Some Problems in Roman History: Ten Essays Bearing on the Administrative and Legislative Work of Julius CaesarClarendon Press, 1924 - 330 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 22
Pagina 9
... remains . After recounting the condemnation by the people , Livy states that , according to some authorities , the con- demnation took place ' per duumviros , qui de perduellione anquirerent , creatos ' . He rejects this version and we ...
... remains . After recounting the condemnation by the people , Livy states that , according to some authorities , the con- demnation took place ' per duumviros , qui de perduellione anquirerent , creatos ' . He rejects this version and we ...
Pagina 35
... remains to consider whether in Cicero's case either Caesar or Clodius , who no doubt acted on Caesar's instructions and initia- tive , assailed the principle implied in the acquittal of Opimius . In 58 B. C. Clodius promulgated and ...
... remains to consider whether in Cicero's case either Caesar or Clodius , who no doubt acted on Caesar's instructions and initia- tive , assailed the principle implied in the acquittal of Opimius . In 58 B. C. Clodius promulgated and ...
Pagina 39
... remain where they start . I advise him to remember that the Porcian laws are still in existence , and that by their operation there is an interval during which even the perduellis condemned by a magistrate may go into exile . Assuming ...
... remain where they start . I advise him to remember that the Porcian laws are still in existence , and that by their operation there is an interval during which even the perduellis condemned by a magistrate may go into exile . Assuming ...
Pagina 49
... remain , as far as political status was concerned , ' Italia verius quam provincia ' ; but this was perhaps no disadvantage , as furnishing a useful administrative background to the new province , as well as a type to be gradually ...
... remain , as far as political status was concerned , ' Italia verius quam provincia ' ; but this was perhaps no disadvantage , as furnishing a useful administrative background to the new province , as well as a type to be gradually ...
Pagina 66
... remains to notice two individual sojourners in Rome , whose treatment under the lex Papia differed as much as that of the chief butler and of the chief baker . Cicero1 speaks of a Glau- cippus whose exemption from the Alien Act was as ...
... remains to notice two individual sojourners in Rome , whose treatment under the lex Papia differed as much as that of the chief butler and of the chief baker . Cicero1 speaks of a Glau- cippus whose exemption from the Alien Act was as ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Some Problems in Roman History: Ten Essays Bearing on the Administrative and ... Ernest George Hardy Visualizzazione completa - 1924 |
Some Problems in Roman History: Ten Essays Bearing on the Administrative and ... Ernest George Hardy Visualizzazione completa - 1924 |
Some Problems in Roman History: Ten Essays Bearing on the Administrative and ... Ernest George Hardy Visualizzazione completa - 1924 |
Parole e frasi comuni
absentis ratio anquisitio Appian Caelius Caesar Caesar's command censors Cicero Cisalpine Gaul civitas clause colonists comitia commissioners connexion consul consulship course Crassus Curio decemviri declares decree Dio Cassius doubt duumviri enfranchisement evidence fact Gallia Cisalpina Gracchus Heraclea Hirschfeld imperium intercessio Italian Italy iudicium iure Judeich Labienus land Latin colonies legal term leges datae legis Legras lex Cornelia lex data lex Iulia lex Iulia municipalis lex Pompeia lex Pompeia-Licinia lex Roscia lex Rubria lex Sempronia Livy magistrates Marcellus March matter Mommsen Mommsen's municipal municipia Nap's passage passed pecunia perduellionis Plutarch Pompey Pompey's populi praetor praetorian probably Prof proposal provinciae provision quam question quinquennium Rabirius recensi regard Reid Roman citizens Rome Rullus Saturninus scheme seems senate senatus consultum ultimum Social war sponsio Strabo Suetonius Sulla Sulla's Table of Veleia tempus towns Transpadani tribunes tribunician law vectigalia viii words καὶ τὴν τὸν τῶν
Brani popolari
Pagina 267 - ergo sunt cives Romani ex municipiis, legibus suis et suo iure utentes, muneris tantum cum populo Romano honorari participes, a quo munere capessendo appellati videntur, nullis aliis necessitatibus neque ulla populi Romani lege adstricti, nisi in quam populus eorum fundus factus est.
Pagina 30 - Saturnini seditiosum tribunatum senatus coercuerat, ac sorte iudex in reum ductus tam cupide condemnavit, ut ad populum provocanti nihil aeque ac iudicis acerbitas profuerit.
Pagina 36 - The passage is worth quoting for its own sake. The more heinous species of this crime is essentially distinguished from all other crimes by the circumstance that in perduellio the perpetrator by the very act passes out of the citizen ranks into the category of public enemies. When from this premise the consequence is drawn that all judicial proceeding is therefore unnecessary, and that the rights of war may be put in force, this is a party doctrine and contravenes law. But even under the observance...
Pagina 10 - Tribuni plebem rogaverunt, plebesque ita scivit ; si M. Postumius ante kalendas Maias non prodisset, citatusque eo die non respondisset, neque excusatus esset, videri eum in exsilio esse : bonaque ejus venire, ipsi aqua et igni placere interdici.
Pagina 18 - Item quod attingat qui de censoribus classicum ad comitia centuriata redemptum habent, uti curent eo die quo die comitia erunt, in Arce classicus canat <um circumque moeros et ante priuati huiusce T. Quincti Trogi scelerosi ostium canat et ut in Campo cum primo luci adsiet.
Pagina 126 - Transpadanas colonias deduxerit. Pompeius enim non novis colonis eas constituit sed veteribus incolis manentibus ius dedit Latii, ut possent habere ius quod ceterae Latinae coloniae, id est ut petendo magistratus civitatem Romanam adipiscerentur.
Pagina 103 - Itaque, quod plerumque in atroci negotio solet, senatus decrevit, darent operam consules, ne quid respublica detrimenti caperet. Ea potestas per senatum, more Romano, magistratui maxuma permittitur ; exercitum parare, bellum gerere, coercere omnibus modis socios atque civis; domi militiaeque imperium atque judicium summum habere : aliter, sine populi jussu, nulli earum rerum consuli jus est.
Pagina 205 - Feruntur omnino conditiones ab illo, ut Pompeius eat in Hispaniam, dilectus, qui sunt habiti, et...
Pagina 267 - Tulit apud 21 20 maiores nostros legem C. Furius de testamentis, tulit Q. Voconius de mulierum hereditatibus ; innumerabiles aliae leges de civili iure sunt latae ; quas Latini voluerunt, adsciverunt ; ipsa denique lulia, qua lege civitas est sociis et Latinis data, qui fundi populi facti non essent civitatem non haberent.
Pagina 17 - Cornicinem ad privati ianuam et in Arcem mittas, ubi canat. Collegam roges ut comitia edicat de rostris et argentarii tabernas occludant. Patres censeant exquaeras et adesse iubeas; magistratus censeant exquaeras, consules praetores tribunosque plebis collegasque tuos, et in templo adesse iubeas omnes; ac cum mittas, contionem advoces.