![Tekmeria - Journal](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/004459168_1-6b8b2b0f31893dae54f50a202885ff27-300x300.png)
The Novus Homo and Virtus: Oratory, Masculinity, and the
... was more to “being a man” than just facing death in combat. During this time another group, the self-styled Atticists, emerged. This group, through their attacks on Cicero, highlight exactly how some Romans conceptualized the deep connection between oratory and traditional virtus. However, the conce ...
... was more to “being a man” than just facing death in combat. During this time another group, the self-styled Atticists, emerged. This group, through their attacks on Cicero, highlight exactly how some Romans conceptualized the deep connection between oratory and traditional virtus. However, the conce ...
Episode 2
... Reconstruction voiceover: “Old men are enduring thirty and forty years of service, many have even lost limbs. Discharge does not end it. They do the same work by a different name. And, if by some chance one survives, he is dragged to the ends of the earth and given ‘payment’ with a swampy marsh or ...
... Reconstruction voiceover: “Old men are enduring thirty and forty years of service, many have even lost limbs. Discharge does not end it. They do the same work by a different name. And, if by some chance one survives, he is dragged to the ends of the earth and given ‘payment’ with a swampy marsh or ...
Augustus and the Visionary Leadership of Pax Romana
... Rome. Historian Adrian Goldsworthy notes the civic duty belief held by Roman citizens during this period and comments, “For such soldiers service in the army was not a career, but a duty owed to the state.”6 The societal norms espoused by the Romans of the third and mid-second century BC era denoted ...
... Rome. Historian Adrian Goldsworthy notes the civic duty belief held by Roman citizens during this period and comments, “For such soldiers service in the army was not a career, but a duty owed to the state.”6 The societal norms espoused by the Romans of the third and mid-second century BC era denoted ...
Marjeta Šašel Kos The Roman Conquest of Illyricum
... Cleemporus, and this incident triggered off an attack by the Roman state on Agron’s kingdom in 229 BC. However, Agron had died in the meantime, leaving a small son, Pinnes, and his wife, Teuta, as regent, although she was not the child’s mother10. Agron, as other Illyrian kings before him, based hi ...
... Cleemporus, and this incident triggered off an attack by the Roman state on Agron’s kingdom in 229 BC. However, Agron had died in the meantime, leaving a small son, Pinnes, and his wife, Teuta, as regent, although she was not the child’s mother10. Agron, as other Illyrian kings before him, based hi ...
Slide 1
... Rome, but a third order had no voice in how they were ruled. They were the slaves. Many people captured in war became slaves. Some were former criminals. Others–very poor Romans–sold themselves and their families into slavery to keep from starving. Roman law considered slaves to be property, so slav ...
... Rome, but a third order had no voice in how they were ruled. They were the slaves. Many people captured in war became slaves. Some were former criminals. Others–very poor Romans–sold themselves and their families into slavery to keep from starving. Roman law considered slaves to be property, so slav ...
Roman Times
... brother. Not only did he plan to enact land reform bills, but he wanted to change prices, the military, and he also wanted to establish colonies. Furthermore, he wanted to end all injustice in the provinces. Some of his accomplishments included giving the equites power to put provincial governors on ...
... brother. Not only did he plan to enact land reform bills, but he wanted to change prices, the military, and he also wanted to establish colonies. Furthermore, he wanted to end all injustice in the provinces. Some of his accomplishments included giving the equites power to put provincial governors on ...
Option 1 - The origins of Rome - The kings - Translations
... I do not know for sure (and if I did, I wouldn’t dare to say) whether the job I have taken on – writing the story of Rome and the Roman people from the very beginning – will be worth the effort. Since I see that it is an old and common practice that the new writers always think they will either writ ...
... I do not know for sure (and if I did, I wouldn’t dare to say) whether the job I have taken on – writing the story of Rome and the Roman people from the very beginning – will be worth the effort. Since I see that it is an old and common practice that the new writers always think they will either writ ...
Some Hypotheses on the Duel of Manlius Torquatus and a Gaul
... way north from Anio (even if the invaders had not already advanced beyond it), since it was there the Romans had suffered the calamitous defeat at the hands of Gauls some fifty years earlier, and Roman sensibilities and superstitions in such matters were very acute, with historical exempla being ent ...
... way north from Anio (even if the invaders had not already advanced beyond it), since it was there the Romans had suffered the calamitous defeat at the hands of Gauls some fifty years earlier, and Roman sensibilities and superstitions in such matters were very acute, with historical exempla being ent ...
Test 5 - Ancient Rome
... Indicate whether the statement is true or false. 1. Italy’s location on a peninsula, the protection provided by the Alps and the Mediterranean Sea, and its climate made it ideally suited for the emergence of a mighty empire. 2. Patricians forced the plebeians to make changes in the Roman government ...
... Indicate whether the statement is true or false. 1. Italy’s location on a peninsula, the protection provided by the Alps and the Mediterranean Sea, and its climate made it ideally suited for the emergence of a mighty empire. 2. Patricians forced the plebeians to make changes in the Roman government ...
