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Search results for alpha,4673 in Adler number:
Headword:
Achari
Adler number: alpha,4673
Translated headword: harsh
Vetting Status: high
Translation: [Meaning something] distressing.
"Having freed the prisoners-of-war to go outside the wall he set up a guard, lest they suffer something unpleasant at the hands of the soldiers, through their hate of the Parthians."[1]
And elsewhere: "he asked nothing about what [it is] unpleasant for a king/emperor to trust in his own enemies."[2]
And elsewhere: "the king of the Persians came into Roman territory, but did nothing harmful."[3]
"Indulging a most unpleasant and diseased temperament, [and] defiling the body with as many different indignities as he could."[4]
Greek Original:Achari: lupêron. ho de tous aichmalôtous apheis exiontas tou teichous parephulatten ephestêkôs, mê ti hupo tôn stratiôtôn pathôsin achari, misei tôi pros Parthuaious. kai authis: ho de edeito mêden peri hou achari pisteuein basilea tois heautou echthrois. kai authis: ho Persôn basileus eisêlthen eis tên Rhômaiôn gên, ouden de edrasen achari. acharistôi nosêmati tôi thumôi charizomenos, lumais hosais edunato pantodapais to sôma lumênamenos.
Notes:
The headword, presumably extracted from the first quotation given (and also illustrated by the second and third), is neuter singular of the adjective in question; likewise already
alpha 4672.
[1] Arrian,
Parthica fr. 91 Roos-Wirth.
[2] Quotation unidentifiable.
[3]
Procopius,
History of the Wars of Justinian 1.2.11 (web address 1); cf. Kaldellis (5-6). The subject here is Bahram V (Persian king 421-438; cf. PLRE II s.v. Vararanes V Gororanes), who went to war against Rome in 421, but negotiated a peace agreement in 422 after several significant military engagements. A later war (440-441) between the Romans and the Persians ended without any major battles having been initiated;
Procopius evidently confuses the two conflicts here (see Kaldellis (6 note 11)).
[4] Part of
Aelian fr. 209 Hercher (210b Domingo-Forasté); cf.
kappa 1001,
chi 110.
References:
A. Kaldellis, ed. and H.B. Dewing, trans., Prokopios: The Wars of Justinian, (Indianapolis 2014)
J.R. Martindale, The Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, vol. II, (Cambridge 1980)
Associated internet address:
Web address 1
Keywords: biography; definition; dialects, grammar, and etymology; ethics; historiography; history; military affairs
Translated by: Jennifer Benedict on 7 June 2001@18:53:25.
Vetted by:David Whitehead (modified translation; augmented notes; added keywords; cosmetics) on 8 June 2001@03:14:10.
David Whitehead (cosmetics) on 29 August 2002@03:51:21.
David Whitehead (augmented notes and keywords; tweaks and cosmstics) on 6 March 2011@06:13:24.
David Whitehead (another x-ref) on 9 May 2012@06:12:00.
Catharine Roth (updated reference, added cross-reference) on 22 October 2012@02:05:43.
David Whitehead on 11 September 2015@08:15:00.
Ronald Allen (expanded n.3, added bibliography, added link) on 3 January 2024@13:00:19.
No. of records found: 1
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