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Darius the Great

Darius the Great

Jacob Abbott

SMK Books
2018
pokkari
Jacob Abbott was a prolific author, writing juvenile fiction, brief histories, biographies, religious books for the general reader, and a few works in popular science. Check out the following list of books to take and exciting, informative, and easy to understand stroll through history Alexander the Great, Alfred the Great, Charles I, Charles II, Cleopatra, Cyrus the Great, Darius the Great, Ghengis Khan, Hannibal, History of Julius Caesar, Margaret of Anjou, Mary, Queen of Scots, Nero, Peter the Great, Pyyrhus, Queen Elizabeth, Richard I, Richard II, Richard III, Romulus, William the Conqueror, Xerxes
Darius the Great

Darius the Great

Jacob Abbott

SMK Books
2018
sidottu
Jacob Abbott was a prolific author, writing juvenile fiction, brief histories, biographies, religious books for the general reader, and a few works in popular science. Check out the following list of books to take and exciting, informative, and easy to understand stroll through history Alexander the Great, Alfred the Great, Charles I, Charles II, Cleopatra, Cyrus the Great, Darius the Great, Ghengis Khan, Hannibal, History of Julius Caesar, Margaret of Anjou, Mary, Queen of Scots, Nero, Peter the Great, Pyyrhus, Queen Elizabeth, Richard I, Richard II, Richard III, Romulus, William the Conqueror, Xerxes
Darius - Unb?ndiges Verlangen

Darius - Unb?ndiges Verlangen

Raine Miller

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
pokkari
Somerset, 1837 'Ti amo, mia cara' Die feine Art der Verf hrung.Darius Rourke und seine brennende Leidenschaft f r eine Frau. Die sanfte Marianne ist so wundersch n wie auch geheimnisvoll. Als ihm die M glichkeit in die H nde gespielt wird, sie zu seiner Frau zu machen, nimmt Darius diese wahr; denn er will, dass Marianne endlich allein ihm geh rt.Wird sie das aber auch?Marianne hat ein Geheimnis. Etwas, das sie unw rdig macht, von einem Mann geliebt zu werden - nicht einmal von dem eleganten Darius. Obwohl nur er es schafft, sie vollkommen in seinen Bann zu ziehen.Ein Blick...Eine Ber hrung...Ein Kuss...Eine bedeutsame Sinnlichkeit. Dies ist eine berauschende und leidenschaftliche Geschichte ber Liebende, die zusammen die S nden und Geheimnisse des jeweils anderen erkunden. Auf ihrem gemeinsamen Pfad werden Darius und Marianne herausfinden, dass es genauso wichtig ist zu kommandieren, wie sich zu unterwerfenEin Mann, der wei , was er will...Eine Frau, die ihn braucht, um ihren Wert zu erkennen... 'Ti amo, mia cara'
Darius the Mede and the Four World Empires in the Book of Daniel
The present study is limited to the related questions of Darius the Mede and the Four World Empires of Nebuchadnezzar's dream and of Daniel's first vision. So far as Darius the Mede is concerned, it is still generally agreed within the critical school that he has no place in history, and that he is a fictitious creation out of confused traditions. But anti-critical orthodoxy has not given up the attempt to find a place in history for him. . . . So far as the Four World Empires are concerned, the issue is not between critical orthodoxy and anti-critical orthodoxy. For here almost every solution which is proposed . . . goes back far beyond the foundation of the critical school. . . . The present study will therefore be limited to the consideration of theories . . . which have appeared in writings published within the present century, but will take into account the advocacy of those theories both before and during this century. It will aim to determine which of these theories may be accepted, and to show why those rejected are untenable. It will also aim to strengthen the defences of the positions adopted against the many challenges which surround them, and to advance fresh considerations for their support. --from the Introduction
Darius' Christmas Journey

Darius' Christmas Journey

Edie Owens

Faithful Life Publishers
2024
pokkari
A Christmas story for all ages Join Darius as he travels with the wise men to find a newborn King and becomes responsible for guarding gifts for the new King. During the journey, Darius hears an amazing story from a shepherd; he learns who the new King is and why He is so important.
Darius Quinton Coleman, Boy Genius

Darius Quinton Coleman, Boy Genius

Kelly Winters

Storyshares, LLC
2022
pokkari
Darius is the great-grandson of Darius Quinton, inventor of complicated machines and the first black aviator on Long Island. Darius has inherited his great-grandfather's mechanical genius, and in this story, he uses his talent to help solve a crime.
Darius the Great and Xerxes I: The History of the Achaemenid Persian Emperors Who Invaded Ancient Greece
*Includes pictures*Includes excerpts of ancient accounts*Includes a table of contentsIt was not until the excavations of the 1930s that many of the relics, reliefs, and clay tablets that offer so much information about Persian life could be studied for the first time. Through archaeological remains, ancient texts, and work by a new generation of historians, a picture can today be built of this remarkable civilization and their capital city. Although the city had been destroyed, the legacy of the Persians survived, even as they mostly remain an enigma to the West and are not nearly as well understood as the Greeks, Romans, or Egyptians. In a sense, the Achaemenid Persian Empire holds some of the most enduring mysteries of ancient civilization. When considering this empire's rulers, the two most often referenced are Xerxes, the leader of the Persian invasion of Greece which caused the heroic sacrifice of the Spartans and their allies at Thermopylae, or Cyrus the Great, the man who created the Persian Empire. But the Persians had another critical ruler sandwiched between them, and Cyrus's accomplishments and Xerxes's defeats would not have been possible without him. That king was Xerxes's own father, Darius I, best known as Darius the Great.Darius I took the throne after the death of Cyrus's son, Cambyses II, and though his reign would not have been possible without the construction of the empire and the administrative groundwork laid by Cyrus the Great before him, Darius proved himself just as worthy of the epithet. Reigning for over 35 years, Darius kept control of the massive Persian Empire despite numerous rebellions and uprisings, and he also managed to implement reforms and improvements that established the empire's golden age. He followed the example of Cyrus before him in his foreign policy and mode of kingship as well, offering tolerance and patience to various cultures and religions, and even treating his enemies fairly in most cases. Perhaps his ultimate success can be seen most clearly in the passage of power at the end of his life. By that time, his reign had been long and stable, and though he died of illness somewhat unexpectedly, his kingdom was still so firmly established that the kingship passed to his son Xerxes without any question or upheaval. Under Darius the Great's rule, the empire reached its greatest extent, stretching from the Indus Valley and Central Asia in the east to Libya and the Danube River in the west.Xerxes remains one of the most famous rulers in history because he led the Second Persian War against the Greeks. That war was a veritable clash of civilizations, and had the Persians triumphed, Classical Athens would have been snuffed out and Greece would never have formed the backbone of Roman and Western culture. Simply put, the West as it is today might never have existed. Not surprisingly, the majority of surviving sources regarding Xerxes are the product of Greek writers, so it was inevitable that the Persian king has been depicted in unflattering terms for thousands of years. The details of his invasion of Greece cast him as the villain in the dramatic Greek retelling of the tragic 300 Spartans holding the pass at Thermopylae, and focus on the loss at Salamis solidified his reputation as a failure despite another 15 years of successful rule after withdrawing from the Greek mainland. Although Herodotus's Histories offer a less biased account than some later sources, he still depicted Xerxes as a figure of tragic failings, listening too often to the wrong councilors and eventually collapsing on the weight of his own hubris. This classic appearance as a tragic hero figure gives some pause for doubt, as the literary stereotype is almost too perfect and suggests a lack of depth and nuance that characterizes all accurate investigations of historical individuals.