An historical outline of the Greek revolution [by W.M. Leake]. by W.M. Leake |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 14
Pagina 59
... appear at this period of the contest in all their deformity , the subsequent history of the insurrection seems to indicate , that they are already giving way to the effects of a consciousness of the dignity of the new position which the ...
... appear at this period of the contest in all their deformity , the subsequent history of the insurrection seems to indicate , that they are already giving way to the effects of a consciousness of the dignity of the new position which the ...
Pagina 138
... appears to be that which would be the best adapted to the mountainous intersections , the commercial coasts , the numerous islands of Greece , and to the great 138 HISTORICAL OUTLINE OF occasion to mention, namely, the crest of the ...
... appears to be that which would be the best adapted to the mountainous intersections , the commercial coasts , the numerous islands of Greece , and to the great 138 HISTORICAL OUTLINE OF occasion to mention, namely, the crest of the ...
Pagina 140
... appear diminished on a comparative reference to the situation of ancient Greece . It will not be suffi- cient for them to form such a divided nation , as , when having successfully resisted in arms the most formidable power with which ...
... appear diminished on a comparative reference to the situation of ancient Greece . It will not be suffi- cient for them to form such a divided nation , as , when having successfully resisted in arms the most formidable power with which ...
Pagina 161
... appears , that both the contending parties in Greece are now supporting the war with finances derived from England . M sand men , with a fleet of thirty vessels of THE GREEK REVOLUTION . 161 tion has been so in one respect. It never ...
... appears , that both the contending parties in Greece are now supporting the war with finances derived from England . M sand men , with a fleet of thirty vessels of THE GREEK REVOLUTION . 161 tion has been so in one respect. It never ...
Pagina 161
... appears , that both the contending parties in Greece are now supporting the war with finances derived from England . M Unhappily for the Greek cause , the numerical strength of THE GREEK REVOLUTION . 161 tion has been so in one respect ...
... appears , that both the contending parties in Greece are now supporting the war with finances derived from England . M Unhappily for the Greek cause , the numerical strength of THE GREEK REVOLUTION . 161 tion has been so in one respect ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
An historical outline of the Greek revolution [by W.M. Leake]. by W.M. Leake William Martin Leake Visualizzazione completa - 1826 |
An Historical Outline of the Greek Revolution. by W. M. L William Martin Leake Anteprima non disponibile - 2019 |
An Historical Outline of the Greek Revolution [By W.M. Leake]. by W.M. Leake William Martin Leake Anteprima non disponibile - 2016 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Acarnania Achelous Ægæan Ætolia Albanians already Aly Pasha Ambracia Ambracic gulf ancient Argolis Armatolí arms army Arta Asia Asiatic attack attempt authority Boeotia Callidromus campaign Capitan Pasha castle cause cavalry chief chieftains Christian circumstances Cnemis coast command Constantinople contest Crete defence districts Eastern effect Egypt Egyptian empire enemy Epirus Euboea European favour fire-ships forces fortresses frontier garrisons Grèce Greek vessels Greeks gulf of Corinth hope Ibrahim important independence inhabitants insurgents Ioannina islands Isthmus Kalamáta land latter Macedonia Maliac gulf maritime Megaris ment Mesolonghi military Moréa Mothóni Mount mountains Musulman nation Naupactus Nauplia naval Navarin Neó-Kastro Northern Greece numbers occupied Omér Osmanlys Ottoman passes Patræ Peloponnesus peninsula Pindus plains of Thessaly population Porte position possession Pouqueville present Prévyza principal retreat Russia Samos seamen Seraskier side situated speedily Spercheius Sphacteria Thessaly tion town Tripolitza troops Turkey Turkish Turkish admiral Turkish fleet Turks Western Greece Ydra
Brani popolari
Pagina 148 - Egripo, and entrusted with the conduct of the war on that side of Greece. He was met at Marathon in the middle of July by the Greeks under Goura, where he received such a check as, combined with the ill success of the Seraskier on the side of Locris, has been sufficient to confine his exertions to Bceotia.