PeoPle anD PlaCes - Studia Europaea Gnesnensia
... Cleemporus, and this incident triggered off an attack by the Roman state on Agron’s kingdom in 229 BC. However, Agron had died in the meantime, leaving a small son, Pinnes, and his wife, Teuta, as regent, although she was not the child’s mother10. Agron, as other Illyrian kings before him, based hi ...
... Cleemporus, and this incident triggered off an attack by the Roman state on Agron’s kingdom in 229 BC. However, Agron had died in the meantime, leaving a small son, Pinnes, and his wife, Teuta, as regent, although she was not the child’s mother10. Agron, as other Illyrian kings before him, based hi ...
Rome - Hempfield Area School District
... sophisticated noble would be expected to know, as well as some required for his future career. Poetry and literature, history and geography, some mythology and important languages – like Greek – would all be taught. ...
... sophisticated noble would be expected to know, as well as some required for his future career. Poetry and literature, history and geography, some mythology and important languages – like Greek – would all be taught. ...
9 The Arrival of the Magna Mater in Rome
... and tow it into Rome, thus proving that hers was the casta manus, the chaste hand that the Sibyl had foretold.11 In Ovid's version, too, the Romans received the Mother joyfully and installed the sacred stone on the Palatine in the Temple of Victory. Then followed a splendid celebration, with banque ...
... and tow it into Rome, thus proving that hers was the casta manus, the chaste hand that the Sibyl had foretold.11 In Ovid's version, too, the Romans received the Mother joyfully and installed the sacred stone on the Palatine in the Temple of Victory. Then followed a splendid celebration, with banque ...
Mos, maiores, and historical exempla in Roman culture - Beck-Shop
... the knowledge and identity of a group of people which regards itself as a unity. It is constantly renewed in view of the present, and it is characterized by both a formative, or didactic, element and a normative element. It works in two modes: a mode of potentiality as an archive of texts, images, a ...
... the knowledge and identity of a group of people which regards itself as a unity. It is constantly renewed in view of the present, and it is characterized by both a formative, or didactic, element and a normative element. It works in two modes: a mode of potentiality as an archive of texts, images, a ...
Roman Isis and the Pendulum of Tolerance in the Empire
... 236). The latter includes an ancient statue of the Nile (Fig. 1) inserted into the fountain in front of the Palazzo dei Senatori, which makes a pair with a statue representing the Tiber on the opposite flank. Sphinxes line the perimeter of the Piazza del Popolo; Egyptian lions appear throughout the ...
... 236). The latter includes an ancient statue of the Nile (Fig. 1) inserted into the fountain in front of the Palazzo dei Senatori, which makes a pair with a statue representing the Tiber on the opposite flank. Sphinxes line the perimeter of the Piazza del Popolo; Egyptian lions appear throughout the ...
Fall of Saguntum Meghan Poplacean
... northward expansion and the threat it would present to Massilian economic interests, went to Rome and urged her to become more concerned with Iberian affairs. It was this involvement that enabled the Saguntines to realistically seek Roman arbitration during the 220s. This arbitration would result in ...
... northward expansion and the threat it would present to Massilian economic interests, went to Rome and urged her to become more concerned with Iberian affairs. It was this involvement that enabled the Saguntines to realistically seek Roman arbitration during the 220s. This arbitration would result in ...
Daughter of a King
... Without a clear successor, they reasoned, the king's death would mean the end of Ptolemaic control of Egypt. Like most royal families, the Ptolemies had sometimes experienced difficulty choosing an heir. It was not easy to pick a new monarch without offending the others who wanted the position. The ...
... Without a clear successor, they reasoned, the king's death would mean the end of Ptolemaic control of Egypt. Like most royal families, the Ptolemies had sometimes experienced difficulty choosing an heir. It was not easy to pick a new monarch without offending the others who wanted the position. The ...
Chapter 14 (The Roman Republic)
... their Etruscan king, and set up a republic. Under this form of government, people choose their rulers. However, not everyone had an equal say in the Roman Republic. The patricians–members of the oldest and richest families–were the only ones who could hold public office or perform certain religious ...
... their Etruscan king, and set up a republic. Under this form of government, people choose their rulers. However, not everyone had an equal say in the Roman Republic. The patricians–members of the oldest and richest families–were the only ones who could hold public office or perform certain religious ...
Presentation Plus! - Central Dauphin School District
... their Etruscan king, and set up a republic. Under this form of government, people choose their rulers. However, not everyone had an equal say in the Roman Republic. The patricians–members of the oldest and richest families–were the only ones who could hold public office or perform certain religious ...
... their Etruscan king, and set up a republic. Under this form of government, people choose their rulers. However, not everyone had an equal say in the Roman Republic. The patricians–members of the oldest and richest families–were the only ones who could hold public office or perform certain religious ...
The Forum Romanum: A Kaleidoscopic Analysis
... The association can be extended even further. Political leaders adopted a certain god-like aura when they were seen orating next to statues of heroes and gods in front of their sanctuaries. While this association occurred naturally by mere physical positioning, Roman leaders often fabricated this he ...
... The association can be extended even further. Political leaders adopted a certain god-like aura when they were seen orating next to statues of heroes and gods in front of their sanctuaries. While this association occurred naturally by mere physical positioning, Roman leaders often fabricated this he ...