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2014 - Massachusetts Junior Classical League
2014 - Massachusetts Junior Classical League

Conquest and Rebellion
Conquest and Rebellion

... gods. Human sacrifices burned in the fires on their altars. The icecold wind blew in the face of the Roman soldiers; the stench was foul. The stink, the screams and curses of the women and priests, their chants and prayers made the freezing Roman soldiers stop in their tracks as they waded out of t ...
Roman Portraits
Roman Portraits

... full‐figure honorific statues. Presented elegantly with solely a name tag, the bust supported the portrait head, but it was not as strongly imbued with social and hierarchical aspects as the honorific statue: the bust format left it open to the viewer to construct the patron’s status and role. This ...
SCUTUM - The Big Book of War
SCUTUM - The Big Book of War

... formed the testudo by joining their shields, and rested their left knees on the ground. The barbarians...threw aside their bows, leaped from their horses, and drawing their daggers, came up close to put an end to them. At this the Romans sprang to their feet, extended their battle-line...and confron ...
PRAISE FOR Scandalous Women - Yakama Nation Legends Casino
PRAISE FOR Scandalous Women - Yakama Nation Legends Casino

... although a brilliant general and popular with his troops, was also a complete party animal with a weakness for powerful women. It was showtime on the Nile. Pulling out all the stops, Cleopatra arrived at Tarsus to meet Antony on her great barge with its gold stern and billowing purple sails, inclini ...
Ara Pacis Augustae
Ara Pacis Augustae

... and Spain. The alter was also a gesture of public thanks to Augustus for the peace and prosperity he brought to the Empire. Symbolises: a new ago of peace and prosperity for Rome and her Empire under the rule of Augustus. This propaganda message was not new for a Roman leader, but the scale of Augus ...
- WRAP: Warwick Research Archive Portal
- WRAP: Warwick Research Archive Portal

... form a focal point for a community, making abstract ideas of ‘nation’, ‘empire’ or ‘res publica’ more concrete or tangible for those concerned.28 Close examination of coin iconography from the Republic suggests that ambiguity did play a role during Roman expansion. I have elsewhere discussed the amb ...
THE OPPOSITION UNDER THE EARLY CAESARS: SOME
THE OPPOSITION UNDER THE EARLY CAESARS: SOME

... offer striking analogies and parallels to the historians' own age. The dangers inherent in such an 'engaged' or 'involved' historical research are obvious, but there can be little doubt that every scholar feels himself best fitted to interpret conditions which-in the broadest sense-lie within the or ...
Mytilene and Other Greek Cities - The University of Michigan Press
Mytilene and Other Greek Cities - The University of Michigan Press

File
File

... now knows that the Romans are at the mouth of the Rhone, in great numbers. His original plan was to continue on to cross the Alps, and descend upon Rome from the north. To travel south and fight the Romans now may mean that Hannibal could destroy their army in one major battle, and therefore leave R ...
Highlights and Historical Background
Highlights and Historical Background

... Modern historians seem to dispute the ancient Etruscan attribution and identify the origins instead in Campania, the region of Italy that today is centered around the city of Naples. 4th century BCE frescoes in Paestum depict armed pairs with Corinthian (Greek) helmets, spears and round shields. Ac ...
THE ROLE OF PHILHELLENISM IN THE POLITICAL INVECTIVE OF
THE ROLE OF PHILHELLENISM IN THE POLITICAL INVECTIVE OF

The settling factors of Roman villas in southern Lusitania
The settling factors of Roman villas in southern Lusitania

... the Roman houses were built on the same type, which were modified mostly according to the local climate. These types of houses were taken over for construction of villas as well. Two main types can be distinguished with the layout of main residential buildings, although these types appeared clearly ...
Thomas Lodge and Elizabethan Republicanism
Thomas Lodge and Elizabethan Republicanism

File
File

... HS) each to ensure their support.  It was this support that would ensure his survival. ...
File - xaviantvision
File - xaviantvision

