Cursus Honorum
... themselves with the people by generously topping up the budget of the games, which they were responsible for, with ...
... themselves with the people by generously topping up the budget of the games, which they were responsible for, with ...
Partisan Politics in the Last Decades of the Roman Republic
... analysis will show, because they made destructive errors in both perception and judgment undermining their personal goals. Their only lasting success lay in their responsibility for eliminating any possibility that the Republic might survive. In order to accomplish this goal each of these men altere ...
... analysis will show, because they made destructive errors in both perception and judgment undermining their personal goals. Their only lasting success lay in their responsibility for eliminating any possibility that the Republic might survive. In order to accomplish this goal each of these men altere ...
Italian Citizenship
... The Lex Julia was followed by the Lex Plautia Papiria. This allowed citizenship to those who met three conditions: he must claim citizenship in an Italian city that was a Roman ally, he must have already established residence there before the passing of this law, and must then present himself to a p ...
... The Lex Julia was followed by the Lex Plautia Papiria. This allowed citizenship to those who met three conditions: he must claim citizenship in an Italian city that was a Roman ally, he must have already established residence there before the passing of this law, and must then present himself to a p ...
Ch 7 Sec 2 Punic Wars.notebook
... rome versus the greeks • Greek colonies in southern Italy saw Rome growing and became worried • General Pyrrhus of Western Greece would come to the aid of the colonies with 20,000 soldiers • Pyrrhus push the Roman army back, but with great cost (time after time) • 275 B.C.= Roman army pushed ...
... rome versus the greeks • Greek colonies in southern Italy saw Rome growing and became worried • General Pyrrhus of Western Greece would come to the aid of the colonies with 20,000 soldiers • Pyrrhus push the Roman army back, but with great cost (time after time) • 275 B.C.= Roman army pushed ...
Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus Germanicus) 15 December 37 CE
... • Ostensibly, Nero did a lot to help aid those affected by the fire, but many believe he was the one who caused the incident in the first place, all in order to make room for his future palace. ...
... • Ostensibly, Nero did a lot to help aid those affected by the fire, but many believe he was the one who caused the incident in the first place, all in order to make room for his future palace. ...
Boudicca_Rebellion_A.. - the unlikely professor
... Auxiliaries were allied troops, but unlike the legionaries, none of them were citizens. They came from regions surrounding the core Roman provinces. Rome provided them no weaponry or armor, but they did get paid. Cavalry troops were similarly allies for the most part, though most (if not all) Roman ...
... Auxiliaries were allied troops, but unlike the legionaries, none of them were citizens. They came from regions surrounding the core Roman provinces. Rome provided them no weaponry or armor, but they did get paid. Cavalry troops were similarly allies for the most part, though most (if not all) Roman ...
Sexuality and Masculinity in Catullus and Plautus
... Roman society was not just a dichotomy of man/woman, patrician/plebian, freedman/slave, and so on. The social hierarchy, as we can see in these works of literature, is intrinsically tied to a sexual hierarchy. At the top are the viri, the “men.” At least in his invective, this concept of a vir was t ...
... Roman society was not just a dichotomy of man/woman, patrician/plebian, freedman/slave, and so on. The social hierarchy, as we can see in these works of literature, is intrinsically tied to a sexual hierarchy. At the top are the viri, the “men.” At least in his invective, this concept of a vir was t ...
A Critical History of Early Rome
... Chapter 2 examines the development of Etruscan and, eventually, Latin cultures in archaic Italy, 800--500 BC. Forsythe emphasizes how the Greeks and Phoenicians influenced indigenous Italian peoples. Phoenicians and Greeks traded with and colonized southern Italy, bringing with them important cultur ...
... Chapter 2 examines the development of Etruscan and, eventually, Latin cultures in archaic Italy, 800--500 BC. Forsythe emphasizes how the Greeks and Phoenicians influenced indigenous Italian peoples. Phoenicians and Greeks traded with and colonized southern Italy, bringing with them important cultur ...
What was the Nobilitas?*
... paper to be clearer in narratiye and discussion than I had supposed. Fergus Millar, Camden Professor of Ancient History, University of Oxford, also read and improved English expressions, criticizing some of my thoughts on Roman history and its history of study as well, when he visited Sugiyama on 23 ...
... paper to be clearer in narratiye and discussion than I had supposed. Fergus Millar, Camden Professor of Ancient History, University of Oxford, also read and improved English expressions, criticizing some of my thoughts on Roman history and its history of study as well, when he visited Sugiyama on 23 ...
The Punic Wars
... Who led the Carthaginian army? What did the Carthaginians do because they were unable to capture the city of Rome? ...
... Who led the Carthaginian army? What did the Carthaginians do because they were unable to capture the city of Rome? ...
