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T HE states of Greece tried again and again to throw off the Macedonian yoke. Unfortunately, however, they often quarreled with one another and were not united against Macedonia. For this reason the kings of that state kept their place as masters of Greece for another hundred years.
Then the Romans invaded the country, and in a battle fought near a town called Pydna the Macedonians were defeated and their king Perseus was taken prisoner. This brought the Macedonian kingdom to an end. Macedonia was made part of the Roman Empire and men were sent from Rome to rule it.
Epirus was next captured. A hundred and fifty thousand of its inhabitants were sold into slavery and the state was made a Roman province.
After the fall of Macedonia the other states of Greece still
continued fighting with one another. So in about twenty
years
Corinth at that time was one of the richest and most beautiful cities in the world. After the battle the Roman general let his soldiers enter the houses and take what they pleased. Pictures, marble statues and jewelry were taken and shipped to Rome. It is said that two of the rough Roman soldiers played a game of dice on one of the finest pictures,—so little did they value works of art.
![]() Last Days of Corinth |
Two thousand of the men of Corinth were put to death by the Romans, and the women and children were made slaves. After the buildings of the city had been plundered they were set on fire.
And now Athens, Thebes, Sparta and the other Greek states became, like Macedonia, parts of the Empire of Rome.
From the rule of Rome Greece passed, in the Middle Ages, under the rule of Turkey, and it was only about seventy-five years ago that she revolted from Turkey and became once more an independent country.
If ever you go to Greece, as thousands of people do, to visit the places where her great men lived, you will see little but ruins. The columns of the temples are broken, the stones of their walls lie scattered on the ground.
![]() Ruins of the Acropolis and Temple of Theseus |
And yet Greece, even amid ruin and decay,
is still teaching the world. Many of the words that stand
for branches of learning in our language
![]() Ruins of the Parthenon |
Although the old-time glory of Greece has waned, the light of art and science which she kindled in the world grows brighter as time rolls on.