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Reassessing Polybius on Naval Power in the First Punic
Reassessing Polybius on Naval Power in the First Punic

... lower Carthaginian losses. This paper argues that Polybius’ language after the battle indicates that the Carthaginians refit, rather than rebuilt their fleet, supporting the supposition that Carthaginian losses were less severe. In light of this correction, the lack of reports of aggressive shipbuil ...
NHH16. Real Men and Mincing Queans
NHH16. Real Men and Mincing Queans

... sexual monster, promiscuous, passive, and effeminate. Even more than their Greek counterparts, Roman writers targeted effeminate men as visible examples of a special tribe. When we look at Roman images or read Roman literature, it is important we do not do so with through our 21st Century eyes. The ...
Flamen Dialis
Flamen Dialis

... across a statue of Alexander the Great and wept, for Alexander had conquered most of the known world by the same age and Caesar had accomplished so little. ...
Chapter 1 Michael`s Last Lifetime - Multiple Personality Disorder
Chapter 1 Michael`s Last Lifetime - Multiple Personality Disorder

... Having executed us as ordered, Zenuitias returned the ax to the soldier who had given it to him. He had fooled the colonel, who could not now find him equally guilty. The next day, he committed suicide, as we all had planned to do if any of us were captured. The other soldiers then stripped off our ...
Cimbri and Teutons - waughfamily.ca
Cimbri and Teutons - waughfamily.ca

... authorized another army to be raised. This time, a force of over 6 legions was hastily prepared under Mallius Maximus, and he was given imperium over both armies. He marched to join Caepio, but Caepio, feeling that Mallius was inferior in social position, refused to obey or join his command. Bitter ...
Augustus Caesar
Augustus Caesar

Lecture: Early Rome and the Beginnings of Roman Imperialism
Lecture: Early Rome and the Beginnings of Roman Imperialism

... (legio). As voting assembly, 193 units divided into 5 classes based on wealth, with the first two classes making a majority (probably limited to a yes/no ...
1. The Etruscans ruled Rome between 616 and 509 B.C.E. 2. The
1. The Etruscans ruled Rome between 616 and 509 B.C.E. 2. The

... could pass laws for all Roman citizens and could nominate consuls, tribunes, and members of the Senate. 3. Other countries adopted the following characteristics from the Roman Republic: a written constitution, elected assemblies, citizenship, civic duty, checks and balances, and a spirit of repu ...
Rome through Documents
Rome through Documents

Gregory K. Golden, Crisis Management during the Roman Republic
Gregory K. Golden, Crisis Management during the Roman Republic

... In this book, Golden seeks a better understanding of how the Roman Republic functioned in practice by looking at its responses to crisis situations, the systems and flaws in those responses, and the strains upon the Republic under such circumstances. In the Prologue and again in the first chapter, G ...
#38 The Legs of Iron – Diocletian`s Split, 1, Diocletian Splits the
#38 The Legs of Iron – Diocletian`s Split, 1, Diocletian Splits the

... over the West. [This was shortly before the time of Constantine, who in 330 A.D. would soon be establishing the overall capital of the Roman Empire in the east, in a city rebuilt and renamed after him, Constantinople.] Then, a few years later, in 293 A.D., a second dividing occurred, with the East b ...
Introduction to Romans
Introduction to Romans

... (5) Jews. When Jews first came to Rome is not known, but a few of them probably arrived in the 2nd cent B.C. It is thought that about 20,000 of them lived in the capital during the first half of the 1st cent A.D. A total of thirteen synagogues are known to have existed in Rome, but not all of them m ...
Gaius Julius Caesar
Gaius Julius Caesar

... transalpine and cisalpine Gaul for a period of 5 years. When he became involved in conquering the rest of Gaul (mostly France), Caesar realized that it would take more than 5 years. Caesar was able to renew his alliance with Pompey in Crassus in 56 and to complete the conquest of Gaul by 50. While i ...
JC Review Guide Acts I_III0
JC Review Guide Acts I_III0

... 11. Who said, “Cowards die many times before their deaths; / The valiant never taste of death but once.”? What does this quote mean? 12. Who said, “It is the bright day that brings forth the adder, / And that craves wary walking.”? About whom is this quote being said? What does this quote mean? 13. ...
Video-Rome Power and Glory-episode 1
Video-Rome Power and Glory-episode 1

... The first two elected leaders, called consuls, were Brutus and Lucretia’s widowed husband. “And so a king was replaced with, first two praetors, eventually two consuls. With two, both of them in agreement on everything, elected annually so that no one person ever had very much power for very long at ...
Physical Order and Disorder in Roman Architecture Style
Physical Order and Disorder in Roman Architecture Style

... Physical Order and Disorder in Architecture: The architecture is composed of different part. The connection between these components has been organized. It means that all these components are subsystem of an organism. This system or organism might be very simple or complicated. Max Bense who is one ...
sample - Lessons of History
sample - Lessons of History

... The City of Rome had begun – but who were these Etruscans who began it? Etruscans: Origin and Language The Ancient Historians had various theories about the origins of the Etruscans. We get our information about them from three main ancient sources: these sources are the Greek historian, Herodotus ...
Why was Boudicca important?
Why was Boudicca important?

... marched to Colchester – this was the capital of Roman Britain. Boudicca and her army then attacked the town. They even burnt down a temple where elderly soldiers and families had been taking shelter. Next Boudicca led her army to London (it was called Londonium at that time). Here they burned down t ...
Ancient Roman Art An Instructor`s Guide
Ancient Roman Art An Instructor`s Guide

... gallery, what can you learn about the society where this art was created? (3) Pick one piece from the gallery: what do you think its purpose was? (4) Who made it and why do you think they made it? Deeper Questions | (1) How did the ancient Romans use art as a tool for building a cultural identity? P ...
Unit 1: Chp. 1-5 Key Vocabulary (Chapter 1) Archaeology
Unit 1: Chp. 1-5 Key Vocabulary (Chapter 1) Archaeology

5: Provincial Perspectives
5: Provincial Perspectives

Ch. 33
Ch. 33

... crisis: a dangerous moment with a high chance of an unwanted result ...
Here
Here

... marched to Colchester – this was the capital of Roman Britain. Boudicca and her army then attacked the town. They even burnt down a temple where elderly soldiers and families had been taking shelter. Next Boudicca led her army to London (it was called Londonium at that time). Here they burned down t ...
The Fall of Julius Caesar - Mrs. Anthony`s English 2
The Fall of Julius Caesar - Mrs. Anthony`s English 2

The Roman Forum
The Roman Forum

... It has long been recognised that one of the most compelling means by which Augustus staked his claim to power over Rome, alongside his political reforms, his military achievements and his literary propaganda, was his self-insertion into the visible fabric of the city of Rome. Everywhere you went in ...
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Roman historiography

Roman historiography is indebted to the Greeks, who invented the form. The Romans had great models to base their works upon, such as Herodotus (c. 484 – 425 BCE) and Thucydides (c. 460 – c. 395 BCE). Roman historiographical forms are different from the Greek ones however, and voice very Roman concerns. Unlike the Greeks, Roman historiography did not start out with an oral historical tradition. The Roman style of history was based on the way that the Annals of the Pontifex Maximus, or the Annales Maximi, were recorded. The Annales Maximi include a wide array of information, including religious documents, names of consuls, deaths of priests, and various disasters throughout history. Also part of the Annales Maximi are the White Tablets, or the “Tabulae Albatae,” which consist of information on the origin of the republic.
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