Famous Men of Rome Teacher Sample
... 7*. Rome claimed divine ancestry through its founders Romulus and Remus (sons of Sylvia and Mars) and Aeneas (son of Venus). How might this have affected the Roman character? The idea of divine ancestry fed the Romans’ strong sense of destiny, as well as their famous perseverance and bravery (if t ...
... 7*. Rome claimed divine ancestry through its founders Romulus and Remus (sons of Sylvia and Mars) and Aeneas (son of Venus). How might this have affected the Roman character? The idea of divine ancestry fed the Romans’ strong sense of destiny, as well as their famous perseverance and bravery (if t ...
SCUTUM - The Big Book of War
... ambush: "Now Pompey was anxious to lead {Oroeses} into conflict before he should find out the number of the Romans, for fear that when he learned it he might retreat...he kept the rest behind...in a kneeling position and covered with their shields, causing them to remain motionless, so that Oroeses ...
... ambush: "Now Pompey was anxious to lead {Oroeses} into conflict before he should find out the number of the Romans, for fear that when he learned it he might retreat...he kept the rest behind...in a kneeling position and covered with their shields, causing them to remain motionless, so that Oroeses ...
A Brief History of Rome
... a counter-revolution. Among the young nobility they found just such a group. Meanwhile the Senate had resolved to return the Tarquin’s property to them. The ambassadors, under the guise of preparing transport for the property with which they were to return, continued their preparations for the count ...
... a counter-revolution. Among the young nobility they found just such a group. Meanwhile the Senate had resolved to return the Tarquin’s property to them. The ambassadors, under the guise of preparing transport for the property with which they were to return, continued their preparations for the count ...
a brief history of rome copy
... a counter-revolution. Among the young nobility they found just such a group. Meanwhile the Senate had resolved to return the Tarquin’s property to them. The ambassadors, under the guise of preparing transport for the property with which they were to return, continued their preparations for the count ...
... a counter-revolution. Among the young nobility they found just such a group. Meanwhile the Senate had resolved to return the Tarquin’s property to them. The ambassadors, under the guise of preparing transport for the property with which they were to return, continued their preparations for the count ...
CLAS 207/307 Roman Social History TRIMESTER 1 2011
... Rome. What return might those providing games, including the imperial family, gain that would seem sufficient compensation for their monetary investment? ...
... Rome. What return might those providing games, including the imperial family, gain that would seem sufficient compensation for their monetary investment? ...
Toledo Bianca Toledo Miss Bergen, Mrs. Downer, Mrs. Ibrahim
... After the death of both brothers, the senate removed their reforms regardless of the beneficial characteristics. Removal of beneficial reforms led right back to the Roman Republic’s previous state of corruptness which clearly proved their senatorial opponents were part of a corrupt government. The b ...
... After the death of both brothers, the senate removed their reforms regardless of the beneficial characteristics. Removal of beneficial reforms led right back to the Roman Republic’s previous state of corruptness which clearly proved their senatorial opponents were part of a corrupt government. The b ...
Togae - WordPress.com
... We do not know a great deal about Roman underclothes, but there is evidence that women wore a simple, wrapped loincloth (subligar or subligaculum, meaning “little binding underneath”) at least some of the time. Women also sometimes wore a band of cloth or leather to support the breasts (strophium o ...
... We do not know a great deal about Roman underclothes, but there is evidence that women wore a simple, wrapped loincloth (subligar or subligaculum, meaning “little binding underneath”) at least some of the time. Women also sometimes wore a band of cloth or leather to support the breasts (strophium o ...
roman clothing - julie petrusa
... We do not know a great deal about Roman underclothes, but there is evidence that women wore a simple, wrapped loincloth (subligar or subligaculum, meaning “little binding underneath”) at least some of the time. Women also sometimes wore a band of cloth or leather to support the breasts (strophium o ...
... We do not know a great deal about Roman underclothes, but there is evidence that women wore a simple, wrapped loincloth (subligar or subligaculum, meaning “little binding underneath”) at least some of the time. Women also sometimes wore a band of cloth or leather to support the breasts (strophium o ...
Food and dining in the Roman Empire
Food and dining in the Roman Empire reflect both the variety of foodstuffs available through the expanded trade networks of the Roman Empire and the traditions of conviviality from ancient Rome's earliest times, inherited in part from the Greeks and Etruscans. In contrast to the Greek symposium, which was primarily a drinking party, the equivalent social institution of the Roman convivium was focused on food. Banqueting played a major role in Rome's communal religion. Maintaining the food supply to the city of Rome had become a major political issue in the late Republic, and continued to be one of the main ways the emperor expressed his relationship to the Roman people.