No one who visits both Rome and Athens at the present day can fail to be struck by one remarkable difference between the two famous cities, which stand for so much in the history of the world. While Athens is composed of a very old group of ruins and a brand-new town, which was rapidly made to order in Germany; while every trace of that mediæval splendour, which once distinguished the court of the Frank dukes, has vanished; in Rome, on the other hand, we have side by side the works of the kings, the memorials of the Republic, the monuments of the Empire, the remains of the Middle Ages, and the modern erections that have sprung up since 1870...
The Tragedy of Empire
Michael Kulikowski
audiobookThe Barbarian Invasions of Italy
Pasquale Villari
bookThe Renaissance Wars in Italy
Jean de Sismondi
bookThe Barbarian Invasions of Italy
Pasquale Villari
bookSea Wolves of the Mediterranean
Hamilton Currey
bookMedieval Europe 395-1270 AD
Gabriel Monod
bookMedieval Europe
Henry Davis
bookRenaissance in Italy: The Age of the Despots
John Addington Symonds
bookA History of Southern Italy: The Rulers of the South
F. Marion Crawford
bookThe Barbarian Invasions of Italy
Pasquale Villari
bookMedieval Europe
Gabriel Monod
bookThe History of Medieval Europe : The Development of Europe and Its Civilization - From the Decline of the Roman Empire to the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century
Lynn Thorndike
book