In later times an immense number of Jews were converted to the Christian religion; but the hatred of the people was not extinguished thereby, and mistrust followed these converts into their new state.
In order to form an idea of the turn which things might have taken if some precaution had not been adopted, it is enough to recollect the insurrections of the last Moors in later times.
Moreover, in later times, although all their other rights remained unimpaired, it was thought disgraceful for a patron to receive money from a client.
Lykurgus was the first to perceive the truth which Epameinondas is said in later times to have uttered about his own table, when he said that "such a dinner has no room for treachery.
The Roman emperor Nero, in later times, imitated this custom.
Now he could no longer conceal that he was in the same condition as Themistokles in later times, when he said that the trophy of Miltiades would not let him sleep.
Probably the most important were military service (fird, expeditio) and the repairing of fortifications and bridges--the trinoda necessitas of later times.
In later times we meet with many other payments both in money and in kind, some of which were doubtless in accordance with ancient custom.
The services of the peasantry can only be conjectured from what we find in later times.
Sargon the Elder had lived in Babylon, and had built himself a palace there: hence the tradition of later times attributed to this city the glory of having been the capital of the great empire founded by the Akkadian dynasties.
Found in a popular story, which came in later times to be associated with the traditions connected with Æsop.
A similar usage was found in later times in the countries colonised by or subjected to the influence of the Phoenicians, especially in Cyprus.
Of later times, the Castle serued the Earle of Cornwall for one of his houses; but now, that later is worm-eaten out of date and vse.
Of later times, Tintogel hath kept long silence in our stories, vntill H.
One of the unfortunates was unearthed in later times by peat-diggers, a man on his horse, who had sunk in the bog.
The sample we purchased was the only sweet we had on our journey, for in those days men and women did not eat sweets so much as in later times, they being considered the special delicacies of the children.
The Mahometans of this period far excelled their enemies in general refinement, and had carried some branches of intellectual culture to a height scarcely surpassed by Europeans in later times.
Even slavery, a sore evil among the Visigoths, as indeed among all the barbarians of German origin, though not effaced, lost many of its most revolting features, under the more generous legislation of later times.
In later times, then, authorship was plainly intended by the superscriptions.
It is not, as in later times, an incubus; it is still an inspiration.
Footnote 11: It has not been easy to discern the exact line in later times, with all the lights of modern discovery.
Thus, while his contemporaries gathered light from his suggestions as to the present condition of affairs, the historian of later times is no less indebted to him for information in respect to the past.
He had been seriously attacked with that dangerous pestilence which, in former years, ravaged this country, called the sweating sickness, a malady as mysterious and fatal as the cholera has been in later times.
But I will give you an instance of later times, even in the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign, of an Hertfordshire man that went as far as Rome to bear his testimony for God against the wickedness of that place.
Instances, also, of later times might be given of a call extraordinary to suffer for righteousness.
Finally, in later times, its capacity was increased from twenty-eight strings to thirty-three, in which state it still remains.
For Tacitus there appeals to the usage, not of remote antiquity only, but of later times also, to justify his design of writing the biography of a distinguished man.
This then was the term of majority, which in later times, when heavier armor was used, was still longer delayed.
This custom was revived in later times, but rather with a gallant than a military intention.
Its extraordinary situation was almost unique in antiquity and is only matched by one city of later times--Venice.
But as so often in later times, those three hundred and seventy-four days had dealt incomparably more hardly with the besiegers than with the besieged.
The best monument of later times left in Ravenna is the fine Palazzo Rasponi in Via S.
It merely affirms that the example given by Kheops, Khephren, and Mykerinos were by no means lost in later times.
In later times, a chapel of alabaster and rose granite was erected alongside the god; temples were built here and there in the more accessible places, and round these were grouped the tombs of the whole country.
This war is noticeable chiefly for the reason that Manlius undertook it without the authority of the Senate, the first instance of its kind, and a precedent which was too frequently followed in later times.
In later times (from about 350) all who were not Patricians or slaves were called Plebeians.
Peace was shortly afterwards made with the barbarians, a peace bought with money; an example often followed in later times, when Rome lacked the strength and courage to enforce her wishes by force of arms.
The toga was of white wool and was nearly semicircular, but being a cumbrous garment, it became customary in later times to wear it only on state occasions.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "later times" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.