria, and the king of Prussia, whr bound themselves, “ in con- formity with the principles of Holy [Scripture, — to lend each other every aid, assistance, and succor, on every occasion,” This treaty was ere long acceded to by nearly all the continental powers as parties to the compact, although the ruling prince of England declined sign- ing it, on the ground that the Er.gl’sn uonstitation prevented him from becoming a party to any convention that was not countersigned by a responsible minister. Chap VT] NINETEENTH CENTURY 50 ’ 2. The terms of the Holy Alliance were drawn by the young Russian emperor Alexander, whose enthusiastic benevolence prompt- ed him to devise a plan of a common international law that should substitute the peaceful reign of the Gospel in place of the rude em- pire of the sword. But the law of the Holy Alliance, although be- neficent in its origin, was to be interpreted by absolute monarchs: as it was evident that its only active principle would be the maintenance ©f despotic power, under the mask of piety and religion, it was justly regarded with dread and jealousy by the liberal party throughout Europe, and was in reality made a convenient pretext for enforcing the doctrine of passive obedience, and resisting all efforts for the es- tablishment of constitutional freedom. 3. The treaties of 1815 both closed the ascendency of imperial France in Europe, and terminated, for a time at least, the revolution- ary movements in the civilized world. Twenty-five years of war had exhausted the treasures of Europe, and covered her soil with mourn- ing, and never before had the sweets of repose been so eagerly cov- eted by rulers and people. But although the nations had tired of the mingled horrors and glories of military strife, the excitement oc- casioned by the revolutionary wars continued, and, for want of otheT channels of action, seized hold of the social passions of the masses : military gave place to democratic ambition — the old ante-revolution- ary contest between despotism and democracy revived, — to be fol- lowed by other revolutions still, until one or the other principle shall triumph — until, in the language of Napoleon, Europe shall become either Cossack or Republican. 4. In England, the social contest, wearing a milder aspect than c»n the continent, displayed itself in the legal strife for government relief and parliamentary reforms. During a long and expensive war / England had enjoyed extraordinary do- engl \nd mestic prosperity : since the year 1792 her population had increased more than four millions, notwithstanding the absorp- tion of five hundred thousand men in the army and navy : the ex- ports, imports, and tonnage, of the kingdom, had more than doubled since the war began ; and although the public debt had grown to an enormous amount, agriculture, commerce, and manufactures, had gone on increasing, during the whole struggle, in an unparallel id ratio. 5. It was confidently anticipated, not only by the ardent and en thusiastio, but also by the prudent and sagacious, that when the enormous expenses of the war establishment should be removed, and 508 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IX peace had thrown open the ports of all Europe to the enterprise of British merchants, the tide of national prosperity would rise still higher and higher ; but never were hopes more cruelly disappointed. Exports, to an enormous amount, being suddenly thrown into countries impoverished by war, glutted the foreign market ; and the consign- ments, in most instances, were sold for little more than half their original cost — spreading ruin throughout the commercial interests. Moreover, the opening of the European and American ports for the the supplies of grain, glutted the home market of England ; and prices of every species of agricultural produce soon fell to two-thirds of what they had been during the closing scenes of the war : a season of unusual scarcity, in 181 6, # threatening a famine, increased the general distress, which, like a pall of gloom, enshrouded the whole kingdom. 6. Other causes, in addition to those originating in the mere transition from a state of war to one of peace, doubtless contributed to the general revulsion in business, among which may be mentioned, as the most prominent, the greatly diminished supply of the precious metals from South America, 3 owing to the unsettled state of that country then occupied with revolutionary wars, and the rapid con- traction of the paper currency of Great Britain, in anticipation of a speedy return to specie payments. But the English Radical or Re- publican party attributed the difficulties to excessive taxation and the measures of a corrupt government ; and a vehement outcry was raised for parliamentary reform, and retrenchment in all branches of public expenditure. 7. The English government, wiser than the continental powers, has ever had the prudence to make seasonable concessions to reasonable popular demands, before the spark of discontent has been blown into the blaze of revolution ; and now, after a spirited contest, a heavy property tax, that had been patiently submitted to as a necessary war measure, was repealed, amid the universal transports of the people : the remission of other taxes followed, and, in one year, a reduction of thirty -five million pounds sterling was made from the national expenditure, although strongly opposed by the ministry. Still the distress continued ; the popular feeling against the govern- ment increased ; numerous secret political societies were organized among the disaffected ; and early in the following year (1817) a com- a. From 1815 to 1810 the amount of gold and silver coin produced from the mines of Soutli America fell from about seven million pounds sterling to five and a half million pounds. Coap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 500 mittee of parliament reported that an extensive conspiracy existed, chiefly in the great towns and manufacturing districts, for the over* throw of the monarchy, and the establishment of a republic in its stead. 8. In consequence of the information, greatly exaggerated, which had been communicated to the committee, ministers were enabled to carry through parliament bills for suspending the privileges of the writ of habeas corpus, and for suppressing tumultuous meetings, de- bating societies, and all unlawful organizations. Armed with ex- tensive powers, government took the most active measures for putting a stop to the threatened insurrection : a few mobs were suppressed ; many persons were arrested on a charge of high treason ; and several were convicted, and suffered death. In 1819 a large and peaceable meeting at Manchester, 1 assembled to discuss the question of parlia- mentary reforms, was charged by the military, and many lives in- humanly sacrificed ; but all attempts in parliament for an inquiry into the conduct of the Manchester magistrates, under whose orders the military had acted, were defeated. Although the people still justly complained of grievous burdens of taxation, and unequal rep resentation in parliament, those evils were not so oppressive as to in- duce them to incur the hazards of revolution ; and government, having yielded to the point where danger was past, was sufficiently strong to carry all its important measures. 9. An event of general interest that occurred soon after the close of the European war was the merited chastisement of the piratical State of Algiers. During a long period the Barbary 2 powers had carried on a piratical warfare against those nations that were not suf ficiently powerful to prevent or punish their depredations. From the year 1795 to 1812 the United States of America had preserved peace with Algiers by the payment of an annual tribute ; but in the latter year the Dey, believing that the war with England would render the Americans unable to protect their commerce in the Mediterranean, commenced a piractical warfare against all American vessels that fell in the way of his cruisers. In the month of June 1815, an Ameri- can squadron, under the command of Commodore Decatur, being sent 1. Manchester , the great centre of the cotton manufacture of Great Britain, and the greatest manufacturing town in the world, is situated on the Irwell, an affluent of the Mersey, thirty-one miles east from Liverpool. (Map No. XVI.) 2. Barbary is the name that has been usually given, in modem times, to that portion of northern Africa bordering on the Mediterranean, and lying between the western frontier of Egypt and the Atlantic. The name Barbary is derived from that of its ancient inhabita' ts, the Berbers. 510 MODERN HISTORI . [Part 11 to the Mediterranean, after capturing several Algerine vessels, com pelled Algiers, Tripoli, and Tunis, to release all American prisoners in their possession, pay large sums of money, and relinquish all future claims to tribute from the United States. 1 0. In the following year, the continued piracies of the Algerines upon some of the smaller European States that claimed the protec tion of England, induced the British government to send out a pow- erful squadron, with directions to obtain from the Dey unqualified abolition of Christian slavery, or, in case of refusal, to destroy, if possible, the nest of pirates whose tolerance had so long been a dis- grace to Christendom. On the 27th of August the British fleet, commanded by Lord Exmouth, appeared before Algiers, whose for- tifications, admirably constructed, and of the hardest stone, were de- fended by nearly five hundred cannon and forty thousand men. No answer being returned to the demands of the British government, the attack was commenced in the afternoon of the same day ; and although the defence was most spirited, by ten in the evening all the fortifications that defended the approaches by sea were totally ruined, while the shot and shells had carried destruction and death throughout the city. On the following morning the Dey submitted, agreeing to abolish Christian slavery forever, and immediately re- storing twelve hundred captives to their country and friends. The total number liberated at Algiers, Tripoli, and Tunis, was more than three thousand. 1 1. The humiliation of the piratical Barbary powers by the Ameri- cans in 1815, and the battle of Algiers in the following year, were events highly important to the general interests of humanity, not only from their immediate results, but as the beginning of the de- cisive ascendency of the Christian over the Mohammedan world. Former triumphs of the cross over the crescent had averted subju- gation from Christendom, or had been obliterated by subsequent dig asters ; but since the battle of Algiers, the followers of the prophet have seen, and mournfully submitted to, their destiny ; Algiers na3 since become a province of a Christian State ; and the Ottoman ea pire is only saved from dissolution by the jealousies of its Christian neighbors. 12. The situation of France at the time of the second restoration of Louis XVIII., with a vast foreign army quartered nx. France. U p 0n p er p e0 p} ej an empty treasury, and an unsettled government was gloomy in the extreme. With a vacillation peculiar Chap Y1.J NINETEENTH CENTURY. 51 i to the French pejple, public opinion had already turned against the Bonapartists and the Republicans, who were regarded as the authors of all the evils under which the nation suffered ; and the king soon found himself seriously embarrassed by the ardor of his own friends. Punishment of the Revolutionists, and a restoration of the powers and privileges of the nobility and the clergy, were violently demand- ed by the Royalists; but, fortunately, the extreme danger of any » violent reactionary movement was too manifest to permit the king to intrust the government to the ultraists of his own party. 13. Had it not been for the presence of a large foreign army France might again have been doomed to the horrors of civil war : as it was, the party feuds of centuries between the Roman Catholics and Protestants, revived by the imbittered feelings of the moment, broke forth anew in the south of France : the Royalists demanded vengeance against the Republicans ; and political zeal combined with religious enthusiasm to arouse the worst passions of the people, and incited to numerous massacres, which recalled the memory of the bloodiest period of the Revolution. Although the king denounced these atrocities, and called upon the magistrates to bring the guilty parties to justice, the latter were screened from arrest, or, if taken, were acquitted in face of the clearest evidence of their guilt. 1 4. The Chamber of Deputies, at its first meeting, in the autumn of 1815, urgently demanded of the king that those “who had im perilled alike the throne and the nation should be delivered over to the just severity of the tribunals stringent laws were passed punish- ing seditious words ; courts martial were established for trying politi- cal offences; and when the king, after the execution of Ney, La- bedoyere, and a few others, proposed a general amnesty, the chamber had prepared, and demanded the proscription of, a list of twelve hun- dred additional victims ; and in order to secure the amnesty the king was compelled, against his inclination for moderate measures, to assent to an amendment providing for the perpetual banishment of all those who had voted for the death of his brother, the unfortunate Louis XVI. France presented the singular spectacle of an ascendant Roy- alist party arrayed in opposition to the king, who, in order to check their undue zeal, was compelled to ally himself with the Republic cans, the natural enemies of his cause. 15. Although the ultra Royalists controlled the action of the leg islature, there was still a powerful party of ultra Revolutionists among the peop e ; and it was the policy of the king and his ministry 512 MODERN HISTORY [Part IX to guard against the danger of the ascendency of either, by conform ing to the general principles which the Revolution had impressed upon the nation. As the legislative body continually thwarted the government, it was determined to alter the composition of the repre- sentatives by a coup d'etat , or arbitrary ordinance of the king ; and accordingly, on the 5th of September, 1816, a royal ordinance was published, which dissolved the Chamber of Deputies, arbitrarily di- minished the number of representatives, and secured the election of a majority of those who were attached to the measures of the minis terial party. 16. The royal ordinance of September, although conferring the right of suffrage upon only one hundred thousand out of thirty mil lions of the population of France, was far more democratic than ac- corded with the wishes of the Royalists, who feared that the new representatives, chosen mostly from the middle classes of landed pro- prietors, would incline towards a republican form of government, undei which they might most effectually secure their own rights, and divide among themselves the honors and emoluments of office. 3 - And such, indeed, was the result. The electoral law proclaimed by the king, and the subsequent creation 13 of a large body of peers taken from the Liberals and Bonapartists, soon placed the control of govern- ment in the hands of the democratic party, which was naturally an- tagonistic to the power which had given it influence ; but the Royal ists, who at the restoration had seemed the ruling party, were unwilling to resign the control of the government ; and the struggle continued to increase in violence between them and the Liberals, until it finally resulted in the Revolution of 1830, and the overthrow of the mon- archy. II. REVOLUTIONS IN SPAIN, PORTUGAL, NAPLES, PIEDMONT GREECE, FRANCE, BELGIUM, AND POLAND: 1820 — 1831 . I. Spain. 1. During the period of general peace, from 1815 tc 1820, Spain, under the rule of the restored Ferdinand, was in a stato of constant political agitation; and in 1820 an insurrection of the soldiery compelled the king to restore to his subjects the free and almost republican constitution of 1812. The Republicans, however, a. By the ordinance of Sept. 5th, 1816, the right of suffrage was established on the basis of •he payment of three hundred francs direct taxes to the government. b. March 5th, 1819. Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 513 who thus obtained the direction of the government, showed little wisdom or moderation ; and a large party, directed by the monks and friars, and supported by the lower ranks of the populace, was formed for the restoration of the monarchy. Several of the European powers, in a congress held at Verona, adopted a resolution to sup port the authority of the king in opposition to the constitution which he had granted; but England stood aloof, and to France was in- trusted the execution of the odious measure of suppressing democratic principles in Spain. 2 . Accordingly, early in the year 1823, a French army of a hun- dred thousand men, under the command of the Duke d’Angouleme, entered Spain : the patriots made but a feeble resistance, and the king was soon restored to absolute authority, on the ruins of the con- stitution. The remainder of the reign of Ferdinand, who died in 1833, was characterized by the complete suppression of all liberal principles in politics and religion, and the revival of the ancient abuses which had so long disgraced the Spanish monarchy. England and the United States severely censured the interference of France in the domestic affairs of the Spanish nation, and showed their sym- pathy with the cause of the oppressed by recognizing, at as early a period as possible, the independence of the Spanish South American republics, which had recently renounced their allegiance to Spain. II. Portugal. 1 . The adjoining kingdom of Portugal was a prey to similar commotions. The emigration of the king and court to Brazil during the peninsular war, has already been mentioned, (p. 488.) The nation being dissatisfied with the continued residence of the court in Brazil, which in fact made Portugal a dependency of the latter, and desiring some fundamental changes in the frame of government, at length in August 1820 a revolution broke out, and a free constitution was soon after established, having for its basis the abolition of privileges, the legal equality of all classes, the freedom of the press, and the formation of a representative body in the na tbnal legislature. This constitution, being violently opposed by the clergy and privileged classes, who formed what was called the apos- tolical party, at the head of whom was Don Miguel, the king’s younger son, was suppressed in 1823, and a state of anarchy con- tinued until the death of the king in 1826, when the crown fell to Don Pedro, emperor of Brazil. 2 . Don Pedro, however, resigned his right in favor of his infant daughter Dorma Maria, at the same time granting to Portugal a x* 33 511 MODERN HISTORY. [Part ll constitutional charter, and appointing his brother Don Miguel regent. Although the latter took an oath of fidelity to the charter, he soon began openly to aspire to the throne, and by means of an artful priesthood caused himself, in 1829, to be proclaimed sovereign of Portugal, while the charter was denounced as inconsistent with the purity of the Roman faith. The friends of the charter, aided by Don Pedro, who repaired to Europe to assert the rights of tig daughter, organized a resistance, and after a sanguinary struggle during which they were once driven into exile, they obtained the promise of support from France, Spain, and England, who in 1834 entered into a convention to expel the younger brother from the Por- tuguese territories. Soon after, Don Miguel gave up his pretensions, and the young queen was placed upon the throne, since which time the country has remained comparatively tranquil. III. Naples. 1 . The kingdom of Naples, embracing Sicily and southern Italy, nearly identical with the Magna Graecia of antiquity had been erected into an independent monarchy in 1734, under the Infante Don Carlos of Spain, who took the name of Charles III. It continued under a succession of tyrannical or imbecile rulers of the Bourbon dynasty till 1798 : the Italian portion of the kingdom was then overrun by the French, who held it from 1803 till 1815, when it reverted to its former sovereign Ferdinand, who, during the French rule, had maintained his court in the Sicilian part of his kingdom. 2. Under the rule of Ferdinand, popular education was wholly neglected ; the roads, bridges, and other public works which the French had either planned or executed, were left unfinished, or fell into decay ; and yet the people were oppressively taxed, and a repre- sentative government was denied them. At length, on the 2d of July, 1820, the growing discontents of the people broke mt in open insurrection, and a remonstrance was sent to the governmt nt de- manding a representative constitution. One based on the Spanish constitution of 1812 was immediately granted, and the Neapolitan parliament was opened on the 1st of October following; but on the same month a convention of the three crowned heads who formed the Holy Alliance, attended by ministers from most of the other Eu- ropean powers, met at Troppau ;* and it was there resolved by the 1. Troppau , the capital of Austrian Silesia, is situated on the Oppa, a tributary of the Oder, thirty-seven miles north-east from Olmutz. From 20th October to 20th November, 1820, it was the place of meeting of the diploma ic congress, which afterwards removed to Laybach. (Map No. XVII.) Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 515 sovereigns of Russia, Austria, and Prussia, to put down the Neapoli- tan constitution \ y force of arms. 3. France approved the measure, but the British cabinet remained neutral. The old king Ferdinand, wno had been invited to visit the sovereigns at Laybach, 1 2 was easily convinced that his promises had been extorted, and therefore were not binding ; and Austrian troops immediately prepared to execute the resolutions of the congress, while the aid of a Russian army was promised, if necessary. An Austrian force of forty-three thousand men entered the Neapolitan territory, heralded by a proclamation from Ferdinand, calling his subjects to receive the invaders as friends. A few slight skirmishes took place, but the country was quickly overrun ; foreign troops gar- risoned the fortresses ; the king’s promise of complete amnesty was forgotten ; and courts martial and executions closed the brief drama of the Neapolitan Revolution. IV. Piedmont. 1 . Piedmont is the principal province of the Sar- dinian monarchy ; 3 and the latter, first recognized as a separate king dom by the treaty of Utrecht in 1713, comprises the whole of north- ern Italy west of the Tessino, 3 together with, the island of Sardinia in the Mediterranean. The Piedmontese, never considering them selves properly as Italians, had been proud of their annexation to France under the rule of Napoleon; and on the restoration of the monarchy they were the first of the Sardinian people to exhibit the liberal principles of the French Revolutionists, and to complain of the oppressive exactions imposed upon them by the government. 2. Scarcely had the Neapolitan Revolution been suppressed, when an insurrection, beginning with the military, broke out in Piedmont. On the 10th of March, 1821, several regiments of troops simulta- neously mutinied ; and it is believed that the malcontents were se- cretly favored by Charles Albert, a kinsman of the royal family, who 1. Laybach , the capital of Austrian Illyria, (which latter embraces the duchies of Carinthia and Carniola,) is situated on a navigable stream, a tributary of the Save, fifty-foui miles north' east from Trieste. It is celebrated in diplomatic history for the congress hel< here in 1821 , {Map No. XVII.) 2. Sardinia (Kingdom of) embraces the territory of Piedmont, Genoa, av.d Nice, and- the adjacent duchy of Sa oy on the west side of the Alps, together with the island of Sardinia. Savoy, which was governed by its own counts as early as the tenth century, was the nucleus of thi.r monarchy. Genoa was annexed to the Sardinian crown at the peace of 1815. (Map No. XVII.) 3. The Tessino or Ticino (anciently Ticinus, see p. 158,) having its sources in Mount St. Gothard, flows southward, and after traversing the Lago Maggiore in its entire length, and "orming the boundary between Lombardy and Piedmont, falls into the Po at Paw a. (Map No, XVII ) 516 MODERN HISTORY. [Paet II. afterwards became king of Sardinia. The seizure of the citadel of Turin, on the 12th, was followed, on the 13th, by the abdication of the king Victor Emanuel, in favor of his absent brother Charles Eelix, and the appointment of Prince Albert as regent. While ef- forts were made to organize a government, an Austrian army was assembled in Lombardy to put down the Revolution : the new king repudiated the acts of the regent, who threw himself on the Aus- trians for protection : on the 8th of April the insurgents were .over- thrown in battle ; and on the 10th the combined royal and Austrian troops were in possession of the whole country In Piedmont, as in Naples, Austrian interference, ever exerted on the side of tyranny, suppressed every germ of constitutional freedom. V. The Greek Revolution. 