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Demosthenes
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All the orations of Demosthenes, prononunced to excite the Athenians against Philip King of Macedon. Translated into English by Thomas Leland, D.D. Fellow of Trinity-College, Dublin. Volume the first
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All the orations of demosthenes, pronounced to excite the athenians against Philip King of Macedon
Translated into English; digested and connected, so as to form a regular history of the pogress of the macedonian power: with notes historical and critical. By Thomas Leland, B.D. Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin -
All the orations of Demosthenes, pronounced to excite the Athenians against Philip, King of Macedon
Translated into English, by T. Leland -
The orations of demosthenes, on occasions of public deliberation
Translated into English; with notes. To which is added, the oration of Dinarchus against Demosthenes. Volume the second. By T. Leland, D.D -
Demosthenes, versus Cicero; alias, the wolf in the sheep's coat; or, The imposter detected
Being a suitable reply to the anti-masonic, anti-illuminati, anti-republican reveries, in a late publication, under the insidious signature of a Cicero. [One line in Latin] -
Demosthenes, On the false embassy
(Oration 19) -
Commentary on Demosthenes, Against Leptines
with introduction, text, and translation -
Demosthenes, versus Cicero; alias, the wolf in the sheep's coat; or, The imposter detected
Being a suitable reply to the anti-masonic, anti-illuminati, anti-republican reveries, in a late publication, under the insidious signature of a Cicero. -
The three orations of Demosthenes chiefe orator among the Grecians, in fauour of the Olynthians, a people in Thracia, now called Romania
with those his fower orations titled expressely & by name against king Philip of Macedonie: most nedefull to be redde in these daungerous dayes, of all them that loue their countries libertie, and desire to take warning for their better auayle, by example of others. Englished out of the Greeke by Thomas Wylson doctor of the ciuill lawes. After these orations ended, Demosthenes lyfe is set foorth, and gathered out of Plutarch, Lucian, Suidas, and others, with a large table, declaring all the principall matters conteyned in euerye part of this booke. Seene and allowed according to the Queenes Maiesties iniunctions -
Private orations
XXVII - XL -
Demosthenes
1, Olynthiacs. Philippics. Minor public speeches. Speech against Leptines : I - XVII, XX / with an Engl. transl. by J. H. Vince -
Demosthenes
2, De corona and De falsa legatione : XVIII, XIX / with an Engl. transl. by C. A. Vince ... -
Demosthenes
3, Against Meidias, Androtion, Aristocrates, Timocrates, Aristogeiton : XXI - XXVI / with an Engl. transl. by J. H. Vince -
Demosthenes
5, Private orations : XLI - XLIX / with an Engl. transl. by A. T. Murray -
Demosthenes
6, Private orations : L - LVIII. In Neaeram : LIX / with an Engl. transl. by A. T. Murray -
Demosthenes
7, Funeral speech, erotic essay : LX, LXI. Exordia and letters / with an Engl. transl. by Norman W. DeWitt and Norman J. DeWitt -
A commentary on Demosthenes' Philippic I
with rhetorical analyses of Philippics II and III -
Olynthiacs
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Against Meidias
<oration 21> -
The first and most excellent oration of that renowned orator Demosthenes, against Philip of Macedon, the potent and politicke enemy of the State of Athens
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Demosthenes the orator
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The orations of Demosthenes, on occasions of public deliberation
Translated into English; with notes. To which is added, the oration of Dinarchus against Demosthenes. Volume the second. By T. Leland, D.D -
All the orations of Demosthenes, pronounced to excite the Athenians against Philip King of Macedon
Translated into English, by Thomas Leland, D. D. Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin. Volume the first -
Several orations
of Demosthenes, exciting the Athenians to oppose the exorbitant power of Philip King of Macedon. Translated, in the years 1702 and 1744, from the Original Greek, by the Earl of Peterborough, Lord Lansdowne, Dr. Garth, Colonel Stanhope, Mr. Topham, and other hands. To which is prefix'd a preface, taken from the French of Monsieur Tourreil, containing a short View of the History of Greece, and the Life of Demosthenes. The whole carefully revised and corrected, with Libanius's arguments, and some notes from Ulpian, now first added