A History of Rome from 753 B.C. to A.D. 410 |
Dall'interno del libro
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Pagina 2
Elsewhere , however , at a very early date they were either absorbed or evicted
by invaders coming from beyond the Alps — the true Italian race . The original
home of this extremely virile people appears to have been in the Danube basin
or ...
Elsewhere , however , at a very early date they were either absorbed or evicted
by invaders coming from beyond the Alps — the true Italian race . The original
home of this extremely virile people appears to have been in the Danube basin
or ...
Pagina 50
Carthage accepted defeat and Hamilcar was left to negotiate the terms — an
indemnity of 3,200 talents or 500,000 pounds , a guarantee not to sail her
warships into Italian waters , and above all the abandonment of all claim to Sicily
. Rome's ...
Carthage accepted defeat and Hamilcar was left to negotiate the terms — an
indemnity of 3,200 talents or 500,000 pounds , a guarantee not to sail her
warships into Italian waters , and above all the abandonment of all claim to Sicily
. Rome's ...
Pagina 143
Nothing daunted by his failure to solve one thorny problem , Drusus plunged
headlong into another ; and during the few months of office which still remained
to him he undertook to champion the unpopular cause of Italian enfranchisement
.
Nothing daunted by his failure to solve one thorny problem , Drusus plunged
headlong into another ; and during the few months of office which still remained
to him he undertook to champion the unpopular cause of Italian enfranchisement
.
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Sommario
THE ROMAN REPUBLIC | 2 |
CHAPTER PAGE I LAND AND PEOPLE I | 3 |
THE ETRUSCANS AND ROME | 5 |
Copyright | |
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