1. In the year 1481, Greece, the early and favored seat of art, science, and literature, was conquered by the Turks, after a sanguinary contest of more than forty years. The Venetians, however, were not disposed to allow its new masters quiet possession of the country ; and during the sixteenth and seven- teenth centuries it was the theatre of obstinate wars between their and the Turks, which continued till 1718, when the Turks were con firmed in their conquest by treaty. Although the Turks and Greeks never became one nation, and the relation of conquerors and con- quered never ceased, yet the Turkish rule was quietly submitted to until 1821, when, according to previous ar rangements, on the 7th of March Alexander Ypsilanti, a Greek, and then a major-general in the Russian army, proclaimed, from Moldavia, the independence of Greece, at the same time assuring his country men of the aid of Russia in the approaching contest. But tin, Russian emperor declined intervention ; the Porte took the most rigorous measures against the Greeks, and called upon all Mussulmen to arm against the rebels for the protection of Islam ism the wildest fanaticism raged 'in Constantinople, where hundreds of the residenl Greeks were remorselessly murdered ; and in Moldavia tk.e bloody struggle was terminated with the annihilation of the patriot army and the flight of Ypsilanti to Trieste, 2 where the Austrian govern- ment seized and imprisoned him. i. 1821 . 1. Islamism, from the Arabic word salama, ‘‘ .o be free, safe, or devoted to God, 1 ’ is tl e term which the followers of Mahomet apply to their religion. The term “ Mohainmedism’- is as objectionable as the term “ popery.” 2. Trieste , a seaport town of Austrian Illyria, is near ‘the north-eastern extremity of the Adriatic, seventy-three miles north-east from Venice. During the mi Idle ages Trieste was tha capital of a small republic. {Map No. XVII.) Chai. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURI 51? 2. In southern Greece no cruelties could quench the fire of liberty and sixteen days after the proclamation of Ypsilanti the Devolution of the Morea began at Suda, a large village in the northern part of Achaia, where eighty Turks were made prisoners. The revolutioi, rapidly spread ovei; the Morea and the islands of the GEgean : the ancient names were revived ; and on the 6th of April the Messenian senate, assembled at Kalamatia, 1 2 proclaimed that Greece had shaken > off the Turkish yoke to save the Christian faith, and restore the ancient character of the country. From that time the Greeks found friends wherever free principles were cherished ; and from England and the United States large contributions of clothing and provisions were forwarded to relieve the sufferings inflicted by the wanton atrocities of the Turks. 3. The rage of the Turks was particularly directed against the Greek clergy, many of whom were murdered, among them the aged patriarchs of Constantinople and Adrianople ; and several hundred of the Greek churches were torn down, while the Christian ambassa dors of neutral powers in vain remonstrated with the Turkish divan. These excesses, and the massacre of those whom the Turks took in arms, showed to the Greeks that the struggle in which they had en- gaged was one of life and death ; and it is not surprising, therefore, that the Greeks often retaliated when the power was in their hands. 4. During the summer months the Turks committed great depre- dations among the Greek towns on the coast of Asia Minor : the in habitants of the island of Candia, who had taken no part in the insur- rection, were disarmed, and the archbishops, and many of the priests, executed : in Cyprus, where also there had been no appearances of insurrection, the Greeks were disarmed, and their archbishop and other prelates murdered. The most barbarous atrocities were also committed at llhodes, and other islands of the Grecian Archipelago, where the villages were burned, and the country desolated. But when in August the Greeks captured the strong Turkish fortresses of Monembasia , ‘ and Navarino, 3 4 and in October that of Tripolitza,- 1. Kalamatia is near the head of the Messenian Gulf, now called the Gulf of Kalmatia. Is ancient name was Calamce. It is east of the Pamisus river — now the Pamitza. {Map No. I v 2. The fortress of Monembasia is in the vicinity of the ancient Epidaurus, on tl e eastern coast of Laconia, forty-three miles south-east from Sparta. {Map No. I.) 3. JVavarbio is on the western coast of Messenia, near the ancient Pylus. It stands on the south side of a fine semi-circular bay of the same name, cut off from the sea by t e long narro Island of Sphagia— anciently Sphactcria. {Map No. 1.) 4 . Tripolitza, a town of modem origin, and, under the Turks, the capital of the Morea, is about fi/e miles north of Tegea, in the ancient Arcadia. Its name Tripolitza, “the thre* MODERN HISTORY 518 [Pabt II they took a teirible revenge upon their enemies ; and in Tripolitza alone eight thousand Turks were put to death. 5. On tRt, 5th and 6th of September the Greek general Ulysses defeated, near the pass of Thermopylae, a large Turkish army which had advanced from Macedonia ; but on the otherffiand the peninsula of Cassandra 1 was taken by the Turks, when three thousand Greeks were put to the sword ; women and children were carried into slave- ry, and the flourishing peninsula converted into a desert waste. The Athenian Acropolis was garrisoned by the Turks, and the inhabitants of Athens fled to Salamis for safety ; but in general, throughout all southern Greece, the Turks were driven from the country districts, and compelled to shut themselves up in the cities. 6. The year 1822 opened with the assembling of the first Greek 182° COD S ress Epidaurus,* the proclaiming of a provisional constitution on the 13th of January, and the issuing, on the 27th, of a manifesto which announced the union of the Greeks under an independent federative government, under the presidency of Alexander Mavrocordato. But the Greeks, long kept in bondage, and unaccustomed to exercise the rights of freemen, were unable at once to establish a wise and firm government : they often quarreled among themselves ; and their captain, or captains, who had exercised an independent authority under the government of the Turks, could seldom be brought to submit to the control of the central govern- ment. The few men of intelligence and liberal views among them, and the few foreign officers who entered their service, had a difficult task to perform ; and all that enabled them to continue the struggle was the wretchedly undisciplined state of the Turkish armies. 7. The principal military events of 1822 were the destruction of Scio 3 by the Turks, the defeat of the Turks in the Morea, the successes c-f the Greek fire-ships, and the surrender of Napoli di Romania* 3 ities,” is supposed to be derived from the circumstance of its having been constructed of the ruins of the three cities Tegea, Mantinea, and Pallantium. (Map No. I.) 1. The peninsula of Cassandra is the same as the ancient Pellene , at the eastern entrance of the Thermaic Gulf, now Gulf of Salonica. (Maps Nos. I. and X.) 2. Epidaurus. See Monembasia. 3. Scio (anciently Chios) is a celebrated and beautiful island, about thirty-two miles in length, near the Lydian coast of Asia Minor. In antiquity, and in modern times down to the dreadful catastrophe of 1822, the island, although for the most part mountainous and rugged, was cul- tivated with the greatest care and assiduity. It was called the “paradise of modern Greece.” Bcio aspired to the honor of being the native country of the first and greatest of poets, — “ The blind old man of Ohio’s rocky isle.” 4. JVapoli di Hi mania (the ancient Nauplia, the port of Argos) is situated on a point of land at the head of the Argi lie Gulf, or Gulf of Nuuplia. (Map No. I.) OkAF. VI. j NINETEENTH CENTURY. 519 to the Greeks. The Greek population of the flourishing and de fenceless island of Scio had declined every invitation to engage in the Revolution, until a Greek fleet appeared on the coast in March 1 822, when the peasants arose in arms against their Turkish masters, attacked the citadel, and put the Turkish garrison to the sword. To punish the Sciots, on the 1 1th of April five thousand of the most bar- barous of the Turkish Asiatic troops were landed on the island, which was given up to indiscriminate pillage and massacre ; and in a few days the paradise of Scio wa3 changed into a scene of desolation. According to the Turkish accounts, twenty thousand individuals were put to the sword, and a still greater number, mostly women and children, sold into slavery Soon after, one hundred and fifty villages in southern Macedonia experienced the fate of Scio ; and the pacha of Salonica 1 boasted that he hao. to-stroyed, in one day, fifteen hun dred women and children 8. In the meantime the Turks had made extensive preparations to conquer western Greece — the ancient Epirus, Acarnania, and iEtolia and relieve the Turkish garrisons in the Morea ; but after some suc- cesses they experienced a series of defeats so disastrous, that, during the month of August alone, more than twenty thousand Turks per- ished by the sword. In June, soon after the destruction of Scio, forty-seven Greeks rowed a number of fire-ships into the midst of the fleet of the enemy, and blew up the vessel of the Turkish admiral, with more than two thousand men on board. The admiral himself, mortally wounded, was carried on shore, where he died. On the l Oth of November, seventeen daring sailors conducted two fire-ships into the midst of the Turkish fleet off the island of Tenedos, 2 and fastened one of them to the admiral’s ship, and the other to that of the second in command. The former narrowly escaped ; the latter blew up with eighteen hundred men on board. Several of the Turkish vessels were wrecked on the Asiatic coast ; others were captured ; and out of a fleet of thirty-five vessels that had sailed for the relief of the 1. Su/onica, (ariciently Thess&onica, at the head of the Thermaic Gulf in Macedonia,) is nc w celebrated uiy and seaport of European Turkey, at the north-eastern extremity of the Gulf of Salonica. The town was known to Herodotus, Thucydides, and ASschines, by the name of Therma, but Cassandra changed its name to that of his wife Thessalonica, the daughter of Philip, and sister of Alexander the Great. In Thessalonica the Apostle Paul made many converts, to whom he adressed the Epistle to the Thessalonians. ( Maps Nos. I. and X.) 2. Tenedos is a small but celebrated island of Turkey, in the Aegean Sea, (Archipelago,) fifteen miles south-west from the mouth of the Dardanelles, and about five miles west from 'he Asiatic coast According to Virgil, (ASneid ii.) it was the place to which the Grecian fleet made the fe gned retreat before the sack of Troy. {Map No. III.) 520 MODERN HISTORY. [PaktII Morea, only eighteen returned, much injured, to the Dardanelles. Finally, to crown the successes of the year, on the 1 2th of December the strong Turkish fortress of Napoli di Romania was carried by assault. 9. During the year 1 823 the war was carried on with results gen* erally favorable to the Greeks. In Thessaly and Epirus there was a suspension of arms : on the 22d of March the Greek fleet gained a victory over an Egyptian flotilla : daring expeditions were made to the coast of Asia Minor : a Turkish army of twenty-five thousand men, that attempted to invade the Morea by way of the Corinthian Isthmus, was repulsed by the brave Suliot leader Marco Botzaris, who fell in the '.roment of victory: and the Turks failed in repeated attacks on Missolonghi. 1 In the summer of this year the illustrious po^t, ^ord Byron, arrived in Greece, and took an active part in ,aid of Greek independence ; but he died at Missolonghi on the 19th of April following. 10. The Turks commenced the campaign of 1824, while dissensions 1824 prevailed among the Greek captains, by seizing Negro- pont, subduing Candia, and reducing the small but strongly-fortified rocky island of Ipsara, in which latter place the heroic Greeks blew up their last fort, after two thousand of the enemy had entered it, and thus perished with their conquerors. The Turk- ish fleet next made an attempt on Samos, but was driven away in terror by the skill and boldness of the Greek fire-ships. A large Egyptian fleet, sent to attack the Morea, was frustrated in all its de- signs, and the campaign terminated gloriously to the Greeks. 1*1. The campaign of 1825 was opened by the landing, in the Morea of an Egyptian army under Ibrahim Pacha, son of the viceroy of Egypt, whom the sultan had induced to engage in the war. Navarino soon fell mro his power ; nor was his course arrested till he had carried desolation as far as Argos. In the meantime Missolonghi was closely besieged by a combined land and naval Turkish force, which, on the 2d of August, after a contest of several days, suffered a disastrous defeat, with the loss of nine thou- sand men. But Missolonghi was again besieged, for the fourth time, the siege being conducted by Ibrahim Pacha alone, who had an army of twenty-five thousand men, trained mostly by French officers. Af- ter repelling numerous assaults, and enduring the extremities of 1. . Missolonghi is on the coast of ^Etolia, about ten miles west of the ancient Chalcia iJtf ap No. I.) Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURA. 521 famine, Missolonghi at length fell, on the 22d of April, 1826, when eighteen hundred of the garrison cut their way through the enemy, and reached Salona 1 and Athens in safety. Many of the inh ibitants escaped to the mountains ; large numbers were captured in their flight ; and those who remained in the city, about one thousand in number, mostly old men, women and children, blew themselves up in the mines that had been prepared for the purpose. Five thousand women and children were made slaves, and more than three thousand ears were sent as a precious trophy to Constantinople. 12. Ibrahim Pacha was now in possession of a large part of southern Greece, and most of the islands of the Archipelago or iEgean Sea ; and the foundation of an Egyptian military and slave- holding State' seemed to be laid in Europe. This danger, connected with the noble defence and sufferings of Missolonghi, roused the atten- tion of the European governments and people : numerous philanthropic societies were formed to aid the suffering Greeks ; and, ° 7 7 VII> 1827. finally, on the 6th of July, 1827, a treaty was concluded at London between England, Russia, and France, for the pacification of Greece — stipulating that the Greeks should govern themselves, but that they should pay tribute to the Porte. 13. To enforce this treaty, in the summer of 1827 a combined Eng- lish, French, and Russian squadron, sailed to the Grecian Archipel- ago ; but the Turkish sultan haughtily rejected the intervention of the three powers, and the troops of Ibrahim Pacha continued their devastations in the Morea. On the 20th of October the allied squad- ron entered the harbor of Navarino, where the Turkish-Egyptian fleet lay at anchor ; and a sanguinary battle followed, in which the allies nearly destroyed the fleet of the enemy. The Porte, enraged by the result, detained the French ships at Constantinople, stopped all com- munication with the allied powers, and prepared for war. 14. In the following year the French cabinet, in connection with England, sent an army to the Morea : Russia declared war for vio- lations of treaties, and depredations upon her commerce ; and on the 7th of May a Russian army of one hundred and fifteen thousand men, under command of Count Wittgenstein, crossed the Pruth, 2 and by the second of July had taken seven for 1. Salona is the same as the ancient Amphissa, in Locris. See Amphissa , p. 96. ( Map No 1.) 2. The river Pruth , forming the boundary between the Russian province of Bessarabia and ‘.he Turkish province of Mold; via, enters the Danube about sixty miles from its mouth. (Maps •foa. X. and XVII.) vm 1828. <922 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II tresses from be Turks. In August a convention was concluded with. Ibrahim Pacha, who agreed to evacuate the Morea with his troops, and set his Greek prisoners at liberty. In the meantime the Greeks continued the war, drove the Turks from the country north of the Corinthian Gulf, and, towards the close of the year, fitted out a great number of privateers to prey upon the commerce of the Turks in the Mediterranean. In consequence of these measures the sultan banished from Constantine pie all the Greeks and Armenians not born in the city, amounting to more than twenty-five thousand persons. 15. In the month of January, 1829, the sultan received a protocol from the three allied powers, declaring that they took the Morea and the Cyc' lades 1 under their protection, and that the entry of any military force into Greece would be regarded as an attack upon themselves. The danger of open war with France and England, together with the successes and alarming advance of the Russians, now commanded by Marshal Diebitsch, who, by the close of July, had crossed the Balkan 2 mountains and reached the Black Sea, and on the 20th of August, took Adrianople, within one hundred and thirty miles of the Turkish capital, induced the sultan to listen to overtures of peace. On the 14th of September the peace of Adrianople was signed by Turkey and Russia, by which the sultan recognized the independence of Greece, granted to Russia considerable commercial advantages, and guaranteed to pay the ex- penses of the Russian war. 16. The provisional government of Greece, which had been or- ganized during the Revolution, was agitated by discontents and jeal- ousies ; for some time the country remained in an unsettled condition, and the president, Count Capo d’lstria, was assassinated in October 1831. The allied powers, having previously determined to erect Greece into a monarchy, first offered the crown to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, (since king of Belgium,) who declined it on. account of the unwillingness of the Greeks to receive him, and their dissatis- faction with the boundaries prescribed by the allied powers. Finally, 1. The Cyc' lades is a name given by the ancient Greeks to that large cluster of islands in the JE gean Sea lying east of southern Greece. (Map No. III.; 2. The Balkan mountains are the same as the ancient Ucemus , which formed the northern boundary of Thrace, separating it from Mrnsia. (See Map No. IX.) The Balkan range extends from th 3 Black Sea westward a distance of about two hundred and fifty miles, dividing tha Turkish provinces of Bulgaria and Rouiuelia, and the waters that flow into the Danube on tne north from those that flow into the Ma itza on the south. (Map No. X ) Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 523 the crown was conferred on Otho, a Bavarian prince, who arrived at Nauplia m 1833. VI. The French Revolution of 1830. 1. On the death of Louis XVIII., in 1824, the crown of France fell to his brother Charles X„ who commenced his reign by a declaration of his intentions of con- firming the constitutional charter that had been granted the French people at the time of the first restoration. But the new king, bit terly opposed to the principles of the Revolution, and governed b the counsels of bigoted priests, labored to build up an absolute mon irchy, with a privileged nobility and clergy for its support ; while, on the other hand, the people, persuaded that a plot was formed to deprive them of their constitutional privileges, talked of open resist- ance to the arbitrary demands of the court. A ministry, which tha popular party had forced upon the king, was suddenly dismissed, and m August, 1829, an ultra-royalist ministry was appointed, at the head of which was Prince Polignac, one of the old royalists, and an early adherent of the Bourbons. 2. At the opening of the Chambers in March 1830, the speech from the throne plainly announced the determination of the king to overcome, by force, any obstacles that might be interposed in the way of his government, concluding with a threat of resuming the concessions made by the charter. As soon as this speech was made public the funds fell ; the ministers had a decided majority opposed to them in the Chamber of Deputies, and a spirited reply was returned, declaring that “ a concurrence did not exist between the views of the government and the wishes of the people ; that the administration was actuated by a distrust of the nation ; and that the nation, on the other hand, was agitated with apprehensions which threatened its prosperity and repose.” The king then prorogued the chambers, and on the 17th of May a royal ordinance declared them dissolved, and ordered new elections, — measures that produced the greatest ex- citement throughout France. 3. In the meantime the king and his ministers, hoping to facilitate their projects, and overcome their unpopularity by gratifying the taste of the French people for military glory, declared war against Algiers, the Dey having refused to pay long-standing claims of French citizens, and having insulted the honor of France by striking the French consul when the latter was paying him a visit of ceremony. A fleet of ninety-seven vessels, carrying more than forty thousand soldiers, embarked at Toulon on the 10th of May, — on the 14th of 524 MODERN HISTORY. [Pakt II June effected a landing on the African coast, — and on the 5th of July compelled Algiers to capitulate, after a feeble resistance. The Dey was allowed to retire unmolested to Italy ; and his vast treasures fell into the hands of the conquerors. 4. The success of the French* arms in Africa occasioned great ex- ultation in France, but did nothing towards allaying the excited state of public feeling against a detested ministry. The elections, ordered to be held in June and the early part of July, resulted in a large in- crease of opposition members ; and the ministerial party was left in a miserable minority. The infatuated ministry, however, instead of withdrawing, madly resolved to set the voice of the nation at defiance, and even to subvert the constitutional privileges granted by the charter. They therefore induced the king to publish, on the morn- ing of the 26th of July, three royal ordinances, — the first dissolving the newly-elected Chamber of Deputies — the second changing the law of elections, sweeping off three-fourths of the former constituency, and nearly extinguishing the representative system — and the third, suspending the liberty of the press. In the ministerial report, pub- lished at the same time with these ordinances, the ministers argue, in favor of the latter measure, that “ At all epochs, the periodical press has only been, and from its nature must ever be, an instrument of disorder and sedition” ! 5. In defiance of these ordinances the conductors of- the liberal journals determined to publish their papers ; and on the evening of the same day, the 26th, they published an address to their country- men, declaring tha* - “the government had stripped itself of the charac- ter of law, and was no longer entitled to their obedience,” — language that would probably have exposed them to the penalties of treason if the contest had terminated differently. It was late in the day be- fore intelligence of the arbitrary measures of government was gen- erally circulated through Paris : then crowds began to assemble in the streets : cries of “ down with the ministry,” and “ the charter forever,” were heard : the fearless harangued the people ; and during the night the lamps in several of the streets were demolished, and the windows of the hotel of Polignac broken. So little had the king anticipated any popular outbreak, that he passed the day of the 26tli in the amusements of the chase ; and it appears that the infatu- ated ministry had not even dreamed of a Revolution as the conse- quenie of their obnoxious measures. 6. On the morning of the 27th several of the journalists printed Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 525 and distributed tbeir papers ; but their doors were soon closed, and their presses broken by the police. This morning the king appointed Marsha. Marmont commander-in-chief of the forces in Paris; but it was not till four in the afternoon that orders were given to put the troops under arms, when they were marched to different stations, to aid the police, and overawe the people. The latter then be- gan to arm : some skirmishing occurred with the troops : during the night the lamps throughout the city were demolished ; and, under the cover of darkness, many of the streets were barricaded with paving-stones torn up for the purpose. At the close of the day Mar- mcnt had informed the king that tranquillity was restored ; and therefore no additional troops were sent for ; nor were the great depots of arms and ammunition guarded. 