Caesar 2 Essay, Research Paper Many people associate the Ides of
... of the populares, his Uncle Marius and Cinna. Cinna was killed the year that Caesar had married Cinna s daughter Cornelia. The second attack upon the city was carried out by Marius enemy Sulla, leader of the optimates, in 82 BC on Sulla s return from the East. The confiscation of property resulted f ...
... of the populares, his Uncle Marius and Cinna. Cinna was killed the year that Caesar had married Cinna s daughter Cornelia. The second attack upon the city was carried out by Marius enemy Sulla, leader of the optimates, in 82 BC on Sulla s return from the East. The confiscation of property resulted f ...
Quintus Sertorius and the Rebellion in Spain
... created several difficulties as it forced him to utilize two different sets of equipment and strategies. After the reforms of Marius, the legion constituted a versatile heavy infantry force. They fought equipped with chain mail, shields, and helmets, armed with pilum and gladius. Complementary troop ...
... created several difficulties as it forced him to utilize two different sets of equipment and strategies. After the reforms of Marius, the legion constituted a versatile heavy infantry force. They fought equipped with chain mail, shields, and helmets, armed with pilum and gladius. Complementary troop ...
A General`s Self-Depiction: The Political
... Rome (both geographically and in the Roman imagination), it is only roughly twenty-five miles from Gaul and many of the Gallic tribes had received British auxiliaries in previous engagements against Caesar; that made the Britons enemies of the Roman people. Moreover, a reconnaissance would be import ...
... Rome (both geographically and in the Roman imagination), it is only roughly twenty-five miles from Gaul and many of the Gallic tribes had received British auxiliaries in previous engagements against Caesar; that made the Britons enemies of the Roman people. Moreover, a reconnaissance would be import ...
Caesar: Selections from his Commentarii De Bello Gallico
... merely as an intervention, a sort of police action to safeguard the integrity of the Roman province of which he was governor. Book Four (4.24–36.1) picks up four years later when Caesar appeared to have brought all Gaul under his e ective military control. He felt secure enough to lead an expedition ...
... merely as an intervention, a sort of police action to safeguard the integrity of the Roman province of which he was governor. Book Four (4.24–36.1) picks up four years later when Caesar appeared to have brought all Gaul under his e ective military control. He felt secure enough to lead an expedition ...
the republican soldier: historiographical representations and human
... Discipline in the Late Republic and Early Principate, which examines the social and cultural implications of discipline in the army.1 Unfortunately it lies on the other side of the late Republican divide, dealing with the period post-Marius and particularly the professional army of the Empire. Part ...
... Discipline in the Late Republic and Early Principate, which examines the social and cultural implications of discipline in the army.1 Unfortunately it lies on the other side of the late Republican divide, dealing with the period post-Marius and particularly the professional army of the Empire. Part ...
Les Horaces (The Horatii) by Pierre Corneille
... Camilla declares emphatically that, in any case, she sees a grim future for herself. How can she possibly hope for a happy outcome with Curiatius, given current prospects? “No man shall ever, eve ...
... Camilla declares emphatically that, in any case, she sees a grim future for herself. How can she possibly hope for a happy outcome with Curiatius, given current prospects? “No man shall ever, eve ...
Julius Caesar - CAI Teachers
... Amazingly, Caesar overcame this huge army, and gained huge spoils of war. He won so quick a victory that those left surrendered, and Vergentorix, the chief commander, rode out on his horse, made a turn around Caesar, threw off his armour and surrendered at his feet. ...
... Amazingly, Caesar overcame this huge army, and gained huge spoils of war. He won so quick a victory that those left surrendered, and Vergentorix, the chief commander, rode out on his horse, made a turn around Caesar, threw off his armour and surrendered at his feet. ...
1 A MOST FATEFUL ENCOUNTER HOW SCIPIO AFRICANUS
... Cornelius Scipio confronted a Carthaginian army led by the most dreaded general of the ancient world: Hannibal Barca, scourge of Italy and the man responsible for some of the most humiliating defeats Rome would ever suffer in its long history. The stakes could not have been higher for either side; a ...
... Cornelius Scipio confronted a Carthaginian army led by the most dreaded general of the ancient world: Hannibal Barca, scourge of Italy and the man responsible for some of the most humiliating defeats Rome would ever suffer in its long history. The stakes could not have been higher for either side; a ...
