| Edward Gibbon - 1826 - 486 sider
...spirit, rising with impunity, proceeded to violate the safeguard of private houses; and fire was employed to facilitate the attack, or to conceal the crimes...their sentence ; masters to enfranchise their slaves ; and fathers to supply the extravagance of their children. The despair of the greens, who were persecuted... | |
| Edward Gibbon - 1854 - 440 sider
...rising with impunity, proceeded to violate the safeguard of private houses ; and fire was employed to facilitate the attack, or to conceal the crimes,...voluntary death, were ravished in the presence of their husbands."7 The despair of the greens, who were persecuted by their enemies and deserted by the magistrate,... | |
| Joseph J. Reed - 1862 - 196 sider
...rising with impunity, proceeded to violate the safeguard of private houses ; and fire was employed to facilitate the attack, or to conceal the crimes...their sentence ; masters to enfranchise their slaves ; and fathers to supply the extravagance of their children. The despair of the greens, who were persecuted... | |
| Edward Isidore Sears - 1869 - 440 sider
...mortal wound with a single stroke of their dagger. The dissolute youth of Constantinople adopted the livery of disorder; the laws were silent, and the bonds of society were relaxed; m creditors were compelled to resign their obligations ; judges to reverse their sentence; masters... | |
| James H. Braund - 1870 - 524 sider
...churches and altars were polluted by atrocious murders ; and it was the boast of the assassins that they could always inflict a mortal wound with a single...their obligations ; judges to reverse their sentence ; and fathers to supply the extravagance of their children. The despair of the greens, who were persecuted... | |
| Edward Gibbon - 1875 - 666 sider
...their dagger. The dissolute youth if Constantinople adopted the blue livery of disorder; the lavvs were silent, and the bonds of society were relaxed...wives, unless they preferred a voluntary death, were revished in the presence of their husbands.47 The despair of the greens, who were persecuted by their... | |
| 1886 - 912 sider
...dagger. The dissolute youth of Constantinople adopted the blue livery of disorder; the laws were silent; the bonds of society were relaxed ; creditors were...resign their obligations, judges to reverse their sentences, masters to enfranchise their slaves, fathers to supply the extravagance of their children... | |
| Edson Lyman Clark - 1898 - 596 sider
...tolerated in a career of violence and crime hardly to be paralleled in the history of civilized nations. " No place was safe or sacred from their depredations...resign their obligations, judges to reverse their sentences, masters to enfranchise their slaves, fathers to supply the extravagance of their children... | |
| Edward Gibbon - 1899 - 674 sider
...safe or sacred from their depredations; to gratify either avarice or revenge, they profusely •pilt the blood of the innocent ; churches and altars were...wives, unless they preferred a voluntary death, were revished in die presence of their husbands.47 The despair of the greens, who were persecuted by their... | |
| Edward Gibbon - 1899 - 616 sider
...Brag. (Hist. Bccles. 1. iv. c. 32); Malala (ii. 138), especially for Antioch; and Theophan. (p. 142). youth of Constantinople adopted the blue livery of...fathers to supply the extravagance of their children; and beautiful boys were torn from the arms of their parents. The despair of the greens, who were persecuted... | |
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