7. At an early hour on the morning of the 28th, armed multitudes appeared in the steets ; and numbers of the National Guard, which the king had previously disbanded, appeared in their uniform among the throng, and with them the famous tri-colored flag, so dear to the hearts of all Frenchmen. To the surprise of Marmont, the king, and the ministry, the riot, which, on the previous evening, they had thought suppressed, had assumed the formidable aspect of a Revolu- tion. By nine o’clock the flag of the people waved on the pinnacles of Notre Dame, and at eleven it surmounted the central tower of the Hotel de Ville, which was afterwards, however, retaken by the royal troops. Marmont showed great indecision in his move- ments : his columns were everywhere assailed with musketry from the barricades, from the windows of houses, from the corners of the streets, and from the narrow alleys and passages which abound in Paris ; and paving-stones and other missiles were showered upon them from the house-tops. The royal guards were disheartened : the troops of the line showed great reluctance to fire upon the citi- zens ; • and the 28th closed with the withdrawal of the royal forces from every position in which they had attempted to establish them- selves during the day. 8. The contest was renewed early on the morning of the third day, when several distinguished military characters appeared as leaders of the people, and among them General Lafayette, who took command of the National Guard ; but while the issue was yet doubtful, several regiments of the line went over to the insurgents, who, thus strength- ened and encouraged, rushed upon the Louvre and the Tuilleries, and speedily overcame the troops stationed there. So suddden was 526 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II the assault that Marmont himself with difficulty escaped, leaving he* hind him more than twenty thousand dollars of the public funds. About half past three P. M. the last of the military posts in Paris surrendered ; the royal troops who escaped having in the meantime retreated to St. Cloud, where were the king and ministry, now in con- sternation for their own safety. The Revolution was speedily com- pleted by the installation of a provisional government : on the 31st Louis Phillippe, Duke of Orleans, 3 - the most popular of the royal family, accepted the office of lieutenant-general of the kingdom *. when the Chambers met he was elected to the throne ; and on the 9th of August took the oath to support the constitutional charter. 9. The results of the revolutionary movement in France, and the overthrow of the elder branch of the Bourbons, in defiance of the guarantees' of the congress of Vienna, spread alarm among the sov- ereigns of continental Europe ; and the emperor of Russia went so far as not only to hesitate about acknowledging the title of the citi- zen king of France, but, as is believed, was preparing to support the claims of the exiled Charles X., when the popular triumph in Eng- land, in the passage of the Reform Bill of 1832, by converting a former ally into an enemy, raised up obstacles that arrested his measures. Charles X., after having abdicated the throne, was per- mitted to retire unmolested from France ; but his ministers, attempt- ing to escape, were arrested, and afterwards brought to trial, when three of them, including Polignac, were declared guilty of treason, and sentenced to imprisonment for life. At the end of six years they were released from confinement, — indignation towards them having given place to pity. VII. Belgium. 1. The French Revolution of 1830 produced a powerful sensation throughout Europe, and aroused an insurrection- ary spiri ; wherever the people complained of real or fancied wrongs, while the continental sovereigns, on the other hand, alarmed for the safety of their thrones, looked with jealousy on every political incve- nent that originated with the people, and prepared to suppress, by military force, the incipient efforts of rebellion. The Belgians, who had been compelled by the congress of Vienna to unite with the Hol- landers in forming the kingdom of the Netherlands, having long been goaded by unjust laws, and treated rather as vassals, than as subjects, a. Louis Phillippe, Duke of Valois at his birth, Duke of Chartres on the death of his grand- father in 1785, and Duke of Orleans on the death of his father in 1794, was the son of LouU Phillippe Joseph, Duke of Orleans,— better known under his Revolutionary titlo of Philip Egalitft. Cha?. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 527 fif the Dutch king, judging the period favorable for dissolving their union with a people foreign to them in language, manners, and in terests, arose in insurrection at Brussels, in the latter part of August, and, after a contest of four days’ duration, drove the Dutch authori ties and garrison from the city. 2. In vain were efforts made by the Prince of Orange to reconcile the 3onflicting demands of the Dutch and the Belgians, and again unite the two people under one government. The proposals of the prince were disavowed by his father the king of Holland, and equally rejected by the Belgians ; and on the 4th of October the latter made a formal declaration of their independence. Soon after, the representa- tives of the five great powers, — France, Great Britain, Prussia, Russia, and Austria, assembled at London, agreed to a protocol in favor of an armistice, and directed that hostilities should cease between the Dutch and Belgians. The Belgians, having decided upon a constitutional monarchy, first offered the crown to the Duke of Nemours, the second son of Louis Phillippe ; but the latter de- clined the proffered honor on behalf of his son ; after which the Belgian congress elected Leopold, prince of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, 1 for their king. As the Dutch continued to hold the city of Antwerp, contrary to the determination of the five great powers, a Fiench army of sixty-five thousand men, under Marshal Gerard, entered Bel- gium in November 1832, and, after encountering an obstinate defence, compelled the surrender of the place on the 24th of December. Since her separation from Holland, Belgium has increased rapidly in every industrial pursuit and social improvement. YIII. Polish Revolution. 1 . By the decrees of the congress of Vienna, most of that part of Poland which Napoleon had erected into the Grand Duchy of Warsaw, and conferred upon his ally the king of Saxony, (see p. 487,) was reestablished as an independent kingdom, to be united to the crown of Russia, but with a separate constitution and administration; and on the 20th of June, 1815, the Russian emperor Alexander was proclaimed king of Poland. The mild character of Alexander had inspired the Poles with hopes that he would protect them in the enjoyment of their liberties ; but his 1. Saxe-Coburg-Gotha is a duchy of central Germany, consisting of the two principalities, Saxe-Coburg, and Gotha the former on the south side of the Thuringian forest, and the latter on the north side. Area of the whole, seven hundred and ninety-seven square miles : popula lion one hundred and forty thousand : chief towns, Coburg, and Gotha. The government ia t eonstitiH'onal monarchy. The house of Saxe-Coburg has intermarried with the principal •eigning families of Europe. (Map \o. XVII. - ) 528 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II fine professions soon began to prove delusive : ere long none but Russians held the chief places of government : the article of the constitution establishing liberty of the press was nullified : publicity of debate in the Polish diet was abolished ; and numerous state prosecutions imbittered the feelings of the Poles against their tyrants. 2. On the accession of Nicholas to the throne of Russia, in De cember 1825, although the lieutenancy of Poland was intrusted to a Pole, yet the real power was invested in the king’s brother, the Archduke Constantine, who held the appointment of commander-in- chief of the army. Constantine proved to be the worst of tyrants — a second Sejanus — delighting in every species of judicial iniquity and ministerial cruelty. The barbarities of Constantine, sanctioned by Nicholas, revived the old spirit of Polish freedom and nationality; and the successful examples of France and Belgium roused the Poles again to action. Secret societies, organized for the express purpose of securing the liberty of Poland, and uniting again under one gov- ernment those portions that had been torn asunder and despoiled by the rapacity of Russia, Prussia, and Austria, existed not only in Po- land proper and Lithuania, but also in Volhynia 1 and Podolia, and even in the old provinces of the Ukraine, which, it might be sup- posed, had long since lost all recollections of Polish glory. 3 . The fear of detection and arrest on the part of some members of one of these societies, led to the first outbreak at Warsaw, on the evening of the 29th of November, 1830. The students of a military school at Warsaw, one hundred and eighty in number, first attempted to seize Constantine at his quarters, two miles from the city ; but during the struggle with his attendants, of whom the Russian general Gendre, a man infamous for his crimes, was killed, the duke escaped to his guards, who, being attacked in a position from which retreat was difficult, lost three hundred of their number, when the students returned to the city, liberated every State prisoner, and were joined by the school of the engineers, and the students of the university. A party entered the only two theatres open, calling out, “Women, home — men, to arms !” The arsenal was next forced, and in one hour and a half from the first' movement, forty thousand men were m arms. Constantine fell back to the frontier. Chlopicki was first appointed by the provisional government commander-in-chief of the 1. Volhynia is a province of European Prussia, formerly comprised in the kingdom of Poland, Vying south of Grodno and Minsk. ( Map No. XVII.) Chap VI j NINETEENTH CENTURA. 52 ^ army of Poland, and afterwards was made dictator; but ht. soon ra signed, and Adam Ozartoriski was appointed president. 4. After two months’ delay in fruitless attempts to negotiate with the emperor Nicholas, who refused all terms but absolute submission, the inevitable conflict began — Russia having already assembled an army of two hundred thousand men under the command of Field Marshal Diebitsch, the hero of the Turkish war, while the Poles had only fifty thousand men equipped for the fight. On the 5th of Feb ruary, 1831, the Russians crossed the Polish frontier: on the 18th their advanced posts were within ten miles of Warsaw ; and on the 20th a general action was brought on, which resulted in the Poles retiring in good order from the field of battle. On the 25th forty thousand Poles, under Prince Radzvil, withstood the shock of more than one hundred thousand of the enemy ; and at the close of the day ten thousand of the Russians lay dead on the field, and several thousand prisoners were taken. 5. Skryznecki, being now appointed commander-in-chief of the Polish forces, concerted several night attacks for the evening of the 31st, which resulted in the total rout of twenty thousand Russians, and the capture of a vast quantity of muskets, cannon and ammuni- tion. These successes wer° so rapidly followed up, that before the end of April the Russians were driven either across the Bug into their own territories, or northward into the Prussian dominions. The conduct of Prussia, in affording the Russians a secure retreat on neutral territory, and furnishing them with abundant supplies, while in all similar cases the Poles were detained as prisoners, destroyed all advantages of Polish valor. Austria, likewise, permitted the Russians to pass over neutral ground to outflank the Poles, but de- tained the latter as prisoners if they once set foot on Austrian terri- tory. Thus Russia and Austria interpreted and enforced the princi pies of the “ Holy Alliance.” 6. While the Poles were stationed at Minsk, 1 2 Skryznecki, uniting ail his forces in that vicinity, to the number of twenty thousand, sud- denly crossed the Bug and forced his way to Ostrolenka, 3 a distance 1. The Bug, a large tributary of the Vistula, forms a great part of the eastern boundary of the present Poland. Another river of the same name, running south-east through Podolia and Kherson, falls into the estuary of the Dnieper, east of Odessa. {Map No. XVII.) 2. Minslc is a small town cf Poland, about twenty-five miles south-east of Warsaw. A large city of the same name is the capital of the Russian province of Minsk, formerly embraced ia Poland. ( Map No. XVII.) 3. Ostrolenka is a smalt town sixty-eight miles north-east from Warsaw. {Map No. XVII.) " y 34 530 MODERN HISTORY. [Paet IX of eighty miles, where, on the 26th of May, he engaged in battle with sixty thousand Russians. The combat was terrific — no quarter was asked, and none was given. The Poles, led by the heroic Gen- eral Bern, lost one-fourth of their number. The loss of the Russians was less in proportion, but they had three generals killed on the field. In the following month, both the Russian commander-in-chief, Mar- shal Diebitscb, and the Archduke Constantine, died suddenly. About the same time a conspiracy for setting at liberty all the Russian prisoners, thirteen thousand in number, was detected at Warsaw. 7. Dissensions among the Polish chiefs, and the want of an ener- getic government, soon produced their natural consequences of di- vided counsels, and disunited efforts in the field ; and by the 6th of September, during the strife of factions at Warsaw, a Russian army of one hundred thousand men, supported by three hundred pieces of cannon, had assembled for the storming of the city. Although de- fended with heroism, after two days’ fighting, in which the Russians had twenty thousand slain, and the Poles about half that number, Warsaw surrendered to the Russian general Paskewitch — the main body of the Polish army, and the most distinguished citizens, retiring from the city, and afterwards dispersing, when no farther hopes re mained of serving their ill-fated country. Large numbers crossed the frontiers and went into voluntary exile in other lands : most of the Polish generals, who surrendered under an amnesty, were sent to distant parts of the Russian empire ; and the soldiers, and Polish nobility, were consigned by thousands to the dungeons and mines of Siberia. The subjugation of Poland is complete : her nationality seems extinguished forever IIL ENGLISH REFORMS. FRENCH REVOLUTION OF 1848. REVO LUTIONS IN THE GERMAN STATES, PRUSSIA, AND AUS- TRIA. REVOLUTIONS IN ITALY. HUNGARIAN WAR. USURPATION OF LOUIS NAPOLEON. I. English Reforms. 1. From the death of George the Third,' m 1820, to the death of George the Fourth, in June 1830, England was agitated by a continued struggle between the two great parties which divided the nation — the whigs and the tories. Civil disabili- • ties of all kinds were loudly objected to, and political abuses denounc- ed with a plainness and force never before known in England. In 1828 the reform party obtained the abolition of the test act, which, though nearly obsolete in point of fact, still imposed nominal disabili ties on Protestant dissenters ; and in 1829 the barriers which had JEAP. Vi.J NINETEENTH CENTURY. 531 ao long excluded Homan Catholics* from the legislature were removed At the time of the accession of William IV., in 1830, a tory ministry headed by the Duke of W ellington, was in power ; hut the decided sentiment of the nation in favor of reform in all the branches of gov- ernment, occasioned its resignation in November of the same year. A whig ministry, pledged for reform, with Earl Grey at its heal, then came into power ; and on the first of March of the following year Lord Johrq Bussell brought forward in parliament the ministerial lan for reforming the representation of England, Scotland, and Ireland, which, if adopted, would extend the right of suffrage to half a million additional voters, disfranchise fifty-six of the so-called rot- ten or decayed boroughs, and more nearly equalize representation throughout the kingdom. After a long but animated debate the bill passed a second reading in the House of Commons by a majority of only one, but was lost on the third reading, the vote being two hun- dred and ninety-one for the bill, and two hundred and ninety-nine against it. 2. By advice of the ministers, the king hastily dissolved parlia ment, and ordered new elections for the purpose of better ascertain- ing the sense of the people. The elections took, place amid great excitement, and the advocates of reform were returned by nearly all the large constituencies. The new parliament was opened on the 14th of June, 1831. The reform bill, being again introduced, passed the commons by a majority of one hundred and thirteen, but was re- jected by the lords, whose numbers remained unchanged, by a ma- jority of forty-one. The rejection of the bill by the lords led to strong manifestations of popular resentment against the nobility : serious riots occurred at Nottingham and Derby and at Bristol 51 many public buildings, and ail immense amount of private property, were destroyed ; ninety persons were killed or wounded ; five of the rioters were afterwards executed, and many were sentenced to trans pcrtation. 3. On the 12th of December Lord John Russell a third time in troduced a reform bill, similar to the former two ; and on the 23d of March, 1832, it passed the Commons by a majority of one hundred and sixteen, but was defeated in the House of Lords by a majority 1. Derby is a large town on the Derwent, one hundred and ten miles north-west from London 2. Bristol is a large and important city and seaport of England, at the confluence of th« 4 von and the Frome, eight miles from the entrance of the former into Bristol Channel, ana ndred and eight miles west from London. The city extends over six or seven distinct d their intermediate valleys, amidst a picturesque and fertile district. (Map No. XVT.\ 532 MODERN HISTORY. [Paet II of forty. The ministry now advised the king to create a sufficient number of peers to insure the passage of the bill ; and on his refusal to proceed to such extremities, all the members of the cabinet re- signed. Political unions were now formed throughout the country ; the people determined to refuse payment of taxes, and demanded that the ministers should be reinstated. There were no riots, but the people had risen in their collective strength, determined to assert their just rights. The king yielded to the force of public opinion and Earl Grej> and his colleagues were reinstated in office, with the assurance that, if necessary, a sufficient number of new peers should be created to secure the passing of the bill. When the lords were apprized of this fact they withdrew their opposition ; but it is worthy of remark that many of them, and all the bishops, left their seats on the final passage of the bill, which, having been rapidly hurried through both houses, received the royal assent on the 7th of June. 4. The passage of the Reform bill was, to England, a political revolution — none the less important because it was bloodless, and carried on under the protection of law. Thereby the electoral franchise, instead of being confined to a varied and limited class in the interest of the aristocracy, was extended, not to the whole citi- zens, as in America, but to a large body comprising the middle classes of society, who were thus, in effect, vested with supreme power in the British empire. An entire change in the foreign policy of the country was the consequence. The French Revolution of 1830 had elevated to power the middle classes of the French people also ; and the ceaseless rivalry of four centuries between France and Eng- land was, for the time, forgotten : the political interests of the two great powers of Western Europe were united; and the Russian auto- crat, in full march to overturn the throne of the citizen-king, and put down republicanism in France, was arrested on the Vistula, where his arms found ample employment in crushing the last remnants of Polish nationality. As to England herself, none of the many evils arising from democratic ascendency in the government, so often pre- licted by the aristocratic party, have yet followed in the train of re- form ; but, on the contrary, the peace, power, and prosperity of the country, have increased thereby. 5. The reign of William IV. was terminated on the 19th of June, 1837, when the Princess Victoria, daughter of the Duke of Kent, and grand daughter of George III., succeeded to the throne, at the age of eighteen years One effect of the descent of the crown to Cha^. Ylj NINETEENTH CENTURY. 5 33 female was the separation from it of Hanoyer, after a union of more than a century. On the 10th of February, 1840, her majesty was married to Albert, prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, a duchy of central Germany. II. French Revolution of 1848. 1. The most important events that distinguished the reign of Louis Phillippe were the abolition of the hereditary rights of the French peerage in October 1831 ; he siege of Antwerp, and its surrender by the Dutch, after a long nd vigorous resistance, in 1832; an attempt of Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of the emperor Napoleon, to excite an insurrec- tion at Strasbourg, in October 1836, for the purpose of overthrowing the government; the second attempt of Louis Napoleon to excite a revolution in France, by landing at Boulogne in August 1840, and his subsequent condemnation to perpetual imprisonment ; and, in December of the same year, the splendid pageant of the restoration of the remains of the emperor Napoleon to France. 2. Louis . Phillippe had been selected to fill the throne of France chiefly through the instrumentality of the venerable Lafayette, who, thinking France still unfitted for a republic, preferred for her “ a throne surrounded by republican institutions.” Placed in this anomalous position, Louis Phillippe, in the vain attempt to concili- ate both monarchists and republicans, had a difficult game to play ; and while he was laboring to consolidate his power, a large and influ- ential party, that he dare not openly denounce, was zealously striving to undermine it. Yet for a time, with an immense revenue, and un- bounded patronage, and the numerous means of political corruption which they placed at his disposal, the government of Louis Phillippe seemed to be steadily acquiring solidity, and by its success in keep- ing down domestic factions, and maintaining friendly relations with foreign powers, acquired a high reputation for wisdom and firmness. 3. Yet amid all this seeming security, the middle and lower classes, disappointed in their expectations as to the results of the Revolution of 1830, were daily growing more and more discontented with the measures and policy of the government ; and it was this all-pervading feeling of discontent, which, without any serious aggressions on the part of government, and without any previous conspiracy on the part of the people, led to the unpremeditated Revolution of February 1848 , — a revolution which, in its completeness and importance, and the bloodless means by which it was accomplished, is without a par allel in history. 534 MODERN HISTORY. [Past H 4. During the winter of 1847-8 numerous political reform ban- quets were held throughout France; and the omission of the king’s health from the list of toasts on these occasions was a circumstance that added much to the jealousy with which these displays were re- garded by the government. The leaders of the opposition having announced that reform banquets would be held throughout France on the 22d of February, Washington’s birthday; on the evening preceding the 22d, the administration forbade the intended meeting in Pari 5 *, and made extensive military preparations to suppress it if it were attempted, and to crush at once any attempt at insurrection. In the Chamber of Deputies, then in session, this arbitrary measure of government was warmly discussed, when the opposition members, consenting to give up the meeting for the morrow, concurred in the plan of moving an impeachment of ministers, with the expectation of obtaining either a change of cabinet, or a dissolution of the Cham- ber and a new election, which would test the sense of the nation. 5. On the morning of the 22d the opposition papers announced that the banquet would be deferred, when the orders for the troops of the line to occupy the place of the intended meeting were counter- manded, and picquets only were stationed in a few places ; but no serious disturbance was anticipated, either by the ministry or its op- ponents. The announcement of the opposition journals, however, came too late ; and at noon a large concourse, chiefly of the working classes, had assembled around the church of the Madeline, where the procession was to have been organized. But the multitude ex- hibited no symptoms of disorder, and were dispersed by the munici- pal cavalry without any loss of life. In the evening, however, dis- turbances began : gunsmiths’ shops were broken open ; barricades were formed ; lamps extinguished ; the guards were attacked ; the streets were filled with troops ; and appearances indicated a sangui- nary strife on the morrow. 