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Περίληψη : Άλλα Ονόματα Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Κύρια Ιδιότητα
Περίληψη : Άλλα Ονόματα Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Κύρια Ιδιότητα

... His most important reform was the exclusion of senators from the higher military ranks, while he started to replace them in the political offices with equites. This policy is also testified in the provinces of Asia Minor, such as Pontus-Bithynia, Cilicia, Lycia-Pamphylia, whereas in the Province of ...
Coriolanus - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey
Coriolanus - The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey

... Corioli, the Romans are driven back; but Martius charges alone through the city gates. His bravery rouses the soldiers, who follow after him, turning the tide of the battle. In the fray, Martius and Aufidius meet; the two men clash fervently and Aufidius retreats, wounded. After the Roman victory, C ...
Augustus` Divine Authority and Vergil`s "Aeneid"
Augustus` Divine Authority and Vergil`s "Aeneid"

104493 - Radboud Repository
104493 - Radboud Repository

... Romanum, which had been destroyed by fire in AD 283, and seems to have remained destroyed till the tetrarchs restored it. Yet in that restoration, changes were made in the orientation of the Forum, linking it closely to the Imperial Fora18. One could argue that in that way the tetrarchs once more ma ...
Power and Status in the Roman Empire, AD 193-284
Power and Status in the Roman Empire, AD 193-284

... Translations are taken from the LCL, unless otherwise noted. The numbering of Dio’s Roman History follows the LCL edition. ‘ / ’ means that a person held a post for an unspecified period between  and . ‘–’ means that a person held an office from  until . ...
Power and Status in the Roman Empire, ad 193–284
Power and Status in the Roman Empire, ad 193–284

... Translations are taken from the LCL, unless otherwise noted. The numbering of Dio’s Roman History follows the LCL edition. ‘ / ’ means that a person held a post for an unspecified period between  and . ‘–’ means that a person held an office from  until . ...
Mithradates: Scourge of Rome
Mithradates: Scourge of Rome

... Danube to Central Asia. In 75 BC, as Rome reeled from Sulla’s savage proscriptions as well as slave revolts and wars in Gaul, Italy and Spain, the Third Mithradatic War broke out. The flashpoint was the death of Nicomedes, Rome’s puppet king of Bithynia. The Romans produced his phony last will and t ...
The misuse of power - SNHU Academic Archive
The misuse of power - SNHU Academic Archive

Publius Clodius Pulcher
Publius Clodius Pulcher

Comparing Strategies of the 2d Punic War
Comparing Strategies of the 2d Punic War

... survived less than a century more; Hannibal was a strategic failure. If so, why did he fail? The failure was certainly not at the tactical or operational level of war. Hannibal won every major battle against the Romans in Italy. He formed and reformed successful armies without reinforcement from his ...
Where Titus Quintius Flamininus`s interests in line with those of the
Where Titus Quintius Flamininus`s interests in line with those of the

... Senatorial orders, or whether he and his consilium invented the specific terms as a negotiating position. Diodorus gives an account of Flamininus’ demands for a Greece left ‘ungarrisoned and autonomous’.10 This choice of rhetoric is analogous to the terms used in the Isthmian declaration, and sugges ...
A yellow- crusted tooth skittered across the floor, followed by
A yellow- crusted tooth skittered across the floor, followed by

... the most powerful man in the world. He had to kill a man who was like a father to him. He had to kill Gaius Julius Caesar, emperor of Rome. After his marvelous conquests of Gaul and Egypt, Julius Caesar had made himself consul for life, or emperor of Rome. To the people, Caesar was more god than man ...
P. VENTIDIUS-FROM NOVUS HOMO TO `MILITARY HERO`
P. VENTIDIUS-FROM NOVUS HOMO TO `MILITARY HERO`

The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol 1
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol 1

... to one main and predominant idea, that Gibbon is unrivalled. We cannot but admire the manner in which he masses his materials, and arranges his facts in successive groups, not according to chronological order, but to their moral or political connection; the distinctness with which he marks his perio ...
000000000000000000000 - 2010
000000000000000000000 - 2010

... Hannibal’s reasons for fighting the Second Punic War were many and varied. However, some main reasons were personal and close at heart. Two reasons he wanted to fight were to defend his homeland and avenge his passed family. Hannibal felt an obligation to his homeland to bring honor and ensure a saf ...
74938 - Radboud Repository
74938 - Radboud Repository

... limited to specific case studies dealing with Egypt and Italy, and hardly go into the process as a whole. Cf. Christol (1997); Johne-Hartmann-Gerhardt (2008), 583-789. On Diocletian as extending and systematizing changes rather than being the initiator, see Bury (1913), 127. ...
Rome v Brutus Affidavits
Rome v Brutus Affidavits

... Of course, I knew Marcus Brutus. In fact, I did refer to him as "the noblest Roman of them all." I do believe that Brutus believed he acted for the common good to all Romans, but he had no right to kill Caesar. Caesar had not taken the crown; Caesar had not thrown out the Senate or taken away their ...
Herod and Augustus: A Look at Patron
Herod and Augustus: A Look at Patron

