Roman Civilization: The RepublicNaphtali Lewis, Meyer Reinhold Columbia University Press, 1951 - 544 pagine Naphtali Lewis and Meyer Reinhold's Roman Civilization is a classic. These volumes consist of selected primary documents from ancient Rome, covering a range of over 1,000 years of Roman culture, from the foundation of the city to its sacking by the Goths. The selections cover a broad spectrum of Roman civilization, including literature, philosophy, religion, education, politics, military affairs, and economics. These English translations of literary, inscriptional, and papyrological sources, many of which are available nowhere else, create a mosaic of the brilliance, the beauty, and the power of Rome. -- Text refers to later edition. |
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Risultati 1-3 di 87
Pagina 241
... citizens ; another provided that the common soldiers should be clothed at public expense without any reduction in pay , and that no one under seventeen years of age should be conscripted for military service ; another concerned the ...
... citizens ; another provided that the common soldiers should be clothed at public expense without any reduction in pay , and that no one under seventeen years of age should be conscripted for military service ; another concerned the ...
Pagina 379
... citizens shall obey them duti- fully and without protest . Upon the disobedient or guilty citizen the magistrate shall use compulsion by means of fines , imprisonment , or lashing , unless an equal or higher authority or the people , to ...
... citizens shall obey them duti- fully and without protest . Upon the disobedient or guilty citizen the magistrate shall use compulsion by means of fines , imprisonment , or lashing , unless an equal or higher authority or the people , to ...
Pagina 389
... citizens from the eastern provinces of the empire . Here the established Hellenistic practice of multiple citizen- ship clashed with a fundamental principle of Roman law , which held that Romans could not simultaneously hold another ...
... citizens from the eastern provinces of the empire . Here the established Hellenistic practice of multiple citizen- ship clashed with a fundamental principle of Roman law , which held that Romans could not simultaneously hold another ...
Sommario
ABBREVIATIONS USED IN CITATION OF SOURCES | 2 |
FROM THE BEGINNINGS TO 509 B C | 46 |
THE CONQUEST AND ORGANIZATION OF ITALY TO 264 B C | 70 |
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Parole e frasi comuni
accordance Adapted from LCL aediles Aetolians alliance allies ancient Antiochus army Asia assembly assigned brought Brutus Caesar called Campanians Carthage Carthaginians Cato censors century B.C. Cicero citizenship civil colony command concerning consul consulship Cornelius court death decemvirs declared decree decurions Dionysius of Halicarnassus duovir election enemy envoys extant Forum friends Gaius Gaul Gnaeus gods Gracchus grain granted Greece Greek Hannibal History of Rome hold honor Italy Jupiter king land or ground Latin legions Livy Lucius Lucius Cornelius Sulla magistracy magistrates Marcus matter military municipality patricians peace person plebeians plebs political Polybius Pompey pontiffs possess praetor province punishment quaestor Quintus Republic rites Roman citizens Roman History sacred sacrifice Samnites Scaptius Scipio senate sent sesterces ships Sicily slaves soldiers temple Termessus territory tion town treaty tribes tribunes Valerius Verres victory vote