6. At an early hour on Wednesday, February 23d, crowds again appeared in the streets, barricades were erected, and some skirmish- ing ensued, in which a few persons were killed. Numbers of the National Guards also made their appearance, and a portion of them, having declared for reform, sent their colonel to the king, to acquaint his majesty with their wishes. He immediately acceded to their requests, dismissed the Guizot cabinet, and requested Count Mole to form a new ministry. This measure produced a momentary calm ; but the rioters continued to traverse the streets, often attacking, and ChaL YL] NINETEENTH CENTURY 583 sometimes disarming, the municipal guards. Between ter and eleven in tie evening a crowd, passing the Hotel of Foreign Affairs, was suddenly fired upon by the troops with fatal effect. The people fled in consternation, but their thirst for vengeance was aroused, and the cry, “ To arms ! Down with the assassins ! Down with Louis Pliil- lippe ! Down with the Bourbons !” resounded throughout Paris. 7. The attempt to establish a Mole administration having failed, the king sent, late at night, for M. Thiers, and intrusted to him the formation of a ministry that should be acceptable to the people ; and on the following morning, the 24th, a proclamation to the citizens of Paris announced that M. Thiers and Odillon Barrot had been ap- pointed ministers — that orders had been given the troops to cease firing, and retire to their quarters — that the Chamber would be dis- solved, and an appeal made to the people — and that General Lam- oriciere had been appointed commandant of the National Guards. The order to the troops to retire, which occasioned the resignation of their commander, Marshal Bugeaud, after a protest against the measure, was a virtual surrender, on the part of government, of the means of defence ; and the king and royal family soon found them- selves at the mercy of an excited populace. The troops quietly al- lowed themselves to be disarmed by the mob, who then, to the num- ber of twenty thousand, and accompanied by the National Guard, directed their course to the Palace Boyal and the Tuilleries, and demanded the abdication of the king. In the course of the day the king signed an abdication in favor of his grandson, the young Count of Paris ; but before this fact w T as generally known the armed populace broke into the palace, made a bonfire of the royal carriages and furni- ture, and after having carried the throne of the state reception room in triumph through the streets, burned that also. Meanwhile the ex king and queen escaped to St. Cloud, whence they pursued their way to Y ersadles, and thence to Dreux, from which latter place they escaped in disguise to England, whither they were followed by M. Guizot, and other members of the late ministry. 8. On the day of the king’s abdication the Chamber of Deputies assembled ; but, being overwhelmed by the crowd, the greatest con- fusion prevailed, and amid shouts of “ No king ! Long live the Re public,” the members of a provisional government were named, and adopted b) popular acclamation. Although a majority of the depu- ties seemed opposed to the establishment of a republic, and it was by no means certain that there was any great party out of Paris iu 536 MODERN HISTORY. [Part U its favor, every attempt to aujourn tlie question was the signal of re- newed shouts and disorder ; and amid the turbulent demonstrations of the Parisian populace the French Republic was adopted, and pro- cla’med to the nation. Royalty had vanished, almost without a straggle, — blown away by the breath of an urban tumult, — and the strangest revolution of modern times was consummated.' 9. ' The leading member of the provisional government was 31 Lamartine, to whom belongs the renown of saving the country fum immediate anarchy. By his noble and fervid eloquence the passions of the mob were calmed ; and by his prompt and judicious measures, among the first of which was the declaration of the abolition of capi- tal punishment for political offences, tranquillity and confidence were at once restored. On the 26th the bank of France was reopened ; the public departments resumed their duties ; and with unparalleled unanimity the army, the clergy, the press, and the people, in the provinces as well as in Paris, immediately gave in their adhesion to the new Republic. 10. The Revolution of February, 1848, was accomplished by the union of the two great sections of the democratic party — the Mod- erate and the Red Republicans. The principles advocated by the former were the right of self-government, civil and religious liberty, and universal suffrage. The latter went much farther, and, adopting the leading principles of the Socialists, demanded the establishment of new social relations between capital and labor ; a new distribution of wealth, the elevation of the laboring classes at the expense of the wealthy, labor and food to all, by government regulations-, and the working out, on a national scale, of the grand problem of Commun- ism. Believing that it is the duty and in the power of government to remedy most of the many evils of society, the people soon began to manifest the hopes which they expected the Revolution to transform into realities. Deputations from all trades and callings — even to shoe-cleaners, waiters, and nursery-maids — waited on the provisional overnment, making known their grievances, and demanding relief, which generally consisted of freedom from taxation, the establish- ment of national workshops, fewer hours of labor, higher wages, and more holidays. 11. Although the Moderate and Red Republicans had united in overthrowing the monarchy, no sooner was tranquillity restored than the animosities of the two sections revived ; and when it was found that the Moderates had control of the provisional government, their 9 Obap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 537 opponents determined upon its overthrow. On several occasions during the month of April, the working classes of Paris assembled in mass to make a demonstration of their numbers ; but the fidelity of the National Guard showed that the real physical power of Paris was still in the hands of the provisional government. The elections, held in April, also showed a large majority in favor of the Moderate party ; and on the ballot, in May, for an executive committee of the government, consisting of five members, not one of the avowed Red Republicans was elected ; and Ledru Rollin, the most violent and • ultra of the committee, was the lowest on the list. 12. On the 15th of May the National Assembly was surrounded by the populace, led by Barbes, Blanqui, Hubert, and other Com- munist leaders, who, after having driven the deputies from their seats, and assumed the functions of government, proclaimed themselves the national executive committee, and through Barbes, one of their num- ber, declared that a contribution of a thousand millions of francs should be levied on the rich for the benefit of the poor — that a tax of another thousand millions should be raised for the benefit of Po- land — that the National Assembly should be dissolved — and, finally, that the guillotine should be put in operation against the enemies of the country. But in the meantime the National Guard was called out, the rioters were soon dispersed, their leaders arrested, and the provisional government reinstated. 13. Owing to the fear of another demonstration against the gov- ernment, the full command of all the troops in Paris was given to General Gavaignac, the minister of war ; and all the approaches to the National Assembly, and the different ministries, were strongly guarded. In June, the government, finding the burdens imposed on the public treasury too heavy to be borne, determined to send out of Paris, to the provinces, about twelve thousand of the workmen then unprofitably employed in the national workshops. This was the Rignal of alarm : disturbances began on the evening of the 22d : on the 23d the most active preparations were made by both parties for the coming contest, and some blood was shed at the barricades erect- ed by the insurgents. At one o’clock on Saturday morning, the 24th, General Cavaignac declared Paris in a state of siege, and the struggle began in earnest. From that hour until four o’clock in the afternoon, when the insurgents were driven from the left bank of the Seine, tha musketry and cannrnade were incessant, and Paris was a vast battle- field. The fight ’was renewed at an early hour on Sunday morning. 538 MODERN HISTORY. lPart II % and continued during most of the day, and it was not till noon on Monday that the struggle was terminated, by the unconditional sur- render of the last body of the insurgents. The number killed and wounded in this insurrection- — by far the most terrible that has ever desolated Paris- —will never be known ; but' five thousand - is probably not a high estimate. 14. The exertions and success of General Cavaignac in defending the government procured for him a vote of thanks from the Assembly and lhe unanimous appointment of temporal chief-executive of the na- tion, with the power of appointing his ministers. Many of the leaders of the insurrection, among them Louis Blanc and Caussidiere, fled from the country : a small number of those taken with arms in their hands were condemned to transportation ; but the great majority, after a short confinement, were set at liberty. The Assembly, in the mean- time, proceeded with its task of constructing the new Constitution, which was adopted on the 4th of November, 1848, by a vote of seven hundred and thirty-nine in its favor, and thirty in opposition. It declared that the French nation had adopted the republican form of government, with one legislative assembly, and that the executive power should be vested in a President, to be elected by universal suffrage, for a term of four years. Its principles were declared to be liberty, equality, and fraternity ; and the basis on which it rested, family, labor, property, and public order. III. Revolutions in the German States, Prussia, and Austria. 1. As soon as the first accounts of the French Revolution of the 24th of February, 1848, reached Germany, the whole of that vast country was in a ferment : popular commotions took place in all the large cities ; and the people demanded a political constitution that should give them a share in legislation, establish the liberty of the press, and otherwise secure them their just rights. On the 29th of Feb- ruary deputations from every town in the Grand Duchy of Baden de- manded of the Grand Duke liberty of the press, trial by jury, th right of the people to bear arms, and meet in public, and a more popular representation in the national diet at Frankfort. a On the a. The present confederation of Germany, organized in 1815, embraces nearly forty States, some of very small dimensions, but each possessing an independent government, and only liable to be called on to furnish its proportionate contingent to the army of the Confederation in case of danger. The emperor of Austria, being the sovereign of many territories that were considered fiefs of the German empire, is a member of the Germanic Confederation ; and hifl minister has the right of presiding in the Confederate Germanic Diet, held at Frankfort. The Austrian German provinces belonging to the Germanic Confederation are the arch-duchy of Chap. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 539 the 2d of March the Duke yielded to their demands, and appointed a ministry from the popular party. 2. Similar demonstrations were made in nearly all the German States. At Cologne, a riot ensued, the town-house was stormed, and the authorities made prisoners. At Munich the people stormed the arsenal, and, having possessed themselves of the arms it contained, forced from the Bavarian king the concessions which he had refused to make. At Hanau, 1 in Hesse Cassel, 2 the Elector yielded only af- ter a severe conflict. Within a week from the revolution in Paris the demands of the people had been acceded to throughout nearly all the south and west of Germany. 3. In a popular convention held at Heidelberg 3 on the 5th of March, the necessity of the reforms demanded by the people was insisted upon ; and at the same time the Federal Diet, sitting at Frankfort, invoked the different German States to take the measures necessary for a new constitution of the Diet, providing that the people as well as the rulers should be represented in it. King Frederick William of Prussia, after having in vain, resisted a popular revolution in Berlin, unexpectedly to all placed himself, foremost in the ranks of the reform party, with the hope, it is believed, of reuniting the German States in one great empire, and placing himself at its head. The king of Saxony was compelled to grant the requests of his subjects, who had pronounced in favor of reform : the king of Hanover also yielded, but with much reluctance, and only when farthei delay would have cost him his throne. On the 26th of March, Sle.rwick and Holstein, 4 the two southern duchies of Denmark, which had always considered 1. Hanau is a town of fifteen thousand inhabitants in the electorate of Hesse, eleven miles north-east from Frankfort. {Map No. XVII.) , 2. Hesse Cassel is an irregularly-shaped State of Germany, consisting of a central territory and several detached portions, the whole lying mostly north of north-western Bavaria. The government is a limited monarchy. Hesse Darmstadt, or the G/md Duchy of Hesse also a limited monarchy, is divided by Hesse Cassel — part of it lying 'iorth and part south of tha rivlr Mayn. {Map No. XVII.) 3. Heidelberg is a city of northern Baden, on the south side o' ' ie Neckar, forty-eight miles south of Frankfort. {Map No. XVII.) 4 . Sleswick and Holstein. See p. 403, and Maps Nos. XIV. **■ . XVII. Austria, the kingdom of Bohemia, with Moravia and Silesii r*st of Galicia, the county of Tyrol, and the duchies of Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola, with Uu town of Trieste. The other States of the Austrian empire have no connection with the Ge Confederation. The king of Prussia, in the same manner as the Austrian emperor, is i member of the Confederation. The empires of Austria and Prussia, and the kingdoms of Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, and Wirtemburg, have, each, four votes in the German Diet ; and the smallest State, the free city of Hamburg, containing an area of only forty-three square milss, has one vote : the principaUtv of Lichtenstein, with a population of only seven thousand, ha^ also one vote. 540 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II themselves as governed by the king of Denmark in liis capacity of a prince of Germany, long dissatisfied with the Danish rule, and irii- tated by the refusal of the king to accede to any of their demands, declared themselves independent of Denmark, and solicited admission into the Germanic Confederation. Being assisted by twenty thousand Prussian and Hanoverian volunteers, they waged a sanguinary war against the Danish king until foreign intervention terminated the contest. 4. For some time there had been much political excitement in those portions of the Austrian empire embracing Galicia, 1 Hungary, and northern Italy ; but down to the period of the French Revolu- tion, in February 1848, the German provinces of the empire had re- mained tranquij. When, however, news of the downfall of Louis Phillippe reached Vienna, a shock was felt which vibrated through- out the whole Austrian empire : the public funds immediately fell thirty per cent. : the people, sympathizing with the Parisians, ex- pressed themselves upon the great subject of reform with a freedom and earnestness altogether foreign to their habits ; and the royal family, panic-stricken by the gathering tempest, were closeted in deep con- sultation. All the royal family and the imperial cabinet, with the exception of the Archduke Louis, uncle of the emperor, and the min- ister Metternich, were in favor of making immediate concessions to the people, as the only means of retaining the provinces, if not of preserving the throne. Metternich tendered his resignation, but was persuaded to retain his post only on condition of being, as hitherto, unobstructed in his administration of the government. 5. At the opening of the Diet of Lower Austria, at Vienna, on the 13th of March, an immense concourse of citizens, headed Jc>y the students of the University, marched to the hall of the Assembly, and there presented their petition in favor of a constitutional government, a responsible ministry, freedom of the press, a citizens’ guard, trial by jury, and religious freedom. The crowd increasing, the Arch duke Albert ordered the people to disperse, but, not being obeyed, commanded the soldiers to fire upon them. Many victims fell, and the greatest excitement was occasioned, which was only partially calmed by an order from the emperor for the military to withdraw. 6. The city guard had in the meantime sided with the people, and 1. Galicia and Lodomeria, now constituting a province of the Austrian empire, and lying north of Hungary, include those territories of Poland which have fallen to Austria in the -'nri ovsa partitions of that country. (Map No. XVII.) Chap. VI ] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 541 opened to them the arsenal. Metternich and the Archduke Albert resigned. On the next day, the 14th, the emperor abolished the censorship of the press, and assented to the formation of a National Guard ; and forty thousand citizens enrolled their names, and were furnished with arms. On the following day, the 15th, all the other demands of the people were complied with, and a promise given that a convention of deputies from each of the provinces should be as- sembled as speedily as possible for the purpose of framing a constb tution for the empire. This announcement was received with ex pressions of the greatest joy ; and the supposed dawn of Austrian liberty was celebrated by triumphal processions and illuminations. 7. The first period of the Revolution terminated with the triumph of the people, and was followed by apparently sincere efforts on the part of the government to fulfil its promises and carry out the reforms projected. But serious difficulties intervened. The various races in the empire — Germans, Magyars, Slavonians, and Italians — were jeal- ous of each other, while their wants and requirements were dissimi- lar : the people, generally, were unprepared for free institutions ; and the government was undecided to what extent concessions were expe- dient. During the whole of April and May, the mob, guided by the students, who often conducted themselves disgracefully, ruled in Vienna : the liberty of the press degenerated into licentiousness : a shameful literature flooded the city : violations of law and order were frequent : the Reign of Terror commenced ; and finally, on the 18th of May, the emperor, anxious for his personal safety, secretly left Vienna and repaired to Innspruck 1 in the Tyrol. But the with- drawal of the emperor was not what the people wished, and they de- sired him, now that Metternich was removed, to lead them onward in the way of reform. Returning in August he strove in vain to resume the reins of government : the students of the university and the democratic clubs usurped the entire control of the city, and, in the name of democracy, exercised a most cruel and unmitigated des- potism. 8. In the meantime the Bohemians, of Slavic origin, opposed to every measure tending to identify them with the German Confedera- tion, had demanded of the emperor a constitution . that should give them a national existence, equivalent, in its relations with the empire, to that enjoyed by the Hungarians. . Being refused their demands, a 1. Innspruck , the chief city of the Tyrd, is on the river Inn, two hundred and orty milea •outh-west from Vienna 542 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL congress of the Slavic nations of the Austrian empire had assembled at Prague early in June, and was discussing the various plans of Slavic regeneration, when a vast assemblage of citizens and students addressed a “ Storm Petition” to Prince Windischgratz, the military commander of the city, demanding the withdrawal of the regular troops, and a distribution of arms and ammunition for the use of the people. The petition not being granted, the people rose in open re- volt ; a most fearful and bloody conflict 3nsued within the city, which was also bombarded from the surrounding heights, and after almost an entire week of fighting, on the 17th the city capitulated. The Slavic congress was broken up ; the bright visions of Bohemian na- tionality vanished; and subsequently the strong national feelings of the Slavonic population, and their hatred alike of Magyars and Germans, rendered them the chief supporters of the Austrian throne and government. 9. At this time Hungary 1 was striving for a peaceable maintenance of her rights against Austrian encroachments ; and Croatia, 2 which was considered as an integral part of the Hungarian monarchy, en- couraged by Austria, had revolted, and her troops were already on their march towards the Hungarian capital. Austria now openly supported the Croats ; and an order of the emperor, on the 5th of October, for some troops stationed in Vienna to march against Hun- gary, produced another Revolution in the Austrian capital. The people, sympathizing with the Hungarians, opposed the march of the troops : a sanguinary contest followed ; the insurgents triumphed ; the ministry was overthrown ; the minister of war murdered ; and the emperor fled to Olmutz, 3 attended by the troops that remained 1. Hungary , taken in its widest acceptation, includes, besides Hungary proper, Croatia, Slavonia, the military frontier provinces, the Banat, and Transylvania. The Carpathian moun- tains form the boundary of Hungary on the north-east, separating it from Galicia and Lodo- meria. The greater part of the kingdom consists of two extensive plains the plain of Uppet Hungary, north of Buda, traversed by the Danube from west to east ; and the great plain of Southern Hungary, south of Buda, watered by the Danube and its tributaries, the Drave the Save, and the Theiss, with the numerous affluents of the latter. The whole of thi lowet plaii, an exceedingly fertile territory, embracing thirty-six thousand English square miles, is in scarcely a single point more than one hundred feet above the level of the Danube. {Map No. XVII.) 2. Croatia , (Austrian) regarded as forming the maritime portion of Hungary, has Slavonia, Tuikish Croatia, and Dalmatia, on the east and south-east, and the Adrialij on the south-west. The Drave separates it from Hungary proper. The Croats are of Slavonic stock, and speak a dialect which has a greater affinity with the Polish than any other language. About the year 1180 Croatia was incorporated with Hungary. ( Map No. XVII.) 3. Olmutz , a town of Moravia, and one of the strongest fortresses of the Austiian empire, is tn the river March, forty miles north-east of Brt on. Olmutz was taken bv the Swedes in the Chap. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 543 faithful to his cause. Fortunately for the emperor, a large and faith ful army in other parts of the empire enabled him soon to concentrate an overwhelming force around the chief seat of rebellion : Prince • Windischgratz from the north, and Jellachich the ban or governor of Croatia from the south, united their forces before Vienna : on the morning of the 28th of October they opened their batteries on the city; and on the 31st, after a great destruction of life and prop- erty, compelled an unconditional surrender. Of sixteen hundred persons arrested under martial law, nine only were punished with death. „ 10. While these events were occurring at Vienna, a Hungarian army of twenty or thirty thousand men, which had pursued J ellachich to the Austrian frontier, had remained there many days awaiting an invitation from the Viennese to come to their aid. At last, on the 28th of October, the Hungarians took the responsibility of advancing into the Austrian territory : on the 30th and 31st they met the im- perialists, when some skirmishing ensued ; but the fatal blow had already been struck at Vienna, and the Hungarian army recrossed the frontiers. 