Cassius will now describe an event which he feels proves Caesar`s
Cassius will now describe an event which he feels proves Caesar`s

... disturbed in mind, said that his name was not King, but Caesar, and seeing that his words produced an universal silence, he passed on with no very cheerful or contented looks. Moreover, after extravagant honors had been voted him in the senate he did not rise to receive them, but as if he were deali ...
1 The Roman gens` influence on loci of power in
1 The Roman gens` influence on loci of power in

... capital cases himself, so he could intimidate anyone who opposed him and confiscate their property (Livy, Rom. Hist. 1.49). After this, Roman society was popularly against tyrannical or sole rule, and avoided it by limiting the power that an individual could acquire. This was done through political ...
Founding fathers: An ethnic and gender study of the Iliadic Aeneid
Founding fathers: An ethnic and gender study of the Iliadic Aeneid

... of blueprint for how to become Roman, or rather how to be a proper Roman citizen living in a Roman community. The location of this blueprint is in the defining characteristics of the epic’s main players, characteristics like gender and ethnicity.4 Syed argues that Vergil’s ethnic and gender construc ...
sample
sample

... vergobrets, were at loggerheads with each other. One, Cingetorix, thought it better to knuckle under to the dictates of Rome, whereas Indutiomarus thought a German-aided revolt just the solution with Caesar away in Britannia. Then Caesar himself had turned up with four legions in light marching orde ...
Caesar`s Rule and Caesar`s Death : Who Lost? Who Gained?
Caesar`s Rule and Caesar`s Death : Who Lost? Who Gained?

Virtus in the Roman World - The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg
Virtus in the Roman World - The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg

... right to command troops. These positions included the praetors, consuls and dictators, though the dictatorship was never actively sought by Republican aristocrats until the end of the Republic, as it only served as an emergency position. 146 In numerous Latin accounts from Livy, Cicero, Cato, and o ...
Document
Document

... tyrant • It is not surprising that, even before Nero appears on the scene, at the beginning of the 1st act he is introduced (during the conversation that takes place between two Roman soldiers) as a most hateful character, who has no regard for the sanctity of marriage, neglects the care of the empi ...
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Promagistrate

A promagistrate (Latin: pro magistratu) is a person who acts in and with the authority and capacity of a magistrate, but without holding a magisterial office. A legal innovation of the Roman Republic, the promagistracy was invented in order to provide Rome with governors of overseas territories instead of having to elect more magistrates each year. Promagistrates were appointed by senatus consultum; like all acts of the Roman Senate, these appointments were not entirely legal and could be overruled by the Roman assemblies, e.g., the replacement of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus by Gaius Marius during the Jugurthine War.Promagistrates were usually either proquaestors (acting in place of quaestors), propraetors, acting in place of praetors, or proconsuls acting in place of consuls. A promagistrate held equal authority to the equivalent magistrate, was attended by the same number of lictors, and generally speaking had autocratic power within his province, be it territorial or otherwise. Promagistrates usually had already held the office in whose stead they were acting, although this was not mandatory.One should also mention here the procurator, a posting originally as a financial manager in a province, a position which held no magisterial power until Claudius gave them his power in the mid 40s AD, enabling them to administer provinces.The institution of promagistracies developed because the Romans found it inconvenient to continue adding ordinary magistracies to administer their newly acquired overseas possessions. Therefore, they adopted the practice of appointing an individual to act in place or capacity of (pro) a magistrate (magistratu); a promagistrate was literally a lieutenant. Subsequently, when Pompeius Magnus was given proconsular imperium to fight against Quintus Sertorius, the Senate made a point of distinguishing that he was not actually being appointed a promagistrate: he was appointed to act not in place of a consul (pro consule), but on behalf of the consuls (pro consulibus).The Roman legal concept of imperium meant that an ""imperial"" magistrate or promagistrate had absolute authority within the competence of his office; a promagistrate with imperium appointed to govern a province, therefore, had absolute authority within his capacity as governor of that province; indeed, the word provincia referred both to the governor's office or jurisdiction and to the territory he governed. A provincial governor had almost totally unlimited authority, and frequently extorted vast amounts of money from the provincial population — he had total immunity from prosecution during his term in office. It became fairly common for provincial governors to seek continual election to office to avoid trial for extortion and bribery, two famous examples being Gaius Verres and Lucius Sergius Catilina.The near limitless power of a high-ranking promagistrate has led to the term ""proconsul"" being used to designate any high-ranking and authoritative official appointed from above (or from without) to govern a territory without regard for local political institutions (i.e., one who is not elected and whose authority supersedes that of local officials). One of the most prominent examples of this is Douglas MacArthur, who was given vast powers to implement reform and recovery efforts in Japan after World War II, and has been described occasionally as ""the American proconsul of Japan"".
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