A History of Rome: From 753 B.C. to A.D. 410Methuen, 1935 - 456 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
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Pagina 189
... legions quartered in the country of the Sequani - an ominous decision which the northern tribes of the interior noted with unconcealed alarm . Beyond the line of the Seine and the Marne Rivers lay a large group of tribes , some of ...
... legions quartered in the country of the Sequani - an ominous decision which the northern tribes of the interior noted with unconcealed alarm . Beyond the line of the Seine and the Marne Rivers lay a large group of tribes , some of ...
Pagina 203
... legions he already possessed Caesar had , of course , ample means of recruiting as many more as he wanted ; and his financial resources enabled him to undertake imme- diately the construction of a fleet . On the other hand , Pompey held ...
... legions he already possessed Caesar had , of course , ample means of recruiting as many more as he wanted ; and his financial resources enabled him to undertake imme- diately the construction of a fleet . On the other hand , Pompey held ...
Pagina 318
... legions , the number still stood at roughly the same figure , or thirty legions at the most . Yet Rome's commitments were greater and her external foes not less active ; so that only by a scientific and economical use of the forces at ...
... legions , the number still stood at roughly the same figure , or thirty legions at the most . Yet Rome's commitments were greater and her external foes not less active ; so that only by a scientific and economical use of the forces at ...
Sommario
AUGUSTUS | 243 |
CHAPTER PAGE XXV THE EMPIRE IN THE FIRST AND SECOND CEN TURIES | 331 |
NERVA TRAJAN AND HADRIAN | 359 |
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