11. The second Revolution of Vienna was a riot, neither national nor liberal in its character, and not participated in by the other parts of the empire ; but its suppression, in connection with the scenes of anarchy which preceded it, produced an unfavorable elfect oja the cause of freedom throughout the whole of Germany. A re- action had already taken place in the popular mind : peace, under imperial rule, began to be preferred to the unchecked excesses of the mob: the emperor Ferdinand, yearning for repose, resigned his crown in favor of his nephew the Archduke Joseph : the government resumed its despotic powers ; and Austria fell back to her old posi- tion. In Prussia, Frederick William, imitating the Austrian empe- ror, and calling the army to his aid, dissolved the assembly which ho had called for the purpose of constructing a constitution, and forgot all nis promises in favor of reform and constitutional liberty. With Prussia and Austria against them, the smaller German States, di- vided in their counsels, could accomplish nothing ; and the project of German unity was virtually abandoned. IV. Revolutions in Italy. 1. Since the fall of Napoleon, Aus- trian influence has been predominant in Italy. The Congress of rhirty Years’ War : was besieged unsuccessfully by Frederick the Great in 1758 J and I .a fay etie was confined the- e in 1794. (Map No. XVH.) 544 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II Vienna assigned to Austria the whole Milanese and Venetian prov- inces, now included in Austrian Lombardy : at the same time the dependent thrones of Tuscany, Modena, 1 and Parma, 1 were filled by members of the ^ouse of Hapsbmg; and it was not long before Austria, in her steady adherence to the principles of despotism, had exacted treaties from all the princes of Italy, stipulating that no con- stitution should be granted to their subjects. When, in 1820, the Neapolitans established a constitution, Austria suppressed it by the force of arms, (see p. 516) : in 1821 she interfered in Piedmont, and in 1831 and 1832, in the Papal States 3 also, for the purpose of suppressing all liberal tendencies, whether in the government or the people. 2. The election in June 1846, of Cardinal Mastai, to fill the pon- tifical chair, with the appellation of Pius the Ninth, threatened the subversion of Austrian influence throughout a great part of Italy. The pope, a plain upright man, earnestly desiring to ameliorate the condition of his people, immediately commenced the work of reform; and the liberal course pursued by him at once revived the spirit of nationality throughout the entire peninsula. Austria, alarmed by these movements, used every means to change the course of the pope; and on the 19th of July, 1847, the Austrian army entered Ferrara, 4 a northern frontier town of the Papal States. The occupation of Ferrara was the signal for a general rising against the emperor of Austria, not only in Rome, but also in Florence, Bologna, 5 Lucca, 9 and Genoa, without regard to their distinct governments. In De 1. The Duchy of Modena is a State of northern Italy, having Austrian Lombardy on the north, the northern division of the Papal States on the east, Parma on the west, and Tuscany, Lucca, and the Mediterranean, on the south. Modena, the ancient Mutina, is the capital. The government, an absolute monarchy, is possessed by a collateral branch of the House of Austria. 2. The Duchy of Parma adjoins Modena on the west, and has Austrian Lombardy on the north, from which it is separated by the Po. Government, an absolute monarchy. Capital, Parma, thirty-three miles south-west from Mantua. 3. The Papal States, or the “ States of the Church,” occupying a great part of central, with a portion of northern Italy, have Austrian Italy on the north, from which they are separated by the Po ; Modena, Tuscany, and the Mediterranean, on the west ; the Neapolitan dominions on the south ; ait. I the Adriatic on the north-east. 4. Ferrara, formerly an independent duchy belonging to the family of Estfe, and now tha most northern city belonging to the pope, is on the west bank of the Volano, five miles south of the Po, and fifty-three miles south-west from Venice. 5. Bologna, the second city in rank in the Papal States, is at the southern verge of the valley of the Po, twenty-five miles south-west from Ferrara. Bologna, which has always assumed the title of “ Learned,” has given birth to eight popes, nearly two hundred cardinals, and m^re than one thousand literary and scientific men and artists. 6. Lucca, a duchy of central Italy, and, next to San Marino, the smallest of the Italian States, has the duchy of Modena oa the north, and the Mediterranean on the south- Lucca, its capital, is eleven miles north-east of Pisa, and thirty-eight west of Florence. Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 545 cember the Austrian army was withdrawn ; and the right of the States of Italy, not under Austrian rule, to choose their own forms of government, seemed to be conceded. 3. The Austrian emperor, fearing for the safety of Lombardy which was already in commotion, increased his forces in that prov- ince, until, in the beginning of March 1848, the different garrisons numbered a hundred thousand men. The proclamation of a republic in France hastened the crisis in the Austrian portion of Italy, and, by the unexpected tidings of the Revolution in Vienna, the climax was precipitated. On the 18th of March the citizens of Milan arose in insurrection, and after a contest of five days drove the Austrian troops, commanded by Marshal Radetsky, from the city. At the same time the Austrians were driven out of Parma and Pavia ; and nearly all the Venetian territory was in open insurrection. On the 23d of March the king of Sardinia, Charles Albert, issued a procla- mation in favor of Italian nationality, and marched into Lombardy to aid in driving the Austrians beyond the Alps. The Austrian gen- eneral, Radetsky, a skilful and veteran commander, retreated until he could concentrate all his forces, when he returned to meet the Ital- ians, who, gradually overpowered by superior numbers, were soon compelled to retire ; and one by one the Austrians regained possess ion of all the cities from which they had been driven. After defeat- ing the Sardinian king in several engagements during the latter part of July, on the 5th of August Radetsky was again before Milan : all Lombardy submitted ; an armistice was agreed upon; and Charles Albert retired to his own dominions. 4. After some attempts of England and France to mediate be- tween the contending parties, the armistice was terminated by Charles Albert on the 20th of March, 1849, on the avowed ground that its terms had been repeatedly violated by the Austrians ; but, in reality in obedience to the clamors of his people, and as the only chance of saving his crown, and preventing Sardinia from becoming a republic. Sardinia was poorly prepared for the cDnflict : her forces were badly organized, and her officers incompetent; while opposed to them was one of the most efficient and best-disciplined armies in Europe, under the command of an able and experienced general. At twelve o’clock on the 20th, the moment that the armistice expired, Radetsky entered Piedmont, while the Sardinians were utterly ignorant of his move- ments ; and by the 24th the war was at an end. Charles Albert, defeated in three battles, and rightly judging that more favor would 35 546 MODERN HISTORY. [Pari H be shown his countrymen if the supreme power were in other hands, abdicated in favor of his son Victor Emanuel on the evening of the 23d, and in a few hours left the country — bidding adieu not only to his crown, but his kingdom also. Victor Emanuel purchased peace by the payment of fifteen millions of dollars as indemnity for the ex penses of the war. 5. While these successes were attending the Austrian arms in Piedmont, an Austrian army was blockading Venice, which on the 22d of March, 1848, had proclaimed the £t Republic of Saint Mark.” Venice held out until her provisions were exhausted, and an immense amount of property had been destroyed — not less than sixty thousand shot and shells having been thrown into the city during the last few days of the siege. In the last days of August 1849, Venice sur- rendered to Marshal Radetsky ; — and with the fall of the Republic of Saint Mark, Austria recovered her authority throughout all north- ern Italy. 6. During this period the southern portions of the peninsula were far from enjoying tranquillity. The subjects of Ferdinand, king of Naples 1 and Sicily, had risen early in 1848, and their demands for a constitution were acceded to ; but the promises of the king to the Sicilians were broken, and Sicily revolted from his authority, and elected for her sovereign the Duke of Genoa, the second son of Charles Albert king of Sardinia. A sanguinary war between the Neapolitans and Sicilians followed : Messina, after two days’ bom bardment, fell into the hands of the Neapolitans : the Sicilians were defeated in a desperate battle at Catania ; Syracuse, terror stricken, surrendered without a blow : Palermo, 2 the last stronghold of the islanders, fell after a short struggle; and Ferdinand of Naples re Burned his former sway as unlimited monarch of the two Sicilies. 7. From the well-known liberal character of Pius the Ninth, an] the manner in which his reign began, it was to be expected that, in the Papal States at least, liberty would find a quiet asylum. For a time prince and people were united in the noble cause of the political regeneration of Italy ; but the people soon outran the pope in the march of reform, and began to murmur because he lingered so far behind them. He granted liberty of the press, and its license alarmed him : he placed arms in the hands of the people, but could 1. The Kingdom if JViples, otherwise called the “Kingdom of the two Sicilies,” nearly Identical with the Magna (iraecia of antiquity, comprises the southern portion of Italy, together with Sicily and the adjacent islands. * 2. Palermo : see Panirmus, p. 117. Chap. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 547 not control l he use of them : he named a council to assist him in the administration of civil affairs, hut was dismayed at the cries for a representative assembly that should share in the government of the country. 8. In the summer of 1848 symptoms of reaction began to appear* Pius signified to the Roman Chamber of Deputies that it was asking too much ; and his appointment of Rossi to the post of prime minis- ter exasperated the people, and diminished his own popularity Rossi’s avowed hostility to the democratic movement led to his assassination on the 15th of November, as he was proceeding to open the Chambers ; and eight days later the pope fled from Rome, and took up his residence in Gaeta, 1 in the territory of the king of Naples. On the 9th of February following, a National Assembly, elected by the people, proclaimed that the pope’s temporal power was at an end, and that the form of government of the Roman States should be a pure democracy, with the name of “ The Roman Republic.” 9. Month after month Pius remained at G-aeta, unwilling to de- mand foreign aid to reinstate him in his temporal sovereignty, and hoping that his people, acknowledging their past misconduct, would recall him of their own accord ; but no signs of any change in his favor being exhibited, he at length availed himself of the only re- source left him. The Roman Catholic powers of Austria, Naples, Spain, and Fiance, responded to his appeal for aid : the Austrians entered the Papal States on the north — the Neapolitans on the south — a body of Spanish troops landed on the coast — and, to the shame of republican France, towards the close of April a French army, under the command of General Oudinot, was sent to southern Italy, under the avowed pretence of checking Austrian influence in that quarter, but, in reality, as the sequel proved, to restore papal authority on the ruins of the Roman Republic. 10 The pretended “ friendly and disinterested mission” of the French army was resisted with a heroism worthy of the days of the early Roman Republic, and the first attack of the French upon the city of Rome resulted in their defeat ; but the assailants were reenforced, an A after a regular siege and bombardment, on the 30th of June, 1848, Rome surrendered. When the French troops entered the c: ty they were received with silence and coldness on the part of the people ; 1. Oaeta is a strongly-fortified seaport town, forty-one miles north-west from Naples, and wveuty-two miles south east from Rome. Cicen was pnt to death, by order of Antony, in th the latter. See p. 420. ( Map No. XVII.) 556 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II Paskiewitch, at the head of eighty-seven thousand Bussiats, passed the frontiers of Galicia, and descended into the valley of the Theiss by way of Bartfeld 1 2 and Eperies ; and forty thousand Bussians and fourteen thousand Austrians entered Transylvania from the south and east. Smaller divisions entered at other points- — the whole de- signed to enclose the Hungarians within a circle of armies, in the plains of the Theiss and the Danube. 18. The plan of the Austrians and Bussians was too successfully oarried out. The Bussians, after encountering a heroic resistance, drove Bern from Transylvania : Jellachich, after experiencing the most disastrous defea.t in the defile of Hegyes,* marched up the Theiss : the Bussians, under Paskiewitch, in two divisions entered Debreczin on the 7th of July, and Pesth on the 11th. Haynau fought his way from Presburg to the vicinity of Comorn, near which place he fought, on the 11th of July, a severe battle with Gorgey, in which the latter had the advantage. On the 19th he reached Pesth, where he renewed those brutal scenes which had marked his whole career in Hungary. To his own everlasting infamy, and the deep disgrace of the Austrian government, he repeatedly ordered ladies of great respectability and high rank to be "publicly flogged for having held communication with the insurgents, — and one, the daughter of a professor in Baab, for having turned her back upon the emperor as he entered the city. Brave officers were hanged by him for no other crime than that of defending their country. Hay- nau, by his barbarities, fully earned the title which has been given him,— that of “ Hungary’s Hangman.” 19. From Comorn, Gorgey, constantly harassed by the enemy, re- treated to Waitzen, and thence to Onod, 3 and on the 29th crossed the Theiss at Tokay, 4 from which place he turned south, and, pur- sued by the enemy, continued his retreat, until, on the 8th of August, 1. Bartfeld, is at the foot of the Carpathian mountains, in northern Hungary, on the Tope, au affluent of the Theiss. It formerly enjoyed considerable distinction as a seat of learning. It is one hundred and fifty-five miles north-easf from Pesth. {Map No. XVII.) 2. Hegyes is a small town of Southern Hungary, thirty-five miles north-west of Peterwardein. {Map No. XVIL) 3. Onod is on the western bank of the Theiss, ninety-five miles north-east of Pesth. (Map No. XVII.) 4. Tokay is a small town, situated at the confluence of the Bodrog with the Theiss, one hun- dred and thirteen miles north-east from Pesth. Tokay derives its whole celebrity from its being the entrepot foi the sale of the famous sweet wine of the same name, made in $. hilly tract cf country extending twenty-five or thirty miles north-west from the town. The finest quality cf the wine is that which flo ws from the ripe grapes by their own pressure, while in heaps (Maj No. XVII.) Chap. VI] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 557 he reached the fortress of Arad, 1 on the Maros. Petty jealousies between the Hungarian generals frequently prevented concert of action and a union of forces when the safety of whole armies depend- ed upon it; and the ambition of Gorgey, in particular, who was possessed of both skill and courage, seemed to be to show himself a great general. His country’s safety was a secondary consideration. 20. Dembinski, in the meantime, had retreated south, and crossed the Danube also in the Banat. After almost constant fighting on the 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th of August, on the latter of which days he was severely wounded, on the 9th his army, commanded by Bern, fought with Jellachich and Haynau the decisive battle of Temeswar, in which the Austrians were at first repulsed with great loss ; but the failure of ammunition in the Hungarian lines finally gave the victory to the Austrians. The southern Hungarian army was com pletely broken up by this disaster : many laid down their arms and returned home : some escaped into Turkey ; and some thousands fell into the hands of the pursuing enemy. On the 8th Gorgey had reached Arad with forty thousand troops, within half a day’s march of the spot where Dembinski was fighting ; but instead of joining his countrymen at that opportune moment, when he might have turned the scale of victory, he was then engaged in efforts for obtaining the dissolution of the government, and procuring for himself the ap- pointment of dictator. Gorgey’s fidelity to the Hungarian cause had long been suspected, even by Kossuth himself, yet he had been re- tained in command of the largest division of the Hungarian army ; and now, when he declared that he alone could and would save the country if dictatorial powers were conferred upon him, Kossuth,, considering the cause of Hungary desperate, took the important step of dissolving the government and conferring upon Gorgey the su- preme civil and military power. (Aug. 10th.) 21. It soon appeared that Gorgey had long maintained a treason- able correspondence with the enemy. He had long disobeyed, at his pleasure, the orders sent him by the government ; and he now made such a disposition of his forces that the Russians might enclose his army, of which, in spite of its corrupt condition, he still stood in fear. On the 13th he surrendered to the Russian general Rudiger, without any conditions, his entire force, with one hundred and forty-four can- nons. When the troops were drawn up for surrender, grief and in- 1. Arad is a strongly-fortified town, situated on both sides of the Maros, twenty -seven miles north of Temeswar. {Map No. XVII.) 558 MODERN HISTORY. IPart II dignation were visible thro lghout* the ranks: one officer broke his sword, and threw it with curses at Gorgey’s feet : many a hussar shot his noble charger, that it might not survive the disgrace of its master; and some regiments burned their standards, determined never to surrender them to the enemy. 22. A few days before Gorgey’s treacherous surrender, one parting gleam of success shed its lustre on the Hungarian arms. At mid- night on the 3d of August the garrison of Comorn, commanded by General Klapka, sallied from the fortress, and drove back the Aus- trians with dreadful slaughter ; and so great was the panic that on the 5th of August Raab 1 was taken, and with it, supplies and ammu- nition to the value of several millions of dollars. The peasantry in the valley of the Danube rose en masse , and Klapka thought serious- ly of marching upon Vienna itself, when the news of Gorgey’s sur- render paralyzed all farther effort. Corriorn surrendered on the 29th of September, on favorable terms ; and with the fall of that import- ant fortress, terminated the military operations in Hungary. 23. After the surrender of Gorgey, Kossuth left Arad and direct- ed his course to the Turkish frontier, and, finding that no hope re- mained of serving his country, delivered himself up to the Ottoman garrison at Widdin. 2 Austria in vaid demanded him of the. Turkish government. When he was finally permitted to leave the country he came to the United States: The attentions there bestowed upon him for his noble efforts in the cause of Hungarian freedom, called forth, from the Austrian government, a remonstrance, which was nobly answered by Mr. Webster, the American Secretary of State. Bern also fled into Turkey, where, after receiving a command in the Turkish army, he died in 1850, of wounds received in the Hungarian war. Dembinski and a few others followed the fortunes of Kossuth. 24. On the 6th of October, 1849, — a day rendered forever mem- orable for infamy in the annals of Austria — thirteen Hungarian generals and staff officers, who had surrendered, were shot or hanged at Arad : many of the Hungarian ministers and other civil officials were also executed : an immense number of inferior officers were sent to fortresses to be imprisoned for life, or a term of years ; and about seventy thousand Hungarians, who had taken part in the contest, 1. Raab is situated south of the Danube, twenty-two miles south-west of Comom. It was a strong post under the Romans. In 1809 an Austrian force was routed by the French under its walls. {Map No. XVII.) 2. Widdin is a fortified town of Bulgaria in Turkey, on the southern bank of the Danube, one > undred and sixty-five miles so ith-east of Peterwardein. ( Map No. Vfl.t Chap VL] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 559 were forcibly enlisted in Austrian regiments. Thus terminated the struggle of Hungary for freedom. Her national existence, preserved through a thousand years, was annihilated, not so much by the over- whelming power of two great empires, as by the faults and treason of her own sons. a VI. Usurpation of Louis Napoleon. 1 . After France had adopted a republican constitution in 1848, the election of a chief magistrate, to hold the- executive power of the nation for four years, became the absorbing subject of thought and discussion with the French people. Six candidates were in the field, — Lamartine, Ledru Rollin, Raspail, Generals Changarnier and Cavaignac, and Louis Na- poleon. Lamartine, who had saved the country from anarchy in the Rev? 1 ution of February, but had made a feeble president of the pro- visional government, soon virtually withdrew from the contest, by re- questing his friends to make no efforts in his behalf : the adherents of Ledru Rollin, although earnest and active, were, comparatively, few in number : Raspail and Changarnier possessed no peculiar rec- ommendations for the office ; and it was soon evident that the choice would lie between General Cavaignac and Louis Napoleon — the former, popular with the Assembly and the leading republicans, a man of tried integrity, and possessing every requisite qualification for the office — the latter an adventurer, who had made two fool- hardy attempts to usurp the throne of France, viewed with jealousy and distrust by the republicans, and treated with coldness by the politicians of all parties, but strong in the prestige of a name, and hailed by the people as the living representative of that world- renowned emperor whom France can never forget. The result of the election surprised every one. Seven and a-half millions of votes were polled in the nation, and, of these, five and a-half millions were cast for Louis Napoleon, who was inaugurated President on the 20th of December. He then solemnly swore “ to remain faith- ful to the Democratic Republic, and to fulfil all the duties which the constitution imposed upon him.” 2. Louis Napoleon, the son of Louis Bonaparte and Hortense Beauharnais, the king and queen of Holland, was born in the palace a. When Kossuth, with the members of the provisional government, was retreating from point to point as the Austrian and Russian armies advanced, he carried with him the Hunga- rian regalia— the royal jewels, and the crown of St. Stephen — objects of almost religious ven- eration to the Hungarian people. It long remained a mystery what had become of them, but after years of search by individuals 6ent out by the Austrian government, they were discovered in Sept. 1853, buried in an iron chest near the confines of Wallachia. 560 MODERN HISTORY. [Part IL of the Tuilleries on the 20th of April, 1808, and, being the first prince of the Napoleon dynasty born under the imperial regime, and the only one living at the time of his election as President of the French Republic, considered himself, and was acknowledged by the Bonapartists, as the legitimate representative of the, emperor Napo- leon, and the heir to his empire. After his second attempt, in August 1840, to excite a Revolution against Louis Phillippe, he was confined in the castle of Ham, 1 from which he made his escape in May 1&46, after an imprisonment of more than five years. Being in London at the time of the Revolution of February, 1848, he imme- uiately repaired to Paris, but was so coldly received by the members of the provisional government that te again left the country. Soon after he was informed that he had been elected a member of the As- sembly from three different departments ; but the hostility against him in the Assembly was so great tjiat, deeming it unsafe to take his seat as a delegate, he resigned the office. In the election to fill vacancies, in August, he was reelected, when he returned to France, and m the 26th of September took his seat as the representative of Pan*, ais native city. But even then, nearly all the members, re- garding him as a secret enemy of the government, treated him with niarxed coldness and neglect ; nor did the icy reserve wear away when the suffrages of nearly six millions of his countrymen had elevated him to the first place in the Republic. o. The first act of Louis Napoleon was to make a public declara- tion of the principles of his government, which he avowed to be strictly republican ; yet from the outset it was assumed by a large portion of the Assembly that he would prove unfaithful, to his oath, and endeavor to establish an imperial dynasty. The Assembly was composed of several parties, — first, the Legitimists, who were ad- herents of the elder branch of the Bourbons : — second, the Orlean- ists, who desired to see the heir of Louis Phillippe raised to the throne : — third, the Republicans, both moderate and ultra ; — and, finally, the Bonapartists, who openly expressed their desire for the restoration of the empire, and were encouraged by Louis Napoleon, although he remained professedly attached to the Republic. 