Pagina 17 - ... them depicted in antient history — industrious, hardy, enterprizing, heroic, ardently attached to their homes and native country, living upon little, or lovers of wine and gaiety as the occasion prompts ; sanguine, quick, ingenious, imitative, but vain, inconstant, envious, treacherous and turbulent. In some of the more mountainous parts of Greece, villages, and even whole districts, were left to their own management, or rather to that of acknowledged primates, who were responsible for the...
Pagina 64 - ... custom, are exempted from keeping the field between November and May, and who Oriental Herald, Vol. 9. 21 never fail to return home in the winter. And hence it has occurred that, for many years past, the Porte has been unable, except, perhaps, on the northern frontier, where are the principal garrisons of the Janissaries, to keep together an army of 10,000 men for more than six months, or even for a shorter time, unless when plunder is immediately in view. So great, nevertheless, are the resources...
Pagina 52 - ... service of Khurshid Pasha, governor of the Morea, about half of whom were Albanians. The command, if command it could be called, was in the hands of the kihaya or lieutenant of Khurshid, the pasha himself having, by order of the Porte, joined the army before loannina, leaving his family at Tripolitza. The Greeks at first were very inferior in numbers to their opponents; they had no cavalry; many of them were scarcely armed, and their besieging artillery consisted only of five or six cannon and...
Pagina 152 - ... up the attempt upon Samos for the present, proceeded to effect a junction with the Egyptian expedition at Cos and Halicarnassus. Sakhturi in like manner united his force with that of the chief navarch Miaoulis, at Patmos, after which the Greeks proceeded to observe the Musulman armament. On the 5th September a small division of Greek vessels with two fireships approached the Turkish fleet, when the latter got under weigh; the Greek fleet then joined their comrades, and an action taking place,...
Pagina 61 - Alif was the occasion of high satisfac"" tion and triumph to the Porte. The exhibition of his head at the imperial gate in February, 1822, and the triumphal conveyance into the capital of part of his spoils, ex* Hughes, vol. ii. p.
Pagina 161 - Tripolitza, and hastening to profit by his advantages, appeared before Nauplia in one month after the capture of Neo-Kastro. A division of his army attacked the Greek outposts at the Mills of Nauplia on the 25th June, but without success; although the Greeks under Demetrius Ypsilanti (who had been living for the last two or three years retired from affairs at Tripolitza) had, in no part 'of the action, more than a few hundred men, supported by the fire of some small armed vessels anchored near the...
Pagina 153 - ... when two fire-ships were attached to a large Egyptian brig of war, and not long afterwards, two others to the frigate which commanded the Tunisine division. So confounded were the Turks with the boldness and the skill of their opponents, in thus attacking them with their small vessels, in the open sea and under sail, that not even the Greek ships accompanying the incendiary vessels suffered much from the Turkish fire. The Ottoman fleet returned in confusion to the anchorage near Budrum, (Halicarnassus,)...
Pagina 173 - Turkish commissariat, will place perpetual obstacles in the way of Ibrahim's progress, and will render the arduous task of subduing the mountains of Greece still more difficult. That tractability of disposition which has enabled Mehmet Aly to mould his Egyptians to the European discipline, is allied to an inferiority in hardihood and energy to the European and Asiatic Turks, with whom similar attempts have always failed. The Egyptians are precisely the troops least adapted to face the active and...
Pagina 174 - ... adapted for prolonging an obstinate contest, by the strength of the country and the elastic character of the inhabitants, there is the fairest reason to hope that Mehmet Aly may be tired of his present expensive undertaking before he has made any great progress towards its completion ; a result which is rendered still more probable, if it be true that his commercial speculations with England are likely to be much less profitable in the present than they have been in the preceding year. If, with...