SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

Herodotus. Book 1, Chapter 6.

6. Croesus, son of Alyattes, by birth a Lydian, was lord of all the nations to the west of the river Halys. This stream, which separates Syria from Paphlagonia, runs with a course from south to north, and finally falls into the Euxine. So far as our knowledge goes, he was the first of the barbarians who had dealings with the Greeks, forcing some of them to become his tributaries, and entering into alliance with others. He conquered the Aeolians, Ionians, and Dorians of Asia, and made a treaty with the Lacedaemonians. Up to that time all Greeks had been free. For the Cimmerian attack upon Ionia, which was earlier than Croesus, was not a conquest of the cities, but only an inroad for plundering.

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

Text source: Herodotus. Translated by George Rawlinson, first issued in 1858. Grammar and spelling updated by Michael Presky, 1993.

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

place  time  topic  people  language

Greece - Ancient - History - Greeks - Greek translation

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

 

Footer section, if any