4. From the beginning there was no mutual confidence between the President and the Assembly; and while the conduct of the I . Ham, celebrated for its strong fortress used as a State Prison, is a town in a marshy plain, in the former province of Picardy, seventy miles north-east from Paris, and thirty -five south-eaat from Amiens. Here Prince Polignac and other ministers of Charles X. were confined for £lx years. Chap. VI.] NINETEENTH CENTURY. 661 former exhibited marked dishonesty of purpose in furthering his am bitious views, the whole career of the latter was a series of intrigues against the President, of party contests, and encroachments upon popular rights. The Assembly introduced^ severe restrictions upon the liberty of the press : it placed the entire control of education in the hands of the Roman Catholic clergy : it made restrictions upon the right of suffrage, which disfranchised three millions of electors ; and it united with the President in sending an army to crush the rising Republic of Rome. 5. The constitution of 1848 provided that it might be revised by a vote of three-fourths of the Assembly during the last year of the Presidential term, and that the President should be ineligible to reelection, until after an interval of four years. This latter provision would therefore render the continuance of Louis Napoleon in power impossible, without a revision of the constitution. Early in 1851 the question of revision was brought before the Assembly, and after being the subject of some very exciting and stormy debates, in which any change was vehemently opposed by the republicans, the motion to revise failed by nearly a hundred votes. 6. In his annual message in November the President strongly urged upon the Assembly the extension of the right of suffrage, a measure which greatly increased his popularity with the French people ; but the bill introduced for that purpose was rejected by the Assembly. Soon after, the increasing animosity of the Assembly towards the President was exhibited by the proposal of a law authorizing his impeachment in case he should seek a reelection in violation of the constitution. His accusation and arrest on a charge of treason were also hinted at. 7. The strife of parties in the Assembly was fast bringing matters to a crisis that would probably have ended in anarchy and civil war, when suddenly — unexpectedly — and quietly, Louis Napoleon put forth his hand, and with a degree of skill that would have done honor to his great name-sake, grasped the reins of power, and, crushing the constitution, overwhelmed all opposition to his will. On the night of Monday, December 1st, the palace of the President was the scene of a gay assemblage of the fashion and beauty of Paris ; and it was ^ remarked that the President was in the highest spirits, and unusually attentive to his guests. 0n the following morning the inhabitants of Paris awoke to find the city filled with troops, and every com- manding position in the vicinity occupied by them, while the Presi- 562 MODERN HISTORY. [Part II dent’s decree, posted on every wall, announced the dissolution of the National Assembly, the restoration of universal suffrage, and the es- tablishment of martial law throughout Paris. The chief members of the Assembly, together with Generals Cavaignac, Changarnier, Lamoriciere, and others, had been seized in their beds, and were already in prison : not a man was left of sufficient ability and popularity to rally the people ; the coup d'etat was entirely successful, and Louis Napoleon was absolute dictator of France. 8. On Tuesday the 2d of December about three hundred members of the Assembly, finding the doors of the hall of legislation guarded, met in another part of the city, declared the President guilty of treason and proclaimed his deposition ; but scarcely had they signed the decree when they were surrounded by a band of soldiers, and all marched to prison. The Assembly being destroyed, measures were next taken to disarm the power of the press ; and none of the jour- nals, except the government organs, were allowed to appear. On Wednesday, the 3d, a decree was promulgated, convening the whole people for an election to be held between the 1 4th and 22d of De- cember — the questions submitted to them being whether Louis Na- poleon should remain at the head of the state ten years, or not, with the power of forming a new constitution on the basis of universal suffrage. On Thursday, the 4th, troops were called out to suppress an insurrection in Paris : no quarter was given, and about a thousand of the insurgents were killed, when tranquillity was restored. In some of the departments the people rose in great strength against the usurpation ; but the army remained faithful, and in the course of two or three days all resistance was quelled. 9. It had been arranged that the army should vote first on the great question submitted to the nation ; and, as had been anticipated, its vote was nearly unanimous in favor of Louis Napoleon. The official returns showed nearly seven and a half millions of votes in his favor, and but little more than half a million against him. Thus the nation sanctioned his usurpation of the 2d of December, and virtually proclaimed its wish for the restoration of the empire. On the 1st of January, 1852, the result of the election was celebrated at Paris with more than royal magnificence, and on the 14th the new constitution was decreed. It was avowedly based on the constitution which the emperor Napoleon had given to the French nation. I intrusted the government to Louis Napoleon for ten years, made him commander-in-chief of the army and navy, gave him control over legislation, and the power to declare war and make treaties. He was all but in name an emperor ; and before a year had passed he assumed that title, apparently with the consent, and by the desire, of the na- tion. France had accepted the Napoleon Dynasty as -a refuge from anarchy — as the only compromise between Bourbonism, or the past, and Republicanism, or the future. GENERAL GEOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL VIEWS, (in addition to the notes throughout the work.) ILLUSTRATED BY THE FOLLOWING MAPS. Page ANCIENT GREECE &4 ATHENS AND ITS HARBORS 566 ISLANDS OF THE AEGEAN SEA 568 . ASIA MINOR 570 . PERSIAN EMPIRE 572 . PALESTINE 574 , TURKEY IN EUROPE 576 . ANCIENT ITALY 578 . ROMAN EMPIRE 580 . ANCIENT ROME ; 582 . CHART OF THE WORLD 584 . • BATTLE GROUNDS OF .NAPOLEON, &c.. . : 586 . FRANCE, SPAIN, AND PORTUGAL 588 . SWITZERLAND, DENMARK, &c 590 . NETHERLANDS (HOLLAND AND BELGIUM) 592 . GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND 594 . CENTRAL EUROPE 596 . UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.. 598 . Map No. I. H. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. « IX. X. XL XIL XIIL XIV. XV. XVL XVIL XVXfT. ANCIENT AND MODERN GREECE. Map No. I. A general description of both Ancient and Modern Greece may be found on pp. 21 '**- Grecian Mythology, 22 to 27— Ancient History of Greece, 27 to 123— Modern History. 51' ;o 523. For descriptive accounts of the Grecian States, and important towns, cities, rives s, battle- grounds, &c., see the “Index to the Descriptive Notes” at the end of the volume. The following is a brief synopsis of the leading events in Grecian History, beginning wth the Persian wars, which ended JB. C. 469. The Peloponnesian wars lasted nearly thirty years, F. 'J. 431-404. Subjugation of Greece by Philip of Macedon, B. G. 338, after which come tha conquests of Alexander, the Achaean League, and then the Roman conquest, B. C. 146, from which time, during thirteen hundred and fifty years, Greece continued to be either really or nominally a portion of the Roman empire. The country was invaded by Alaric the Goth, -•V. D. 400, and afterwards by Genseric and Zaber Khan, in the sixth and seventh, and by the Normans in the eleventh century. After the capture of Constantinople by the crusaders in 1204, Greece was divided into feudal principalities, and governed by a variety of Norman, Ve- netian, and Frankish nobles. It was invaded by the Turks in 1438, and conquered by them in 1481. It was tne theatre of wars between the Turks and Venetians during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries ; but by the treaty of Passarovitch, in 1718, it was given up to the Turks, who retained possession of the country till the breaking out of the Greek Revolution in 1821. The present kingdom of Greece embraces all the Grecian peninsula south of the ancient Epirus and Thes' saly, as seen on the accompanying map, together with Eubce'a, theCyc' lades, and the northern Spor’ ades. Thes’ saly, now a Turkish province, reiains its ancient name and limits: Epirus is embraced in the Turkish province of Albania, for which, see Map No. VII. The Modern Greeks are described as being, generally, “ rather above the middle height, and well-shaped ; they have the face oval, features regular and expressive, eyes large, dark, and animated, eyebrows arched, hair long and dark, and complexions olive colored.” They retain many of the customs and ceremonies of the ancients; the common people are extremely credulous and superstitious, and pay much attention to auguries, omens, and dreams. They belong mostly to the Greek Church ; they deny the supremacy of the pope, abhor the worship of images, and reject the doctrine of purgatory, but believe in transubstantiation. The priests are generally poor and illiterate, although improving in their attainments; and their habits are generally simple and exemplary. The inhabitants of Northern Greece, or Hellas, are said to have retained “a chivalrous and warlike spirit, with a simplicity of manners and mode of life which strongly remind us of the pictures of the heroic age.” The inhabitants of the Peloponnesus are more ignorant and less honest than those of Hellas. Previous to the Greek Revolution, remains of the Hellenic race were found, in their greatest purity, in the mountainous parts of the country — in the vicinity of Mount Parnassus in Northern Greece, and the inhospitable tracts of Taygetos in Southern Greece, whither th&y had been driven from the plains by their ruthless oppressors. The language of the modern Greeks bears, in many of its words, and in its general forms and grammatical structure, a strong resemblance to the ancient Greek — similar to the relation sus- tained by the Italian to the Latin; but as the pronunciation of the ancient Greek is lost, how far the modern tongue corresponds to it in that particular cannot be ascertained. Travellers still speak in the highest terms of the fine views everywhere found in Grecian scene- * ry ; — and besides their natural beauties, they are doubly dear to us by the t housand hallowed asso- ciations connected with them by scenes of historic interest, and by the numerous ruins of ancient art and splendor which cover the country — recalling a gloriouf Past, upon which we love to dwell as upon the memoiy of departed friends, or the scenes of happy childhood— “sweet, but mournful, to the soul.” “Yet are thy skies as blue, lhj& crags as wild; Sweet are thy groves, and verdant are thy fields, "Thine olive ripe as when Minerva smiled. And still his honied wealth Hymettus yields. There the blithe bee his fragrant, fortress builds. The freeborn wanderer of thy mountain air ; Apollo still thy long, long summer gilds, Still in his beam Mendeli’s* marbles glare; Art, Glory, Freedom fail, but Nature still is fair. “Where’er we tread, ’tis haunted, holy ground; No earth of thine is lost in vulgar mould, But one vast realm of wonder spreads around, And all the muses tales seem truly told, Till the sense aches with gazing to behold The scenes our earliest dreams have dwelt upon : Each hill and dale, each deepening glen and wold, Defies the power which crush’d thy temples gone: Age shakes Athena’s tower, but spares gray Marathon.” Ckilde Harolde , cantf in ’ n . T. Wiilijniio AjnpSiijinlisj ^oTl i I /AjuilIoniH v£$^oAttfu/t>nea JL '•Sill Methoueom ibertaiUM Z J r9« ft — §”«pfS <-,/ »-;r!i i #j> ■JM^uic oCyllime ^ijuv^'i'/iln^ ^°h‘'S Ja’ ANCIENT ATHENS. Map No. II. Among the monuments of antiquity which still exist at A hens, the most striking are those which surmount the A crop' olis, or Gecropian citadel, which is a rocky height rising abruptly out of the Attic plain, and accessible only on the western side, where stood the Propylce'a, a magnificent structure of the Doric order, which served as the gate as well as the defence of the Acrop' olis. But the chief glory of Athens was the Par' thenon, or temple of Minerva, which stood on the highest point, and near the centre, of the Acrop' olis. It was constructed entirely of the most beautiful white fnarble from Mount Pentel' licus, and its dimensions were two hundred and twenty-eight feet by one hundred and two — having eight Doric columns in each of the two fronts, and seventeen in each of the sides, and afto an interior range of six columns in each end. The ceiling of the western part of the main building was supported by four interior columns, and of the eastern end by sixteen. The entire height of the building above its platform was sixty-five feet. The whole was enriched, within and without, with matchless works of art by the first sculptors of Greece. This magnificent structure remained entire until the year 1687, when, during a siege of Athens by the Venetians, a bomb fell on the devoted Par' thenon, and setting fire to the powder which the Turks had stored there, entirely destroyed the roof, and reduced the whole building almost to ruins. The eight columns of the eastern front, however, and several of the lateral colonnades, are still standing, and the whole, dilapidated as it is, still retains an air of inexpressible grandeur and sublimity. North of the Par’ thenon stood the Erechtheivm, an irregular but beautiful structure of the Ionic order, dedicated to the worship of Neptune and Minerva. Considerable remains of it are still existing. In addition to the three great edifices of the Acrop' olis, which were adorned «vith the most finished paintings and sculptures, the entire platform of the hill appears to have been covered with a vast composition of architecture and sculpture, consisting of temples, monuments, and statues of Grecian gods and heroes. Among these may be mentioned statues of Jupiter, Apollo, Neptune, Mercury, Venus, and Minerva; and a vast number hf statues of eminent Grecians— the whole Acrop' olis having been at once the fortress, the sacred enclosure, and the treasury of the Athenian nation, and fbrming the noblest museum of sculpture, the richest gallery of painting, and the best school of architecture in the world. Beneath the southern wall of the Acrop' olis, near its eastern extremity, was the Theatre of Bacchiis, which was capable of containing thirty thousand persons, and whose seats, rising one above another, were cut out of the sloping rock. Adjoining this on the east was the Odhum built by Pericles, and* beneath the western extremity of the Acrop' olis was the Od6um or Musical Theatre , constructed in the form of a tent. On the north-east side of the Acrop' olis stood the Prytaneum , where were many statues, and where citizens who had rendered service to the State were maintained at the public expense. A short distance to the north-west of the Acrop' olis was the small eminence called Areop' agus, or hill of Mars, at the eastern extremity of which was situated the celebrated court of the Areop' agus. About a quarter of a mile south-west stood tffe Pnyx , the place where the public assemblies of Athens were held in its palmy days, a spot that will ever be associated with the renown of Demosthenes, and other famed Athenian orators. The steps by which the speaker mounted the rostrum, and a tier of three seats for the Audience, hewn in the solid rock, are still visible. A short distance south of the Pnyx was the eminence called the Museum , that part of Athens where the poet Musaeus is said to have been buried. In the Ceramicus, north and west of the Aerop' olis, one of the most considerable pai ts of the ancient city, were many public buildings, some dedicated to the worship of the -gods, others used for stores, and for the various markets, and some for schools, while the old Forum , often used»for large assemblies of the people, occupied the interior. North of the Areop' agus is the Temple of Theseus , built of marble by Cimon. The roof, friezes, and cornices, of this temple, have been but little impaired by time, and the whole is one of the most noble remains of the ancient magnificence of Athens, and the most perfect, if not the most beautiful, existing?* specimen of Grecian architecture. South-east of the Acrop' olis, and near the Ilissus, is now to be seen a cluster of sixteen mag- nificent Corinthian columns of Pentel ic marble, the only remaining ones of a hundred and twenty, which mark the site of the Temple of Jupiter Olympius. On the left bank of the Ilissus was the St&dium, used for gymnastic contests, and capable of accommodating twenty five no. n. 568 'aousaud peisons. The marble seats have disappeared, but the masses of masonry vfhich formed the semi-dft-cular end still remain. Just without the ancient city walls on the east was the Lyceum, embellished with buildings, groves, and fountains, — a place of assembling for military and gymnastic cxercisesj and a favorite resort for philosophical study and contemplation. Near the foot of Mount Anchesmus was the Cynosar' ges , a place adorned with several temples, a gymnasium, and groves sacred to Hercules. Beyond the walls of the city on the north was the Academy, or Public Garden,— surrounded with a wall, and adorned with statues, temples, and sepulchres of illustrious men, and planted with olive and plane trees. Within this enclosure Plato possessed a small garden, in which he opened his school. r Thence arose the Academic sect. Athens had three great harbors, the Pine’ us, Munych' ia, and Phal’ erum. Anciently these ports formed a separate city larger than Athens itself, with which they were connected by means of two long walls. During the prolonged conflict of the revolutionary war in Greece, from 1820 to 1827, Athens was in ruins, but it is the now capital of the kingdom of Greece. The philosophical era in the history of Athens has been beautifully alluded to by Milton. “See there the olive grove of Academe, Plato’s retirement, where the Attic bird Trills her thick-warbled notes the summer-long . There flowery hill Hymeitus with the sound Of bees’ industrious murmur oft invites To studious musing; There Ilissus ,rolls His whispering stream: within the walls then view The schools of ancient sages ; his who bred Great Alexander to' subdue the world, Lyceum there, and painted Stoa next; To sage philosophy next lend thine ear, From Heaven descended to the low-roofed house Of Socrates ; see there his tenement, Whom, well inspired, the oracle pronounced Wisest of men; from whose mouth issued forth Mellifluous streams that water’d ail the schools . Of Academics old and new, with those Surnamed Peripatetics, and the sect Epicurean, and the Stoic severe.” » ISLANDS OF THE J5GEAN. Map No. III. The Aegean Sea, now called the Archipelago, is that part of the Mediterranean lyinp •Jt/feen Greece, the islands Crete and Rhodes, and Asia Minor. It embraces those groups o olands, the Cyc' lades and the Spor' ades ;* also Eubce'a, Lesbos, Chios, Tenedos, Lemnos, &> , nearly all of which cluster with interesting classical associations. Mentioning only the most important in history, and beginning in the northern Archipelago, we have Thasos , now Theso or Tasso, early colonized by the Phoenicians on account of its valuable silver mines : — Samothrace, where the mysteries of Cybeie, the “Mother of the Gods,” are said to have originated: — Lemnos, known in ancient mythology as the spot on which Vulcan fell, after being hurled down from heaven, and where he established his forge: — Tenedos , whither the Greeks retired, as Virgil relates, in order to surprise the Trojans : — Lesbos , celebrated for its olive oil and figs, and as being the abode of pleasure and licentiousness, while the inhabitants boasted a high degree of intellectual cultivation, and, especially, great musical attainments : — Chios, now Scio, called the garden of the Archipelago, and claimed to have been the birthplace of Homer :— Samos, early distinguished in the maritime annals of Greece for its naval ascendency, and for its splendid temple of Juno : — Icaria , whose name mythology derives from Ic'arus, who fell into the sea near the island after the unfortunate termination of his flight from Crete:— Patmos, to which St. John was banished, and where he wrote his Apocalypse: — Cos, celebrated for its temple of Aesculapius, and as being the birthplace of Hippocrates, the greatest physician of antiquity Nisyrus, said to have been separated from Cos by Neptune, that he might hurl it against the * The division befween the Cyc' lades and Spor' ades, on the accompanying Map, should include the islands Ascania, Thera , and Anaphe, among the latter. Nj. Ill, letcia j Sjj / Scra Ccr/>ity (iZrfojpuTis I ramjGnmi 7 J in/urmis p . 'fieatira wizm.-iunaxamjnm ->Erjt/irtr£ X JO T A Corin) | iMXpfirsiLsr WSSVcapoZis j / ^AT/ifmZma K W&sSm&. v- ' C Tv m yca no ' ■ ’£}: yViPH^X mfM MELQt WMm S- a- 7 1 r = ^ i PHCLCCfiUORL Vsc/i/y/j fKCCITIJ \ CLv(//rhy\ Zw/a-urrnii* ' Pfiocnix 'JJlz/etnA j & to? S | (^CnrTyinl mmhemGgMn^y COAETE OF GREECE AMfl —ASIA MINOBr tfcaZe o/Jlf/fcE 570 jflant Po ybae' tes : — fin' aplie , said to have been made to rise by thunder from the bottom of the sea, in order to receive the Argonauts during a storm, on their return from Colchis:— Thera, now called Santorin, said to have been formed in the sea by a clod of earth thrown from the ship Argo : — Astypalce’a , called also Trapedza, or the “Table of the Gods,” because its soil was fertile, and almost enamelled with flowers •.