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The West Encounters and Transformations
The West Encounters and Transformations

Cincinnatus, 458 BC - Latter
Cincinnatus, 458 BC - Latter

... Aquians and ordered the Consul Minucius to lead an army against them. The Romans easily won a few battles at first. Then the Aquians began to retreat as if they did not mean to fight any more. The Romans followed swiftly, until they were drawn into a narrow valley on each side of which were high, ro ...
Roman military equipment in the 4th century BC
Roman military equipment in the 4th century BC

The Catiline Conspiracy
The Catiline Conspiracy

The Roman Republic Biography SPARTACUS WHY HE MADE
The Roman Republic Biography SPARTACUS WHY HE MADE

... in the Roman army, but seems to have left the army to form a bandit group. Spartacus led the group on raids of their own. Eventually Spartacus was captured by the Romans. The Romans made him a slave and trained him to become a gladiator. Roman gladiators were forced to fight to entertain crowds of s ...
the roman republic
the roman republic

... Both Sulla and Marius want to take their troops east, and the soldiers of both men are eager to fight: lots of good things for the taking, and lots of opportunity to kill people without them having much of an opportunity to kill you back. Who is going to go? http://www3.northern.edu/marmorsa/histor ...
Significant Leaders of the Late Republic
Significant Leaders of the Late Republic

Roman History VI
Roman History VI

... Not through his efforts, but Sicilian slave revolt also successfully suppressed, grain supplies flow again ...
HIST 391: Etruscans and Romans (3 credits)
HIST 391: Etruscans and Romans (3 credits)

Images of Rome. - Durham Research Online
Images of Rome. - Durham Research Online

... dichotomy between the Roman image and native identity also proves a significant issue for a number of the other papers. The image of the Roman empire has provided an origin myth for many of the peoples of Europe and, in particular, the West throughout history. Communities in the present-day Italian ...
DBG Book 1 Outline
DBG Book 1 Outline

... get ready for departure: they buy all the wagons and pack animals they can; plant as many crops as possible for supplies on the trip, and make alliances with the nearest states. 6-9. They considered two years necessary to accomplish these goals and decided to schedule their departure for the third y ...
Book I Outline
Book I Outline

... get ready for departure: they buy all the wagons and pack animals they can; plant as many crops as possible for supplies on the trip, and make alliances with the nearest states. 6-9. They considered two years necessary to accomplish these goals and decided to schedule their departure for the third y ...
YEAR 4: JULIUS CAESAR AND IMPERIAL ROME (5 lessons)
YEAR 4: JULIUS CAESAR AND IMPERIAL ROME (5 lessons)

... Julius Caesar invaded Britain, defeated its population of Celts, and managed to take it for the Roman Empire. This was the origin of his famous saying, ‘veni, vidi, vici’, meaning ‘I came, I saw, I conquered. ...
heródoto 01 - Revista Heródoto
heródoto 01 - Revista Heródoto

... as well as demonstrating it and making it public. The Forum, and mostly the Rostra, were places of free access where roles were performed, mainly communication, such as magistrates’ and candidates’ speeches and legal activities like defense and accusation in public judgments. Furthermore, for the yo ...
Tod Kirton Ms. Allen Period 2 March 19, 2010 Brutus vs. Antony
Tod Kirton Ms. Allen Period 2 March 19, 2010 Brutus vs. Antony

... Julius Caeser was born on July 12, 100 BC, and was murdered on march 15, 44 BC. Caeser was part of the Roman military and was also a political leader. Caeser was one of the main people who was involved in the transformation of the roman republic into the roman empire. In arrangement with Pompey and ...
Why was Julius Caesar Assassinated
Why was Julius Caesar Assassinated

... If you were present when Caesar said this, what would you think about his personality? ...
pdf CLAS 40409 File size - Victoria University of Wellington
pdf CLAS 40409 File size - Victoria University of Wellington

The Spectacle of Bloodshed in Roman Society
The Spectacle of Bloodshed in Roman Society

... Furthermore, the spectacle of gladiatorial combats, ritualized executions and wild beast hunts served the purpose of creating interactions between the emperor and those whom he ruled. These spectacles and entertainments were usually funded by leading politicians who used these shows and games as a w ...
SOCIETAS VIA ROMANA NEWSLETTER
SOCIETAS VIA ROMANA NEWSLETTER

... were for the powerful. As those principles were derived from the gods, so too, as Camillius demonstrated by his honorable actions, they also applied to the enemies of Rome and to their children. The duty of every Roman is to abide by what the gods had ordained, and true courage is measured by those ...
Document
Document

... fall? The term is "historical novel" and not "novelistic history" and one could reasonably argue that it is the noun that carries the major attribute rather than the epithet. A good historical novel, therefore, must be, above all, a good novel, a good piece of literature. But since the particular ki ...
The Modern Day Rome? - Digital Commons @ Liberty University
The Modern Day Rome? - Digital Commons @ Liberty University

Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar

... Caesar’s adopted son Octavius and Antony create an army to fight the conspirator army being created outside the city by Brutus and Cassius to avenge the death of their father and friend. There are many twists during the fighting, but in the end Brutus commits suicide and Octavius and Antony’s armies ...
REV Bishop Roman - ResearchSpace@Auckland
REV Bishop Roman - ResearchSpace@Auckland

... some nearby skeletons were those of men murdered with the large nails adjacent, a hypothesis joining these old bones with terrible violence. Stow demurs – since ‘a smaller nail would more aptly serve to so bad a purpose, and a more secret place would lightly be employed for their burial’ -- but the ...
Image and portraiture of Augustus the Meroe Head
Image and portraiture of Augustus the Meroe Head

... If this is the case then the figures on the other side could be Octavia in the centre having been abandoned by Anthony with her brother, Octavian, next to her. He is shown nude as he would be after his deification after his death but the vase may well date from his lifetime. The other figure on thei ...
Rebellion of the reactionaries
Rebellion of the reactionaries

... Caesar’s politics had completely altered the traditional power structures in the senate. Holding high offices below him did not go hand in hand with more political influence as it used to. Decisions were made by Caesar alone. And even those who had helped finance his rise to power felt betrayed. ...
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Roman Republican governors of Gaul



Roman Republican governors of Gaul were assigned to the province of Cisalpine Gaul (northern Italy) or to Transalpine Gaul, the Mediterranean region of present-day France also called the Narbonensis, though the latter term is sometimes reserved for a more strictly defined area administered from Narbonne (ancient Narbo). Latin Gallia can also refer in this period to greater Gaul independent of Roman control, covering the remainder of France, Belgium, and parts of the Netherlands and Switzerland, often distinguished as Gallia Comata and including regions also known as Celtica (Κελτική in Strabo and other Greek sources), Aquitania, Belgica, and Armorica (Britanny). To the Romans, Gallia was a vast and vague geographical entity distinguished by predominately Celtic inhabitants, with ""Celticity"" a matter of culture as much as speaking gallice (""in Celtic"").The Latin word provincia (plural provinciae) originally referred to a task assigned to an official or to a sphere of responsibility within which he was authorized to act, including a military command attached to a specified theater of operations. The assignment of a provincia defined geographically thus did not always imply annexation of the territory under Roman rule. Provincial administration as such originated in efforts to stabilize an area in the aftermath of war, and only later was the provincia a formal, preexisting administrative division regularly assigned to promagistrates. The provincia of Gaul therefore began as a military command, at first defensive and later expansionist. Independent Gaul was invaded by Julius Caesar in the 50s BC and organized under Roman administration by Augustus; see Roman Gaul for Gallic provinces in the Imperial era.
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