Trial of Julius Caesar
Trial of Julius Caesar

Tiberius Claudius Nero
Tiberius Claudius Nero

... evidence, they conclude that he was mad. The best explanation both for Gaius's behavior and the subsequent hostility of the sources is that he was an inexperienced young man thrust into a position of unlimited power, the true nature of which had been carefully disguised by its founder, Augustus. Gai ...
sexual virtue, sexual vice, and the requirements of the
sexual virtue, sexual vice, and the requirements of the

... pages of Petronius' Satyricon -- which portrays Roman life as an unbridled celebration of excess -- to conclude that the Romans joyfully abandoned themselves to all sorts of appetites. Vulgarity and sexual excess seemed to have been the order of the ...
Julius Caesar - davis.k12.ut.us
Julius Caesar - davis.k12.ut.us

... Caesar was fighting Pompey, another powerful Roman, and his sons. Pompey, as well as others ...
ROMAN CONQUEST OF SPAIN: THE ECONOMIC MOTIVE
ROMAN CONQUEST OF SPAIN: THE ECONOMIC MOTIVE

... that Tartessian society was sharply stratified, featuring an aristocratic class of varying degrees of wealth and a relatively indigent lower class. The two eastern Mediterranean groups involved in the Iberian peninsula before the arrival of the Romans were the Phoenicians and the Greeks. Harrison e ...
View/Open - MARS - George Mason University
View/Open - MARS - George Mason University

... by perennial springs” (Quintus Curtius 8.1.11).13 The creators of the aforementioned Horti would have found inspiration in the notoriety of several other ancient gardens, as indicated by Pliny in his Natural History: “for we find that in remote antiquity, even, there was nothing looked upon with a ...
roman history
roman history

... b. When  the  Sabines  attacked,  Spurius  Tarpeius  was  commander  of  the  Roman  citadel.   Spurius  Tarpeius’  daughter  Tarpeia  was  bribed  by  Titus  Tatius  to  open  the  gates,   after  which  the  Sabines  threw  their  shiel ...
Test - Warwickshire County Council
Test - Warwickshire County Council

[Social]:(Untouchables)
[Social]:(Untouchables)

... threaten   to   leave   Rome   if  they   didn’t   have   some   voice   in  the   government,   the  patricians   realized   they   were  losing   control.   They   also  recognized   that   they   needed  the   plebeians   more   than   the  plebeians   needed   them,   so  they   decided   to   r ...
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Early Roman army

The Early Roman army was deployed by ancient Rome during its Regal Era and into the early Republic around 300 BC, when the so-called ""Polybian"" or manipular legion was introduced.Until c. 550 BC, there was probably no ""national"" Roman army, but a series of clan-based war-bands, which only coalesced into a united force in periods of serious external threat. Around 550 BC, during the period conventionally known as the rule of king Servius Tullius, it appears that a universal levy of eligible adult male citizens was instituted. This development apparently coincided with the introduction of heavy armour for most of the infantry.The early Roman army was based on a compulsory levy from adult male citizens that was held at the start of each campaigning season, in those years that war was declared. There were probably no standing or professional forces. During the Regal Era (to c. 500 BC), the standard levy was probably of 9,000 men, consisting of 6,000 heavily armed infantry (probably Greek-style hoplites), plus 2,400 light-armed infantry (rorarii, later called velites) and 600 light cavalry (equites celeres). When the kings were replaced by two annually-elected praetores in c. 500 BC, the standard levy remained of the same size, but was now divided equally between the Praetors, each commanding one legion of 4,500 men.It is likely that the hoplite element was deployed in a Greek-style phalanx formation in large set-piece battles. However, these were relatively rare, with most fighting consisting of small-scale border-raids and skirmishing. In these, the Romans would fight in their basic tactical unit, the centuria of 100 men. In addition, clan-based forces remained in existence until at least c. 450 BC, although they would operate under the Praetors' authority, at least nominally.In 493 BC, shortly after the establishment of the Roman Republic, Rome concluded a perpetual treaty of military alliance (the foedus Cassianum), with the combined other Latin city-states. The treaty, probably motivated by the need for the Latins to deploy a united defence against incursions by neighbouring hill-tribes, provided for each party to provide an equal force for campaigns under unified command. It remained in force until 358 BC.
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