Hannibal - Feric
... short journey to Sicily and the mainland of Italy. It also provided relatively easy access to the trading centres in Spain, Portugal and France. It had a safe harbour and fertile land. Carthage soon controlled trade in the western Mediterranean and developed a great commercial empire, with their all ...
... short journey to Sicily and the mainland of Italy. It also provided relatively easy access to the trading centres in Spain, Portugal and France. It had a safe harbour and fertile land. Carthage soon controlled trade in the western Mediterranean and developed a great commercial empire, with their all ...
Fall of Caesar
... When King Mithridates of Pontus initiated his Third Mithridatic War, Caesar set out for Asia, raised an army of regional troops and defeated Mithridates’ forces. Both his actions, the crucifiction of his captors and the protecting of Asia during the war, were technically illegal, as Caesar was a pri ...
... When King Mithridates of Pontus initiated his Third Mithridatic War, Caesar set out for Asia, raised an army of regional troops and defeated Mithridates’ forces. Both his actions, the crucifiction of his captors and the protecting of Asia during the war, were technically illegal, as Caesar was a pri ...
Rome and Italy
... scourging or beheading of anyone who appealed, ‘but if the law was disregarded on either point it did no more than term it “a wicked deed”. Such was the sense of shame amongst men at that time that this, I suppose, was thought to impose a legal sanction which would be sufficiently binding. Today har ...
... scourging or beheading of anyone who appealed, ‘but if the law was disregarded on either point it did no more than term it “a wicked deed”. Such was the sense of shame amongst men at that time that this, I suppose, was thought to impose a legal sanction which would be sufficiently binding. Today har ...
The Jugurthine War and The Conspiracy of Catiline
... nothing, 2both because many men have already spoken of its value, and in order that no one may suppose that I am led by vanity to eulogize my own favourite occupation. 3I suppose, too, that since I have resolved to pass my life aloof from public affairs, some will apply to this arduous and useful em ...
... nothing, 2both because many men have already spoken of its value, and in order that no one may suppose that I am led by vanity to eulogize my own favourite occupation. 3I suppose, too, that since I have resolved to pass my life aloof from public affairs, some will apply to this arduous and useful em ...
VOLUME #2 of THE ANCIENT WORLD SERIES
... of units and markers. Each player has an Army Display and City Occupation Display, the former for keeping track of which combat units belong to which Legion/Army/Fleet, while the latter holds the various city garrisons. Both displays are back printed and each are identified as to which scenario they ...
... of units and markers. Each player has an Army Display and City Occupation Display, the former for keeping track of which combat units belong to which Legion/Army/Fleet, while the latter holds the various city garrisons. Both displays are back printed and each are identified as to which scenario they ...
THE INFLUENCE OF HANNIBAL OF CARTHAGE ON THE ART OF
... Hannibal’s successes during the Second Punic War engendered such fear and resentment in the Romans that they dreaded the rise of another military leader as capable as he. As a foundation for this analysis we will look at a short background of the Punic Wars in general and a more detailed examination ...
... Hannibal’s successes during the Second Punic War engendered such fear and resentment in the Romans that they dreaded the rise of another military leader as capable as he. As a foundation for this analysis we will look at a short background of the Punic Wars in general and a more detailed examination ...
Act V - Bibb County Schools
... character of the play that bears his name; Brutus has over four times as many lines, and the play does not show us Caesar’s point of view. Nonetheless, virtually every other character is preoccupied with Caesar—specifically, with the possibility that Caesar may soon become king. If Caesar were to be ...
... character of the play that bears his name; Brutus has over four times as many lines, and the play does not show us Caesar’s point of view. Nonetheless, virtually every other character is preoccupied with Caesar—specifically, with the possibility that Caesar may soon become king. If Caesar were to be ...
Why did they do that? Takes on the PUNIC WARS by David E Woody
... choices they made, and observing the results. You may choose to be either Hannibal or the Roman Generals, after which you will be given a set of choices from key moments in the conflict. If you make a choice other than that made by the historical characters, you will find a description of what might ...
... choices they made, and observing the results. You may choose to be either Hannibal or the Roman Generals, after which you will be given a set of choices from key moments in the conflict. If you make a choice other than that made by the historical characters, you will find a description of what might ...
Theta IX Responsables scientifiques Mentions légales Date de
... passed away than Caesar promises to build a funeral monument to honour his ...
