The Great Events by Famous Historians, Vol. 1 by Various
page 15 of 520 (02%)
page 15 of 520 (02%)
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as no man has done since. So, too, we give a literal translation of the
earliest known code of laws, antedating those of Moses by more than a thousand years, rather than some modern commentary on them. At other times the same principles have led to the other extreme, and on modern events, where there seemed no wholly satisfactory or standard accounts, we have had them written for us by the specialists best acquainted with the field. As the work thus grew in hand, it became manifest that it would be, in truth, far more than a mere story of events. With each event was connected the man who embodied it. Often his life was handled quite as fully as the event, and so we had biography. Lands had to be described--geography. Peoples and customs--sociology. Laws and the arguments concerning them--political economy. In short, our history proved a universal cyclopædia as well. To give it its full value, therefore, an index became obviously necessary--and no ordinary index. Its aim must be to anticipate every possible question with which a reader might approach the past, and direct him to the answer. Even, it might be, he would want details more elaborate than we give. If so, we must direct him where to find them. Professional index-makers were therefore summoned to our help, a complete and readable chronology was appended to each volume, and the final volume of the series was turned over to the indexers entirely. We believe their work will prove not the least valuable feature of the whole. Briefly, the Index Volume contains: 1. A complete list of the Great Events of the world's history. Opposite each event are given the date, the name of the author and standard work |
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