—Amorgus, the birthplace of the Iambic poet Simon' ides : — Ios , claimed to have been the burial place of Homer : — Melos, now Milo, cele- brated for its obstinate resistance to the Athenians, and its cruel treatment by them, (see p. 83) : — Antiparos, celebrated for its grotto, of great depth and singular beauty : — Paros, famed for its beautiful and enduring marble : — Mazos, the largest of the Oyc' lades, celebrated for the worship of Bacchus, who is said to have been born there : — Seriphus, celebrated in mythology as the scene of the most remarkable adventures of Perseus, who changed Polydec' tes, king of this island, and his subjects, into stones, to avenge the wrongs offered to his mother Dan® Delos, (a small island between Rhenea and Mycanos,) celebrated as the natal island of Apollo and Diana : — Ceos, the birthplace of the Elegiac poet Simonides, grandson of the poet of Amorgus. The Simonides of Ceos was the author of the celebrated inscription on the tomb of the Spartans who fell at Thermopylae : — “ Stranger, tell the Lacedaemonians that we are hying here in obedience to their laws.” AEgina, Salamis, Crete, Rhodes, &c., have been de- scribed in other parts of this work. See Index, p. 84G. ASIA MINOR. Map No. IV. Asia Minor, or Lesser Asia, a celebrated region of antiquity, embraced the great peninsula of Western Asia, about equal in area to that of Spain, and bounded north by the Black Sea, east by Armenia and the Euphrates, south by Syria and the Mediterranean, and west by the Euxine Sea or Archipelago. The divisions by which it is best known in history are the nine coast provinces, Cilicia, Pamphylia, and Lycia, on the Mediterranean ; Caria, Lydia, and Mysia, on the Aegean ; Bithynia, Paphlagonia, and Pontus, on the Euxine ; and the four in- terior provinces, Galatia, Cappadocia, Phrygia, and Pisidia. All of these were, at times, inde- pendent kingdoms, and at others, dependent provinces. The most renowned of the early kingdoms of Asia Minor was that of Lydia, situate between the waters of the Hermus and the Maeander, and bounded on the east by Phrygia. Under the last of its kings, the famous Croesus, renowned for his wealth and munificence, the Lydian kingdom was extended so as to embrace the Grecian colonies on the Euxine coast, and nearly all Asia Minor as far as the Halys. On the overthrow of Croesus by Cyrus the Persian, B. C. 566, the Lydian kingdom was formed into three satrapies belonging to the Medo-Persian em- pire, under which it remained upward of two centuries. The Macedonian succeeded the Per- sian dominion, B. C. 331, from which time, during nearly two centuries, Asia Minor was subject to many vicissitudes consequent on the changing fortunes of Alexander’s successors. During the century immediately preceding the Christian era, the western provinces of the peninsula fell successively into the hands of the Romans, under whom they formed what was called the proconsulship of Asia, (see Map No. IX.,) the same which the Greek writers of the Roman era call Asia Proper, and in which sense we find the word Asia used in the New Testament, ( Acts, 2 : 9,) although in some passages Phrygia is spoken of as distinct from Asia. (Acts, 16 : 6, and Revelations.) The decline of the Roman power exposed the peninsula to fresh invasions from the East; and at the period of the first crusade the Mohammedans had spread over almost the whole peninsula. Asia Minor now constitutes a pachalick of Asiatic Turkey, under the name of Natolia, or Anatolia — a corruption of a Greek word, ( avaroh /,) meaning the East , corresponding to the French word Levant. The Greek colonists of Asia Minor, who spread themselves along the coast from the Euxine to Syria, were at least equal, in commercial activity, refinement, and the cultivation of the arts, to their European brethren. Among the Grecian poets, philosophers, and historians of Asia Minor, we may mention, in poetry, Homer, Hesiod, Sappho, and Alcasus ; in philosophy, Thales, Pythag' oras, and \naxag’ oras ; and in history, Herod’ otus, Ct6sias, and Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Anatolia is now occupied bv. a mixed population of Turks and Greeks, Arme- nians and Jews ; besides wandering tribes of Kurds and Turcomans in the interior, engaged partly m pastoral, and partly in marauding occupations. PERSIAN EMPIRE. Map No. V. Abcient Persia comprehended, in its utmost extent, all the countries between the rbei Indus and the Mediterranean, and from the Euxine and Caspian Seas to the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean ; but in its more limited acceptation it denoted a particular province, bounded on the north by Media and Parthia, on the east by Carmania, on the south by the Persian GfJ£, and on the west by Susiana. (See Map.) This was the original seat of the conquerc 8 iff Asia. Great obscurity rests on the early history -of the nations embraced within the limits < i &' 6 Persian empire ; but about the middle of the sixth century B. C., Cyrus, supposed by some to have been grandson of Astyages, the last Median monarch, being elected leader of the Persian hordes, became, by their assistance, a powerful conqueror, at a time when the Median and Babylonian kingdoms were on the decline, and on their ruins founded the Persian empire, which properly dates from the capture of Babylon, B. C. 536. Cambyses, generally supposed to be the Ahasuerus of Scripture, succeeded Cyrus ; then followed the brief reign of the usurper Smerdis, after whom Darius Hystaspes was elevated to the throne, 521 B. C. Darius was both a legislator and conqueror, and his long and successful reign exerted a powerful influence over the destinies of Western Asia. Under his rule the Persian empire attained its greatest extent. (See Map.) His vast realm he divided into twenty satrapies or provinces, and ap- pointed the tribute which each was to pay ; but his government was little more than an or ganized system of taxation. The attempts of Darius to reduce Greece to his sway were de- feated at Marathon ; ! B. C. 490 ;) and the mighty armament of Xerxes, his son and successor, was destroyed in the battles of Sal' amis, Platae'a, and Myc' ale. The Medo-Persian empire itself was finally overthrown by Alexander the Great, in the battle of Arbela, B. C. 331. The Macedo-Grecian kingdom of Alexander succeeded to the vast Persian domains, with the additional provinces of Greece, Thrace, and Macedon — thus exceeding the Persian kingdom in extent. Abouybe middle of the third century B. C., the Parthians, under Arsaces, one of their nobles, arose against the successors of Alexander, and established the Parthian empire, which, under its sixth monarch, Mithridates I., attained its highest grandeur— extending from the Euphrates to the Indus. (See Parthia , p. 179.) The Parthian empire lasted nearly four hundred and eighty years— from B. C. 250 to A. D. 226, at which latter period the Persians proper, taking advantage of the weakened state of the empire under the Seleucidae, rebelled, and founded a new dynasty, that of the Sassanidce. (See Note, Persian History, p. 249.) The Persian empire under the Sassanidm continued until the year 636, when it was overthrown by the Moslems in the great battle of the Cadesiah. (See p. 249.) Persia then continued a province of the caliphs for more than two centuries, when the sceptre was wrested from them by the chief of a bandit tribe. After this period Persia was wasted, for many centuries, by foreign oppression and internal disorder, (see pp. 287—311—351,) when, toward the end of the sixteenth century, order was restored, and Persia again rose to distinction under the government of Shah Abbas, surnamed the Great, (p. 351.) The present kingdom of Persia is' reduced to the limits of the ancient provinces of Persia, Media, Carmania, Parthia, the country of the Matieni, and the southern coasts of the Caspian Sea. The Turkish territories extend some distance east of the Tigris ; Russia is in possession the country between the Euxine or Black and Caspian Seas, embracing a part of Armenia ; nd- on 'he east the now independent but constantly changing kingdoms of Cabool and Belo- histaD embrace the ancient Bactria, India, and Gedrosia, together with parts of Margiana and Aria, (row eastern Khorassan,) and the country of the ancient Saraifgaei. The present Persia hns sd area of four hundred and fifty thousand square miles, with a population of eight or ten millions. The most striking physical features of Persia are its chains of rocky mountains ; its long arid valleys without rivers ; and its vast salt or sandy deserts. The population is a mixture of tue ancient Persian stock with Arabs and Turks. The language spoken is the Parsee,- simple in struUiire, and, like the French and English, having few inflections. The religion oi the country \r> Mohammedanism (of the Sheah sect, or adherents of Ali,) which seems, how ever, to "oe n^pldly on the decline. Ho. V. PALESTINE. Map No. VI. A brief geographical account of Palestink has been already given on page 40 accounts of the Moabites, Canaanites, Midianites, Philistines, Ammonites, — and of the Jordan, Jabesh* Gilead, Gilgal, Gath, Gilboa, Hebron, Tyre, Sidon, Joppa, Syria, Damascus, Kabbah, Edom, Samaria, Gaza, Bethoron, Mount Tabor, &c., may be found by referring to the Index at the end of the volume. Joshua divided Palestine, or the Holy Land, among the twelve Israelitish tribes, whose localities may be learned from the accompanying map. The Children of Israel remained united under one government until the death of Solomon, when ten of the twelve tribes, under Jeroboam, rebelled against Rehoboam, the son and successor of Solomon. The tribe of Judah, with a part, and part only, of the little clan of Benjamin, remained faithful to Rehoboam. From this time forward Judah and Israel were separate kingdoms. 1’he dividing line was about ten miles north of Jerusalem, between Jericho and Gibeah, — the former belonging to Israel, the latter to Judah. Edom, or Idumea, and the possession of the capital, Jerusalem, therefore fell to Judah ; but four-fifths of the territory, and the sovereignty over the Moabites, belonged to Israel. The Syrians (Aramites) and Ammonites, after this, were no longer under subjection. The history of Israel from the time of Jeroboam to the carrying away of the ten tribes captive to Assyria, (B. C. 721,) was a series of calamities and revolutions. The reigns of its seventeen princes average only fifteen years each ; and these seventeen kings belonged to seven different families, which were placed on the throne by seven sanguinary conspiracies. With the captivity, the history of the ten tribes ends. Josephus assures us that they never returned to their own land. The history of Judah, after the revolt of the ten tribes, is little more than the history of a single town, Jerusalem. After the lapse of three hundred and eighty-nine years Jerusalem was taken by Nebuchadnezzar, (B. C. 606, and afterwards, B. C. 587,) and Judea became tributary to the king of Babylon. The termination of the captivity of Judah, after a period of seventy years, was the act of Cyrus, soon after the conquesj of Babylon, B. C. 530 ;* but it was a com- mon saying among the Jews, that “ only the bran, that is, the dregs of the people, returned to Jerusalem, but that all the fine flour stayed behind^ at Babylon.” At the time of the Persian conquest by Alexander, Judea, along with the rest of the Persian provinces, passed imder the Macedonian dominion. After the death of Alexander we find Palestine alternately subject to the kings of Syria and Egypt ; about the middle of the second century B. C,, Judea was rendered independent by the Maccabees, (pp. 112—114,) and m the year 63 B. C. it was conquered by Pompey, when it became a p^rt of the Roman empire. (See p. 177.) Under the Roman dominion, Palestine was divided into five provinces, viz.: Upper and Lower Galilee, Samaria, Judea, and Peraea,— situated as follows : The divisions of Asher and Naphtali, (see Map,) embracing the country of the Sidonians, formed Upper Galilee the tribes of Zebulun and Issachar, embracing the country of the Perizites, formed Lower Galilee ; —the half tribe of Manasseh west of the Jordan, and the tribe of Ephraim, embracing the country of the Hivites, formed Samaria;— the tribes of Benjamin, Judah, and Simeon, em bracing the countries of the Jebusites, Amorite3, Hittites, and Philistines, formed Judea ;— the tribes of Reuben, Gad, and the half tribe of Manasseh east of the Jordan, embracing the >untries'of the Moabites and Ammonites, and the kingdom of Bashan, formed Peraea. Palestine remained under the Roman dominion (part of the time under the Eastern or reek empire) until the year 636, when Omar conquered Jerusalem, (see p. 249 :) after being more than four hundred years subject to the Arabian caliphs, the country fell into the hands of the Turks, (see p. 268,) who proved more oppressive masters than any of their predecessors. Then followed the Crusades ; and about four hundred and sixty years after the conquest of Omar, the Holy city was rescued from the Mohammedan yoke, (see p. 283 ;) but after a series of changes, in the year 1519 Jerusalem came finally into the hands of the Turks, whose flag has ever since floated over its sacred places. The inhabitants of Palestine are a mixture of various races— consisting of the * lescendants pf the ancient inhabitants of the country, their Arab conquerors, Turks, Crusaders, wandering Bedouins, Kurds, &c., but all now equally naturalized, and distributed into various classes or tribes according to their several religious systems. I*o, VI. TURKEI IN EUROPE. Map No. VII. European Turkey, including Moldavia, Wallachia, and Servia, which are connected vr.ti 'he Porte only by the slenderest ties, is bounded on the north by Slavonia, Hungary, Transylvania — divisions of the Austrian empire — from which it is separated by the Save, the Danube, and the eastern Carpathian mountains ; on the north-east it is separated from the Russian province of Bessarabia by the Pruth ; on the east it has the Black Sea, the Bosporus, the Sea of Marmora, and the Hellespont ; on the south the Archipelago and Greece ; and on the west the Mediterranean, the Adriatic, and the Austrian province of Dalmatia. Area of European Turkey about two hundred and ten thousand square miles ; population about fifteen millions. The leading events in the history of European Turkey may be stated as follows : The ancient Byzanteum founded by Byzas the Megarean, B*C. 656 destroyed by Septimius Severus in his contest with Niger, A. D. 196 -.—rebuilt by Constantine, who gave it his own name, and made it the capital of the Roman empire, A. D. 328 captured in 1204 by the Crusaders, who retained it till 1261 : — taken in 1453 by the Turks, who thus put an end to the Eastern or Greek empire, and firmly established their power in Europe. The Turkish arms continue to maintain their ascendency over those of Christendom until their check in 1683 by the famous John Sobieski, in the siege of Vienna. (See p. 389.) Then began the decline of the Ottoman power: it received a severe blow by the victories of Prince Eugene in 1697, (see p. 390;) since which period province after province has been dismembered from the empire, which, during the last century, has been saved from dissolution only by the mutual jealousies and animosities of its Christian neighbors. The divisions by which European Turkey is best known in history are Rumilia, Bulgaria, Moldavia, Wallachia, Servia, Bosnia, Turkish Croatia, Hersegovina, Albania, Thessaly, and Macedonia, — for which, see the accompanying Map. Rumilia, bordering on the Black Sea, the Sea of Marmora, and the Archipelago, coritaining the cities of Adrianople ^md Constantinople, and watered by the Maritza, the ancient Hebrus, is coterminous with the ancient Thrace, (p. 71 .) Bulgaria , separated from Rumilia by the Balkan range of mountains, having Sophia for its capital, and the Danube for its northern boundary, corresponds to the ancient Moesia Inferior, (p. 200.) Moldavia and Wallachia , separated from Transylvania by the Carpathian mountains, correspond to the ancient Dacia conquered by Trajan, (p. 200-3.) The inhabitants, descendants of the ancient Dacians, call themselves Roumuni , or Romans. Servia , peopled by Slavonians — corresponding to the ancient Moesia Superior, formed an independent kingdom in the Middle Ages. It was conquered by the Turks in 1365 ; but since that period it has fre- quently rebelled against its Turkish masters. The internal government is now wholly in the hands of the Servians, who pay a small annual tribute to the sultan. Bosnia , now a pachalic of Turkey, comprMng also under its government Tuokish Croatia and Hersdgovina, and occu- pying the north-western extremity of the empire, was anciently included in Lower Pannonia. In the Middle Ages it first belonged to the Eastern empire, and afterwards became a separate kingdom dependent upon Hungary. It was conquered by the Turks in 1480, after a war of seventeen years ; but it was not till 1522 that Solyman the Magnificent finally annexed it to the Turkish dominions. Albania , a large province bordering on the Adriatic, is nearly the same as the ancient Epirus, (p. 44.1 Thessaly and Macedonia preserve their ancient names and limits. Constantinople, the capital of the Turkish dominions, occupies a triangular promontory near the eastern extremity ;of the province of Rumilia, at the junction of the Sea of Marmora with the Thracian Bosporus. It is separated from its extensive suburbs Galata, Pera, &c., on • the north, by the noble harbor called the Golden Horn. Like Rome, Constantinople was originally built on seven hills, The city is about thirteen miles in circuft— comprises an area of about two thousand acres— and has a population, exclusive of its suburbs, of about five hundred thousand. The seraglio , containing the palace, mint, arsenal, public offices, &c., occupies the site of the ancient Byzanteum, (see p. 218,) at the apex of the triangle. It is about three miles in circuit, and is entirely surrounded by walls. The Bosporus, or Channel of Con- stantinople, is about seventeen miles in length, with a width varying from half a mile to two miles. The channel is deep ; the banks abrupt, with stately cliffs ; and the adjacent country is ■?nrivalled for beauty. No. VII. ANCIENT ITALY. Map No. VIII. Ancient Italy was called by the Greeks Hesperia, from its western ntuation in relation t« Greece ; and from the Latin poets it received the names Ausonia, Satunda, and CEnotria. (See also p. 123.) About the time of Aristotle, (B. C. 380,) the Greeks divided Italy into six countries or regions, — Ausonia or Opica, Tyrrhenia, Iapygia, Ombria, Liguria, and Henetia ; but the di- visions by which it is best known in Roman history are those given on the accompanying Map, — Cisalpine Gaul, Etruria, Umbria, Picenum, the country of the Sabines, Latium, Cam- pania, Samnium, Apulia, Calabria, Lucania, and Brutiorum Ager. Cisalpine Gaul, or Gaul this side of the - Alps , embracing all northern Italy beyond the Rubicon, was inhabited by Gallic tribes, which, as early as six hundred years B. C., began to pour over the Alps into this extensive and fertile territory. Etruria , embracing the country west and north of the Tiber, was inhabited by a nation which had attained to an advanced de- gree of civilization before the founding of Rome. Umbria embraced the country east of Etruria, from the Rubicon on the north to the river Nar, which separated it from the Sabine territory on the south. Picenum , inhabited by the Picentes, was a country on the Adriatic, having the river ASsis on the north, the Matrinus on the south, and on the west the Apennines, which separated it from Umbria. The Country of the Sabines , at the period when it was marked out with the greatest clearness and precision, was separated from Latium by the river Anio, from Etruria by the Tiber, from Umbria by the Nar, and from Picenum by the central ridge of the Apennines. (See also Map No. X.) Latium was south of Etruria and the country of the Sabines, from which it was separated by the Tiber and the Anio. Campania , separated from Latium by the river Liris, was called the garden of Italy. The Campanian nation conquered by the Romans was composed of Oscans, Tuscans, Samnites, and Greeks ; tha latter having formed numerous colonies in southern Italy. Samnium , the country of the Samnites, bordered on the Adriatic, having Picenum on the north, Apulia on the south, and Latium and Campania on the west. The ambitious and warlike Samnites not unfrequently brought into the field a force of eighty thousand foot and eight thousand horse. Apulia , inhabited by tha early Daunii, Peucetii, and Messapii, bordered on the Adriatic on the east ; and, on the west, on the territories of the Samnites, the Campanians, and Lucan ians. Calabria , called also by the Greeks Iapygia, embraced the south-eastern extremity of the Italian peninsula, answering nearly to what is now called Terra di Otranto. Lucania , inhabited by the warlike Lucani, who carried on a successful war with the Greek colonies of southern Italy, was separatee from Apulia and Calabria on the north-east by the Bradanus. Brutiorum Ager , the Country of the Brutii, comprised the southern extremity of the peninsula, now called Calabria Ultra. The Brutii, the most barbarous of the Italian trib&s, were reduced by the Romans soon after the withdrawal of Pyrrhus from Italy. Since the downfall of the Roman empire Italy has never been united in one State. Aftei having been successively possessed by the Heruli, Ostrogoths, Greeks, and Lombards, Charle magne annexed it to the empire of the Franks in 774 : from 888 till the establishment of the republic of Milan in 1150, it generally belonged, with the exception of the territory of the Ve netians, to the German emperors. In 1535, Milan, then a duchy, came into the possession of the emperor Charles V. Since the war of the Spanish succession, the duchies of Milan and Mantua have generally belonged to Austria, with the exception of the short time they forme/ a part of the Cisalpine republic and the French empire. Venice was a republic from thf seventh century till 1797, It was confirmed to Austria by the treaty of 1815. The presen; Italian States are the kingdom of Lombardy and Venice, forming a part of the Austrian empire — kingdom of Sardinia — kingdom of Naples and Sicily — Grand-duchy of Tuscany— States oi the Church— Duchies of Parma, Modena, and Lucca— and the little republic of San-Marino. The French rule in Italy was a great blessing to that unhappy country ; “ but the coalition,’’ says Sismondi, “ destroyed all the good conferred by France.” The state of the people con- trasts very disadvantageous^ with the fertility of the soil and the beauty of the climate. '< How has kind Heav’n adorn’d the happy land, And Tyrani p usurps her happy plains V And scattered blessings with a wasteful hand ! The poor inhabitant beholds in vain But what avail her unexhausted stores, The redd’ning orange and the swelling grain, Her blooming mountains and her sunny shores, Joyless he sees the growing oils and wines, With all the gifts that Heav’n and earth impart, And in the myrtle’s fragrant shade repines The smiles of nature and the charms of art, Starves, in the midst of natures's bounty curs! While proud Oppression in her valleys reigns, And in th« laden vineyard d >es 'lor thirst.’ No. VIII. AM tmEW .WAT^ Wtlttlie KcighlioRing Countries mms ©sir ¥® mns msmm • \ _/ Seale ef Miles. -R- e y f t \pbcP lerui m.% fcriiec), If'/'on'cC. ^^&ljJSmvnlh MB ROMAN EMPIRE. Map No. IX. Regal Rome, or Rome under the Kings, occupying a period of about two hundred and forty years, from the founding of the city, 753 B. C., to the overthrow of royalty, 510 B. C., ruled over only a narrow strip of seacoast, from the Tiber southward to Terracina, an extent of about seventy miles, (see Map No. X ;) but it already carried on an extensive commerce with Sardinia, Sicily, and Carthage. , Republican Rome, occupying a period of about four hundred and eighty years, from the overthrow of royalty 510 B. C. to the accession of Augustus, 28 B. C., extended the Roman do- minion, not only over all Italy, but also over all the islands of the Mediterranean — over Egypt, and all Northern Africa from Egypt westward to the Atlantic Ocean — over Syria and all Asia Minor — over Thrace, Achaia or Greece, Macedonia, and Illyricum — and overall Gaul, and most of Spain. Imperial Rome occupies a period of about five hundred years, extending from the accession of Augustus, 28 B. C., to the overthrow of the Western empire of the Romans, A. D. 476. Under Augustus, the Roman dominion was extended by the conquest of Meesia, corresponding to the present Turkish provinces of Bulgaria and Servia — of Panvonia, corresponding to the eastern part of southern Austria, and Hungary south of the Danube, Styria, Austrian Croatia, and Slavonia, and the northern part of Bosnia— of JVoricum , corresponding to the Austrian Salzburg, western Styria, Carinthia, Austria north to the Danube, and a small part of south- eastern Bavaria — Rhtstia, extending over the country of the Tyrol and eastern Switzerland — and Vindelicia , corresponding to southern Wirtemberg and Bavaria south of the Danube. (See also Maps Nos. VII. and XVII.) On the death of Augustus, therefore, the Roman empire was bounded by the Rhine and the Danube on the north ; by the Euphrates on the east ; by the sandy deserts of Arabia and Africa on the south ; and by the Atlantic Ocean on the west. The southern part of Britain, or Brittania, was reduced by Ostorius, in the reign of Claudius ; and Agricola, in the reign of Domitian, extended the Roman dominion to the Frith of Forth, and the Clyde. With this exception, the empire continued within the limits given it by Augustus, until the accession of Trajan, who, in the year 105, added to it Dacia, a region north of the Danube, and corresponding to Wallachia, Transylvania, Moldavia, and all Hungary east of the Theiss and north of the Danube. Trajan also, in his eastern expedition, descended the Tigris from the mountains of Armenia to the Persian Gulf, and for a brief period extended the sway of Rome over Colchis, Armenia, Mesopotamia, and Assyria; and even the Parthian monarch accepted his crown from the hands of the emperor. In the time of Trajan, therefore, who died A. D. 117, the Roman empire attained its greatest extent, — being, at that period, the greatest monarchy the world has ever known, — extending in length more than three thou- sand miles, from the Western Ocean to the Euphrates, and more than two thousand in breadth, from the northern limits of Dacia to the deserts of Africa,— and embracing an area of sixteen hundred thousand square miles of the most fertile land on the face of the globe. Well might it be called the Roman World. Adrian, or Hadrian, the successor of Trajan, voluntarily began the system of retrenchment which was forced upon his successors. In order to preserve peace on the frontiers he aban- doned all the conquests of his predecessor except Dacia, and bounded the eastern provinces by the Euphrates. The unity of this mighty empire was first broken by the division into Eastern and Western in the year 395. In the year 476 the Western Empire fell under the repeated attacks of the barbarians of Germany and Scythia, the rude ancestors of the most polished na- tions of Europe. The Eastern Empire survived nearly a thousand years longer, but finally fell under the power of the Turks, who took Constantinople, its capita in the year 1453, and made U the capital of the Ottoman empire. Nc. rx 4NUENT ROME, Map No. X. In describing Ancient Rome our attention is first directed to the relative localities of the Seven Hills on which Rome was originally built— the