... passed away than Caesar promises to build a funeral monument to honour his ...
Carthaginian Mercenaries - Digital Commons @ Wofford
... taxes required to finance the First Punic War, and Libyan men whose families could not pay were arrested by the Carthaginians in droves.4 In revolt, the Libyan cities gave aid to the mutinous mercenaries, bloodily revolting against their Carthaginian masters and eventually fighting so ruthlessly tha ...
... taxes required to finance the First Punic War, and Libyan men whose families could not pay were arrested by the Carthaginians in droves.4 In revolt, the Libyan cities gave aid to the mutinous mercenaries, bloodily revolting against their Carthaginian masters and eventually fighting so ruthlessly tha ...
ISBN: 978-0-9861084-1-9 - Classical Wisdom Weekly
... of Roman emperors, as well as a plethora of articles written on the topic, which can be located at many universities and at JSTOR. While they still held a considerable amount of land, Parthia’s empire was initially not as large as the Seleucid empire, though they gradually conquered the latter’s ter ...
... of Roman emperors, as well as a plethora of articles written on the topic, which can be located at many universities and at JSTOR. While they still held a considerable amount of land, Parthia’s empire was initially not as large as the Seleucid empire, though they gradually conquered the latter’s ter ...
Marcomannia in the making
... For who is so worthless or indolent as not to wish to know by what means and under what system of polity the Romans in less than fifty-three years have succeeded in subjecting the whole inhabited world to their sole government – a thing unique in history? Polybius believed that Rome had conquered th ...
... For who is so worthless or indolent as not to wish to know by what means and under what system of polity the Romans in less than fifty-three years have succeeded in subjecting the whole inhabited world to their sole government – a thing unique in history? Polybius believed that Rome had conquered th ...
Julius Caesar - autoSocratic Home
... The Soothsayer delivers his famous warning to Caesar. The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings Cassius tells Brutus that rise of Caesar is their fault, because they are not doing anything to stop it. Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look Caesar’s suspic ...
... The Soothsayer delivers his famous warning to Caesar. The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings Cassius tells Brutus that rise of Caesar is their fault, because they are not doing anything to stop it. Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look Caesar’s suspic ...
Why did they do that? Takes on the PUNIC WARS by David E …
... While on an expedition, Hannibal finds himself in the vicinity of a Roman force some 5 times larger than his own. He could choose to stand and fight, using the river at his back as an incentive to his men to fight boldly. If his soldiers prove superior, the Romans will be unable to outflank him. If ...
... While on an expedition, Hannibal finds himself in the vicinity of a Roman force some 5 times larger than his own. He could choose to stand and fight, using the river at his back as an incentive to his men to fight boldly. If his soldiers prove superior, the Romans will be unable to outflank him. If ...
Marius` Mules - Western Oregon University
... According to Sallust, the Roman historian who left the most complete record of the war, Jugurtha was the grandson of Massinissa, who had been a great ally of Rome. He was excluded from the throne because of his illegitimate status, nevertheless, he was cherished in his uncle Micipsa's court and was ...
... According to Sallust, the Roman historian who left the most complete record of the war, Jugurtha was the grandson of Massinissa, who had been a great ally of Rome. He was excluded from the throne because of his illegitimate status, nevertheless, he was cherished in his uncle Micipsa's court and was ...
Julius Caesar - Stamford High School
... and replace it with a formal autocracy or whether he merely intended to become the leading citizen—although one without rivals—in the Roman world. In the end, the result was the same, for Caesar for a brief time did become supreme ruler, and the Republic was destroyed. Although it was Caesar’s nephe ...
... and replace it with a formal autocracy or whether he merely intended to become the leading citizen—although one without rivals—in the Roman world. In the end, the result was the same, for Caesar for a brief time did become supreme ruler, and the Republic was destroyed. Although it was Caesar’s nephe ...
Navigating Gaul through the Eyes of Caesar and His Men
... (celeriter), an attribute Caesar often uses to describe himself. Instead of offering decisive battle out on a plain, Vercingetorix harries the Romans, trying to limit their access to food and water with his numerically superior force of cavalry. It could be said that Vercingetorix’s mental map of G ...
... (celeriter), an attribute Caesar often uses to describe himself. Instead of offering decisive battle out on a plain, Vercingetorix harries the Romans, trying to limit their access to food and water with his numerically superior force of cavalry. It could be said that Vercingetorix’s mental map of G ...