It is thus with regard to the disease called Sacred: it appears to me to be nowise more divine nor more sacred than other diseases, but has a natural cause from the originates like other affections. Men regard its nature and cause as divine from ignorance and wonder, because it is not at all like to other diseases. And this notion of its divinity is kept up by their inability to comprehend it, and the simplicity of the mode by which it is cured, for men are freed from it by purifications and incantations. But if it is reckoned divine because it is wonderful, instead of one there are many diseases which would be sacred; for, as I will show, there are others no less wonderful and prodigious, which nobody imagines to be sacred.
Delphi Complete Works of Hippocrates
Hippocrates Hippocrates
bookPliny's Natural History
Pliny the Elder
bookThe History of Chemistry (The Complete Two-Volume Edition)
Thomas Thomson
bookConstantinople
William Holden Hutton
bookThe Destruction of the Greek Empire and the Story of the Capture of Constantinople by the Turks
Edwin Pears
bookThe Destruction of the Greek Empire : The Story of the Capture of Constantinople by the Turks
Edwin Pears
bookThe Antiquities of Constantinople
Petrus Gyllius (Pierre Gilles)
bookCambridge Medieval History:The Eastern Roman Empire
J.B Bury
bookConstantinople and the Scenery of the Seven Churches of Asia Minor: Series One and Series Two in one Volume
Robert Walsh
bookThe Walls of Constantinople
Bernard Granville Baker
bookHistory of the Byzantine Empire: From the Foundation until the Fall of Constantinople (328-1453) : The Rise and Decline of the Eastern Roman Empire
Charles Oman
bookConstantine the Last Emperor of the Greeks, or the Conquest of Constantinople by the Turks
Chedomil Mijatovich
book