Page:A general history for colleges and high schools (Myers, 1890).djvu/832

754 *Rom′u-lus, 225.
 * Romulus Augustus, last Roman emp. in the West, 348.
 * Roncesvalles (ron-thes-väl′yes), Pass of, 405.
 * Roses, Wars of the, 488, 489; union of the, 541.
 * Rosetta Stone, 36.
 * Ross′bäck, battle of, 646.
 * Roundheads, origin of name, 610.
 * Rousseau (roo′sō'), 649.
 * Roussillon (roo′sḗl′yṓn′), 591.
 * Royal touch, superstition of, 601, 602.
 * Rox-a′na, bride of Alexander, 165.
 * Ru′bi-con, the, Caesar crosses, 294, 295.
 * Rump Parliament, 614.
 * Runnymede, 480.
 * Ru′ric, 411.
 * Russia, invasion of, by Darius I., 79; introduction of Christianity, 382, n.; the name, 508; Tartar conquest of, 508; freed from the yoke of the Mongols, 508, 509; under Peter the Great, 633–639; under Catherine the Great, 639–641; invasion of, by Napoleon, 683, 684; Alexander I. and the Holy Alliance, 692; Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829, 693; Crimean War, 694, 695; emancipation of the serfs, 696; Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, 696–698; Nihilism, 698, 699.
 * Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829, 693; of 1877–1878, 696–698.
 * Ryswick (rĭz′wik), treaty of, 596.
 * Sā′bæ-an-ĭsm, 45,
 * Sacred War, first, 108; second, 160.
 * Sadowa, battle of, 704,
 * Sages, the Seven, 203.
 * Sa-gun′tum, 257.
 * St. Antony, 383.
 * St. Augustine, 358.
 * St. Bartholomew, massacre of, 576, 577.
 * St. Benedict, 383.
 * St. Bẽr′nard, 444.
 * St. Boniface (bo'ne'fass'), 382.
 * St. Co-lum′ba, 380.
 * St. Dom′i-nic, 456.
 * St. Francis, 456.
 * St. Germain (zhĭr′măn ), treaty of, 574, 575.
 * St. Jerome, 358.
 * St. John, knights of. See Hospitallers.
 * St. Patrick, 379.
 * St. Petersburg, founding of, 637.
 * Sä′is, 25.
 * Săl'adin, captures Jerusalem, 444; the antagonist of Richard, 445.
 * Sal′a-mis, naval battle of, 134.
 * Sal′lust, 356.
 * Sa-lo′na, 331.
 * Samaria, 48, 66.
 * Samaritans, origin of, 67.
 * Samnite War, first, 243; second, 244; third, 244.
 * Sam′ni-um, 222.
 * Sa′mos, 88, no.
 * Samson, 63.
 * Samuel, judge of Israel, 63.
 * Sans-culotte (song-ku-lŏt′), 663.
 * Sa′por, k. of Persia, 328, n.
 * Sappho (saf′fo), 192.
 * Saracens, conquests of, 392–402; preserve Greek science, 473. See Arabs, and Mohammed.
 * Sar′a-cus. See Esarhaddon II.
 * Sar′da-na-pa′lus. See Asshurbanipal.
 * Sar-din′i-a, acquired by Rome, 254.
 * Sar′dis, capital of Lydia, 75; captured by Cyrus, 76; sacked by the Greeks, 80.
 * Sar′gon I., k. of Assyria, 42, 48, 49.
 * Sā′rum, 717.
 * Sassanian monarchy, 334, n.
 * Saul, k. of the Hebrews, 64.
 * Sä-vo-nä-ro′lä, Girolamo, 511.
 * Saxons. See Anglo-Saxons. Invade Britain, 336; subjugated by Charlemagne, 406.
 * Scandinavians. See Northmen. Conversion of, 382.
 * Scar-a-bæ′us, the, 29.
 * Schles′wig, 703.
 * Schmäl′käld, League of, 533.
 * Scholasticism, 471, 472.
 * Schoolmen, chief of the, 471.
 * Scipio, P. Cornelius (Africanus), 264, 265.
 * Scipio, Publius Cornelius, 259, 260.
 * Scone, stone of, 482.