Aventine, Coelian, Palatine, Esquiline, Capitoline, Viminal, and Quirinal— all included within the walls of Servius Tullius, built about the year 550 B. C. About two hundred and eighty years later the emperor Aurelian commenced the erection of a new wall, which was completed by Probus five years afterward. The cir- cumference of the Servian town was about six miles ; that given it by the wall of Aurelian, which extended to the right bank of the Tiber and inclosed a part of the Janiculan mount, was about twelve ; although the city extended far beyond the limits of the latter. The modem rampart surrounds, substantially, the same area as that of Aurelian. The greater part of Modern Rome covers the flat surface of the Campus Martius, the Capi- toline and Quirinal mounts, and the right bank of the Tiber from Hadrian’s Mausoleum, (now the Castle of St. Angelo,) south to and including the Janiculan mount. The ancient city of the Seven Hills is nearly all contained within the old walls of Servius. Almost the whole of this area, with the exception of the Capitoline and Quirinal hills, is now a wide waste of piles of shattered architecture rising amid vineyards and rural lanes, exhibiting no tokens of habitation except a few mouldering convents, villas, and cottages. Beginning our survey at the Capitoline hill, on which once stood the famous temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, we find there no vestiges of ancient grandeur, save about eighty feet of what are believed to have been the foundations of the temple. At the northern extremity of the hill we still discern the fatal Tarpeian Rock, surrounded by a cluster of old and wretched hovels, while rains encumber its base to the depth of twenty feet. The open space between the Capitoline, Esquiline, and Palatine hills, is covered by relics of ancient buildings interspersed among modern churches and a few paltry streets. Here was the Great Roman Forum — a large space surrounded by and filled with public buildings, temples, statues, arches, &c., nearly all of which have disappeared ; and the surface pavement on which they stood is now covered with their ruins to a depth of from fifteen to thirty feet. The space which the Forum occupied has been called, until recently, Campo Vaccino, or the Field of Cows ; and it is in reality a market place for sheep, pigs, and cattle. In early times there was a little lake between the Capitoline and Palatine hills. In time this was converted into a marsh ; and the most ancient ruin which remains to us, the Cloaca Maxima , or great drain, built by the Tarquins, was designed for carrying off its waters. This drain, still performing its destined service, opens into the Tiber with a vault fourteen feet in height and as many in width. The beautiful circle of nineteen Corinthian columns near the Tiber, around the church of Santa Maria, has been usually styled the Temple of Vesta — sup- posed to belong to the age of the Antonines. On the Palatine hill Augustus erected the earliest of the Palaces of the Ccesars ; Claudius ex tended them, and joined the Palatine to the Capitoline by a bridge ; and towards the northern point of the Palatine, Nero built his “ Golden House,” fronted by a vestibule in which stood the emperor’s colossal statue. The Aventine rises from the river steep and bare, surmounted by a solitary convent. On the Ccelian are remains of the very curious circular Temple of Faunus , built by Claudius. Southward are the ruins of the Baths of Caracalla , occupying a surface equal to one-sixteenth of a square mile. The building, or range of buildings, was im- mense, — containing four magnificent temples dedicated to Apollo, ABsculapius, Hercules, and Bacchus,— a grand circular vestibule, with baths on each side for cold, tepid, warm, and sea- bathing — in the centre an immense square for exercise — and beyond it a noble hall with sixteen hundred marble seats for the bathers, and, at each end of the hall, libraries. On each side of the building was a court surrounded by porticoes, with an odeum for music, and, in the middle, a spacious basin for swimming. There was also a gymnasium for running, wrestling, & c., and around the whole a vast colonnade opening into spacious halls where the poets declaimed, and philosophers gave lectures to their auditors. But the immense halls are now roofless, and the wind sighs through the aged trees that have taken root in the pavements. South of the Palatine was the Circus Maximus , which is said to have covered the spot wher? the games were celebrated when the Romans seized the Sabine women. It was more thap 'w^ ‘housant feet in length, and, in its greatest extent, contained seals for two hundred Ghisruxn y.J’rfksimerius] C. V U u! ■oaiia feramna \ /T ai-quiiM 1 ^^orac'lAi i Sabatinui Veil ^ idenap^J SABINES' ^^^%oColla,t£a., ' > , xv^ oTuscnlu PrtBi3.estce\ '/( VemLa: oWoj-ba Lppif Forum. ^ Milas. Hadrian's ' Mausoleum i Column of A . ' Antoninus 11 \ _ Clrcus/W, Agcmalis Pai>£heon Ti.hurtr'iiian Theatre oP^ . M arcullu sQ i r nestim’af^, "Forum.^ mpMUiBatoj V \ {^ lOJtWt. \ oTcmple - ofi Claudius.;.; HA tSnyfaly 5b4 siitl sixty thousand spectators. We can still trace its shape, out the s ructure lias entirely tig. appeared. In the open space eastward of the Great Forum stands tho Coliseum or Flavian Amphi- theatre, the boast of Rome and of the world. This gigantic edifice, which was begun by Ves- pasian and completed by Titus, is in form an ellipse, and covers an area of about live and a-half acres. The external elevation consisted of four stories,— each of the three lower stories having eighty arches supported by half columns, Doric in the first range, Ionic in the second, and Corinthian in the third. The wall of the fourth story was faced with Corinthian pilasters, and lighted by forty rectangular windows. The space surrounding the central elliptical arena was occupied with sloping galleries resting on a huge mass of arches; and ascending towards the summit of the external wall. One hundred and sixty staircases led to the galleries. A movable awning covered the whole, with the exception of the Podium, or covered gallery for the emperor and persons of high rank. Within the area of the Coliseum, gladiators, martyrs,, slaves, and wild beasts, combated on the Roman festivals; and here the blood of both men and animals flowed in torrents to furnish amusement to the degenerate Romans. The Coliseum is now partially in ruins; scarcely a half presents its original height; the uppermost gallery has disappeared ; the second range is much broken ; the lowest is nearly perfect ; but the Podium is in a very ruinous state. From its enormous mass “ walls, palaces, half cities have been reared ;” but Benedict XIV. put a stop to its destruction by consecrating the whole to the martyrs whose blood had been spilled there. In the middle of the once bloody arena stands a crucifix ; and around this, at equal distances, fourteen altars, consecrated to different saints, are erected on the dens once occupied by wild beasts. The principal ruins on the Esquiline, a part of them extending their intricate corridors on the heights overlooking the Coliseum, have been called the Baths and the Palace of Titus ; but although it is evident that baths constituted a part of their plan, the design of the whole is not known. What is called the Temple of Minerva Medica, in a garden near the eastern walls, is a decagonal ruin, supposed to belong to the age of the Antonines. The Baths of Diocletian , on the Viminal mount, appear to have resembled, in their general arrangement, those of Caracalla. Still farther to the north-east are the remains of the camp erected by Sejanus, the minister of Tiberius, for the Praetorian guards. In the beautiful gardens of the historian Sallust, on the eastern declivity of the Pincian mount, are the remains of a temple and circus, supposed to belong either to the Augustan age, or to the last days of the Republic. On the western ascent of the thickly-peopled Quirinal, whose heights are crowned by the palace and gardens of the pope, are extensive ruins of walls, vaults, and porticoes, belonging to the baths of Constantine. They are now surrounded by the beautiful gardens of the Colonna palace. Farther south, be- tween the Quirinal and Capkoline, some striking remains of the Forums of Nerva and Trajan are still visible. Of the numerous ruins in the Campus Martius, we have room for only a brief notice. Of the Theatre of Marcellus, eleven arches of the exterior walls still remain. Of the Theatre of Pompey , the foundation arches may be seen in the cellars and stables of the Palazzio Pio. The Flaminian Circus and the Circus Agonalis are entirely in ruins. The Column of Antoninus and the Tomb of Augustus are still standing, with their summits much lowered. The Pantheon , the most perfect of all the remains of ancient Rome, is a temple of a circular form, built by Agrippa. It was dedicated to Jupiter the Avenger, but besides the statue of this god, it contained those of the other heathen deities, formed of various materials — gold, silver, bronze, and marble. The portico of this temple is one hundred and ten feet long by forty-four in depth, and is supported by sixteen Corinthian columns, each of the shafts con- sisting of a single piece of Oriental granite, forty-two feet in height. The bases and capital are of white marble. The main building consists of a vast circular drum, with niches flanked by- columns, above which a beautiful and perfectly preserved cornice runs round the whole build- ing. Over a second story, formed by an attic sustaining an upper cornice, rises, to the height of one hundred and forty-three feet, the beautiful dome, which is divided internally into square panels supposed to have been originally inlaid with bronze. A circular aperture in the dome admits the only light which the place receives. The consecration of this temple (A. D. © >8) as a Christian church, has preserved, for the admiration of the moderns, this mod beautiful of heathen fanes. Christian altars now fill the recess where race stood the most famous status »f the gods of the heathen world. No. XI. CHART OF THE WORLD. Map No. XI. Map No. XI. is a Chart of the World on Mercator’s projection — a Chart of History , ex- hibiting the world as known to Europeans at the period of the discovery of America — and a Ckart of Isothermal lines , or lines of equal heat, showing the comparative mean annual tern perature of different parts of the Earth’s surface. It will be observed that General History, previous to the discovery of America, is confined *0 a small portion of the Earth’s surface ; as represented by the light portions of the Chart ; while the whole Western Continent and Greenland, most of Africa and Asia, and their islands, and parts of Northern Europe and Iceland, were unknown to Europeans, and in the darkness of barbarism. It would seem, therefore, that the history of the World has but just com- menced. The Isothermal lines show that the temperature of a place does not depend wholly upon its latitude. Thus the southern limit of perpetually frozen ground in the northern hemisphere (at a mean annual temperature of thirty-two degrees Fahrenheit) follows a line ranging from below fifty-five degrees of latitude to above seventy. The mean annual temperature of London, at fifty-one and a-half degrees north latitude, is fifty degrees of Fahrenheit, the same as that of Philadelphia, which is eleven and a-half degrees of latitude farther south. The line of greatest heat, (at a mean annual temperature of eighty-two and four-tenths degrees of Fahrenheit,) is more than ten degrees of latitude north of the Equator in South America, in Africa, and southern Hindostan ; and about eight degrees south of the Equator in a part of the Indian Ocean be- tween Borneo and Hew Holland. The sea is, generally, considerably warmer in winter than the land, and cooler in summer. Continents and large islands are found to be warmer on their western sides than on the eastern. The extremes of temperature are experienced chiefly in large inland tracts, and little felt in small islands remote from continents. Had the Arctic regions been entirely of land, the intense heat of summer and the cold of winter would have been equally fatal to animal life. BATTLE GROUNDS OF THE WARS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION AND THE WARS OF NAPOLEON. Map No. XII. The wars growing out of the French Revolution, of which those of Napoleon were a con- tinuation, embrace a period of nearly twenty-three years, from the defeat of the Austrians at Jemappes on the 17th of November, 1792, to the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo on the 18th of June, 1815. The accompanying Map presents at a glance the vast theatre on which were exhibited the thousand Scenes in this mighty Drama of human suffering. The thickly-dotted Spanish penin- sula may be regarded as one great battle-field, where Frenchman, Spaniard, Portuguese, and Briton, sank in the death struggle together. Those dark spots where the “pealing drum,” the “ waving standards,” and the “ trumpets clangor,” invited to slaughter, cluster thickly around the eastern boundaries of France, including Belgium and northern Italy they are seen in far-off Egypt and Palestine, recalling Napoleon’s dreams of Eastern conquest ; and they strew the route to Moscow, where, from the fires of the Kremlin, and amid the snows of a Russian inter, the French eagles commenced a lasting retreat. As we look over this vast gladiatorial arena of frantic, struggling Life, and agonizing Death, our thoughts naturally turn from its mingled horrors and glories to rest upon the commanding genius, — the wizard spirit, — of him “ who rode upon the whirlwind and dire, ted the storm”— of him whom Byron well describes as a mighty Gambler, “Whose game was empires, and whose stakes were thrones, Whose table earth, whose dice were human bones.” But the French Revolution and the wars of Napoleon, with all the suffering which they oc- casioned, have not been unattended with useful results in urging forward the march of European civilization. The moral character of Napoleon, the most prominent actor in the drama, has been variously drawn by friends and foes ; but the towering height, the lightning-like rapidity and the brilliancy, of his genius, have never been questioned i y his most bitter revilers. FRANCE, SPAIN, AND PORTUGAL, Map No. XIII Franck, (ancient Gaul,) bordering on three seas, and being enclosed by natural boundaries on all sides except the north-east, where her natural limits are the Rhine, is admirably situated for a commanding influence in European affairs ; and, besides, her large population, the active spirit of her people, the fertility of her soil, and the amenity of her climate, place her among the foremost of the great nations of the earth in power and resources. When first known to the Romans, Gaul was divided between the Belgae, the Celtse, and the Aquitani ; the Belgae or Belgians between the Seine and Lower Rhine the Celts between the Seine and Garonne ; and the Aquitani between the Garonne and Pyrenees ; but the Romans, under Augustus, made four divisions of Gaul ; — Belgica, in the north-east ; — Lugdunensis, be- tween the Seine and Loire ; — Aquitania, between the Loire and Pyrenees ; — and Narbonensis, in the south-east. None of the barbarian tribes of Europe passed through a more agitated or brilliant career than the ancient Gauls, the ancestors of the French people. They burned Rome, conquered Macedonia, forced Thermopylae, pillaged Delphi, besieged Carthage, and established the empire ot Galatia in Asia Minor; but, after a century of partial conflicts, and nine years of general war with Caesar, they yielded to the overshadowing power of Rome. When Rome fell, Gaul was overrun by the Germanic nations : then came the beginning of the empire of the Franks — the encroachments and defeat of the Saracens— the vast empire of Charlemagne — and then the increasing power of the feudal nobility, until, in the year 987, the last of the Carlovingian princes possessed only the town of Laon ! Under Hugh Capet even, dukes, counts, and minor seigneurs, shared among themselves nearly all of the modern kingdom. But by degrees the great fiefs, one after another, fell to the crown ; and before the close of the seventeenth century all France was united under one monarchy in the person of Louis XIV. Thus, with her history, the geography of France has been continually changing ; but those divisions of her territory best known in general history are the old Provinces, as given on the accompanying Map. These provinces, during the Middle Ages, were all either duchies or minor seignories ruled by the feudal nobility ; and their history is, therefore, virtually, for a »ong period, that of separate kingdoms. (See description of Provence, Brittany, Normandy, Aquitaine, Burgundy, Roussillon, &c., pp. 300, 371-2, 379.) ^At the period of the French Revolution the thirty-three provincial divisions were abolished, and France was then divided into eighty-six Departments or Prefectures ; these into three hundred and sixty-three Arrondissements ; these into two thousand eight hundred and forty-five Cantons ; and these latter into thirty-eight thousand six hundred and twenty-three Communes. Spain, anciently Hispania, a name given to the entire peninsula beyond the Pyrenees, was not fully conquered by the Romans till the time of Augustus, who made three divisions of the country ; — 1st, Ratica, in the south of Spain, embracing the more modern province of Anda- lusia ; — 2d, Lusitania, embracing all Portugal south of the Douro, and, in addition, most of Estremadura and Salamanca ; — and, 3d, Tarraconensis, embracing the remainder, and greater portion, of the peninsula. About the time of the subversion of the Western empire of the Romans, Spain was overrun by the Vandals, and other Gothic tribes; and, a century later, the Christianized Visigoths estab- lished their supremacy in every part of the peninsula. At the beginning of the eighth century the Moors from Africa overran the whole country, but after their defeat by Charles Martel in France, (see p. 253,) the Christians began to make head against them, founded the kingdom of Leon about the middle of the eighth century, and, from that period, gradually extended their power until, in 1492, Granada, the last Moorish kingdom, yielded to the arms of Ferdinand ot Aragon, and, soon after, the whole Spanish peninsula was united under one government in 1 i 39 Portugal became an independent kingdom: from 3580 to 1640 i: was a Spanish province ; but at the latter period it regained its independence. For histo rical acco Hits of Navarre, Aragon, Cj stile, Leon, and Granada, see p. 317, — Portugal, 318. °D tirikirkr H7S \ oBrusself l ' ‘ ( ttermiu DrYfiy?---. 'VP ERCHEL ClIAi -r-'jJicTico *\Z/Man; Iciiartrfis' E R\R l irawx ).. — )■"" Guercto [aiyiARC m&esE, fu (f^f^amencany \ ' Artillery V 21 r4 PUBLISHED BY IVISON AND PHINNEY, NEW YORK, WILLSON’S HISTORICAL SERIES. } Stone Altar found at Copan , six feet square and four feet high. No. 3.— WILLSON’S AMERICAN HISTORY. School Edition. 12mo. Library Edition. 8vo. j| School Edition and University Edition, comprising Book I.— Historical Sketches ! of the Indian Tribes, with a Description of American Antiquities, and an Inquiry into j their Origin, and the Origin of the Indian Tribes. Book If. — History of the United < States, (same as the above,) with Appendices additional, showing, 1st. : our Relations t with European History during our Colonial existence ; an Account of the Reformation, * History of the Puritan Sects, &c. ; 2d, An Account of Parties in England during our j Revolution, and the European Wars in which England was involved by that Contest; 3d, An Examination of the Character, Tendency and Influence of our National Govern- ment, and an Historical Sketch of tLe Parties that divided the Country from toe close of the Revolution to the termination of the Second War witn England. Book III, Part 1. — History of the present British Provinces, from their Early Settlement by the French to the present time, comprising History of the Canadas, of Nova Scotia and Cape Breton, Prince Edward’s Island, New Brunswick and Newfoundland. Also, the Early History of Louisiana. Part 2.— History of Mexico, from the Conquest, by Cortez, to the commencement of the War with the United States in 1846. Part 3.— History of Texas, from the time of its discovery by La Salle in 1684, to the time of its admission into the American Union in 1845. Appendix. — Sketch of the Mexican War. One vol. large octavo. 706 pages. Book l. contains Plans and Drawings of all the principal Mounds and Ruins known to exist in our own territory, and in other portions of the Continent. The results of Stephen’s Travels in Central America and Yucatan are succinctly given ; and copies of the most interesting drawings, made by Mr. Catherveod, have been engraved ex- pressly for this work. NOTICE. Prom, the Madison Banner , Indiana. “It o mtains a very large quantity of matter, and is decidedly better adapted *or Schools and Academies than any other history of the American Continent. It will a .so prove invaluable to all persons and classes as a book of reference. Indeed, we have never perused any historical work with more satisfaction, interest, and delight.” 23 j PUBLISHED BY IVISON AND PHINNEY, NEW YORK WILLSON S HISTORICAL SERIES. r~t NOTICES OF WILLSON’S AMERICAN HISTORY, The From the Cincinnati Herald. compendium on the subject we have ever seen.” From the Brooklyn Eagle , JV. Y. | “ We have little but commendation to bestow on this handsome, neatly- printed ) work.” From the Cincinnati Chronicle. “ We commend this book to the public as one of universal interest.” From the New York Tribune. w The most succinct and comprehensive history of America that ha? alien under our notice.” No. 4. — WILLSON’ S OUTLINES OF GENEKAL History. Now first published, Aug. 1854. School Edition. 600 pages. Octavo. University Edition. 850 pages. Octavo. \ The Publishers submit (o Teachers, Superintendents of Schools, Sec., “ WILLSON’S J OUTLINES OF GENERAL HISTORY,” with the confident belief that it will commend { itself to them as decidedly superior to any other work on the same subject, j The SCHOOL EDITION of the Outlines embraces 600 octavo pages — extending I from the earliest Historic periods to the year 1852. In Grecian and Roman History, | the line fixed by historical criticism is drawn between the uncertain and legendary, and * the authentic. The results of the investigations of those able modern writers, Thirl- | wall, Grote, Niebuhr, and Arnold, are given — and the authorities on all disputed points { of general interest are cited. j A prominent characteristic of the work is its UNITY OF PLAN, which is preserved 1 throughout, — the attention of the reader being confined chiefly to those nations whose } successive history has exerted a marked influence on the civilization of mankind. Thus { we have, after a brief notice of the early Ages, the History of Greece, until that country, } and all the nations around the Mediterranean, are absorbed in the overshadowing power j of the Roman Empire then the Roman WORLD until the dissolution of the Western J Empire ; — then succeeds the gloomy period of the Middle Ages, but marked, in regular 2 succession, by the mighty colossus of Saracen dominion, the Feudal system, Chivalry, J and the Crusades; the period closing with the discovery of America, and the dawn of a * brighter future. The several succeeding centuries are also so marked by prominent and 1 mostly successive events as to render considerable unity of narrative easily attainable; J — the Sixteenth by the Age of Henry VIII. and Charles V., and the Age of Elizabeth— j the Seventeenth by the Thirty Years’ War, the English Revolution, and the Wars of j Louis XIV. — The Eighteenth by the War of the Spanish Succession, Peter the Great of J Russia and Charles XU. of Sweden, the War of the Austrian Succession, the Seven | Y< ars’ War, the American Revolution, and the French Revolution — the Nineteenth by 2 the Wars of Napoleon ; the Peace, and Reforms, which followed ; and the still recent 2 Revolutions which have converted Europe into a great Battle Ground for Freedom. { The STYLE in which the work is written will be found to be chaste, vigorous and ; elevated — the PROPER NAMES are so accentuated, especially in Grecian and Roman i History, that the student will readily form the habit of their correct pronunciation; in- 1 stead of questions, a full ANALYSIS precedes each chapter or section; nearly eight 2 hundred GEOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL NOTES illustrate and explain what- 1 ever is essential to the full elucidation of the text ; and eighteen HISTORICAL MAPS, | of the full size of the page, are found at the close of the volume, with each, an accom- t panying page of explanatory matter The Historical Maps are, 1st, Ancient Greece; 2 2d, Athens and it* Harbors; 3d, Islavds of the Aegean Sea; 4th, Asia Minor; 5th. Per- 2 sian Empire in iia greatest extent ; 6th, Palestine, or the Holy Land ; ?th, Turkey in t .