The monuments dedicated to the reign of Emperor Trajan
... the Trajan's Forum, the scenes, which are carved in low relief, are small and hard to read. It is uncertain how much of the column's relief Romans would have been able to see; there's some speculation whether knowledge of the idea of the narrative was more important than being physically able to rea ...
... the Trajan's Forum, the scenes, which are carved in low relief, are small and hard to read. It is uncertain how much of the column's relief Romans would have been able to see; there's some speculation whether knowledge of the idea of the narrative was more important than being physically able to rea ...
The History of Rome, Book II
... achievement of this, the most ancient opposition in Rome, consisted in the abolition of the life-tenure of the presidency of the community; in other words, in the abolition of the monarchy. How necessarily this was the result of the natural development of things, is most strikingly demonstrated ...
... achievement of this, the most ancient opposition in Rome, consisted in the abolition of the life-tenure of the presidency of the community; in other words, in the abolition of the monarchy. How necessarily this was the result of the natural development of things, is most strikingly demonstrated ...
aus: Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 88 (1991) 291–295
... tribes under the leadership of one phylarch without the willingness of the tribal leaders themselves. The statement of Procopius that Arethas was placed in command of as many tribes as possible, is an indication that Arethas had to negotiate his position with other tribal leaders who, for a variety ...
... tribes under the leadership of one phylarch without the willingness of the tribal leaders themselves. The statement of Procopius that Arethas was placed in command of as many tribes as possible, is an indication that Arethas had to negotiate his position with other tribal leaders who, for a variety ...
The Roman Calendar - Mr. De Vito`s Sophomore Classes
... before the Ides of July. An eclipse on June 21 (168 BC) in northern Greece was recorded as having occurred on September 3, the third day before the Nones of September (Livy, XXXVII.4; XLIV.37). Nor did the college of pontiffs (from pontifex or "bridge maker"), who were responsible for regulating the ...
... before the Ides of July. An eclipse on June 21 (168 BC) in northern Greece was recorded as having occurred on September 3, the third day before the Nones of September (Livy, XXXVII.4; XLIV.37). Nor did the college of pontiffs (from pontifex or "bridge maker"), who were responsible for regulating the ...
Fines imperii – imperium sine fine?
... rule, through Tiberius Nero who was then my stepson and legate, certain Pannonian tribes that had not been reached by a Roman army before my reign, thereby extending the frontier of Illyricum as far as the Danube.”25 However, not all of the later Pannonia was subdued during the Pannonian War, and it ...
... rule, through Tiberius Nero who was then my stepson and legate, certain Pannonian tribes that had not been reached by a Roman army before my reign, thereby extending the frontier of Illyricum as far as the Danube.”25 However, not all of the later Pannonia was subdued during the Pannonian War, and it ...
PDF - UWA Research Portal
... Eastern countries, including the major part of Israel itself. As we settled ourselves in at the kibbutz where we would be staying it was exciting to realise that the tel in the near distance was Maresha, known from the Bible, and that was where we would be excavating. “But that’s not all”, one of th ...
... Eastern countries, including the major part of Israel itself. As we settled ourselves in at the kibbutz where we would be staying it was exciting to realise that the tel in the near distance was Maresha, known from the Bible, and that was where we would be excavating. “But that’s not all”, one of th ...
The Roman City Carnuntum
... Tiberius, who later became Emperor, erected a winter camp in the Carnuntum area in the year 6 AD. This was the beginning of 400 years of Roman presence in Carnuntum. Under Emperor Claudius a military camp was erected around the year 54 AD where today’s market town of Bad DeutschAltenburg is situated ...
... Tiberius, who later became Emperor, erected a winter camp in the Carnuntum area in the year 6 AD. This was the beginning of 400 years of Roman presence in Carnuntum. Under Emperor Claudius a military camp was erected around the year 54 AD where today’s market town of Bad DeutschAltenburg is situated ...
Introduction - Classical Association of South Africa
... heading directly for Arausio, the furthest outpost of Roman presence in Gaul. At Arausio was the consul Cn. Mallius Maximus (cos. 105) with an army of about 40,000, while on the west bank was the proconsul Q. Servilius Caepio with another army roughly the same size. Caepio had moved north after his ...
... heading directly for Arausio, the furthest outpost of Roman presence in Gaul. At Arausio was the consul Cn. Mallius Maximus (cos. 105) with an army of about 40,000, while on the west bank was the proconsul Q. Servilius Caepio with another army roughly the same size. Caepio had moved north after his ...
1º de educación secundaria obligatoria
... 1. In previous units you’ve studied Europe. Write down the information you remember about the Mediterranean area: ...
... 1. In previous units you’ve studied Europe. Write down the information you remember about the Mediterranean area: ...
Gaius cassius longinus (before 85 bc october 42 bc)
... The Revolt against King Tarquin. In 510 BC Rome witnessed a revolt against the rule of Etruscan kings. The traditional story goes as follows; Sextus, the son of king. As a boy of just two or three, Gaius accompanied his father, Germanicus, on campaigns in the north of Germania. The soldiers were amu ...
... The Revolt against King Tarquin. In 510 BC Rome witnessed a revolt against the rule of Etruscan kings. The traditional story goes as follows; Sextus, the son of king. As a boy of just two or three, Gaius accompanied his father, Germanicus, on campaigns in the north of Germania. The soldiers were amu ...
COMMEMORATIVE SPACES IN EARLY IMPERIAL ROME
... the physical object or setting of the action, a communication that surfaces in the interpretation of many other facets of Roman cultural practice, especially in the rituals associated with Roman commemorative culture and the physical monuments themselves. The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the ...
... the physical object or setting of the action, a communication that surfaces in the interpretation of many other facets of Roman cultural practice, especially in the rituals associated with Roman commemorative culture and the physical monuments themselves. The purpose of this thesis is to analyze the ...
proconsul titus quinctius flaminius and rome`s war with the east
... Titus’s actions as a military Tribune in the 2nd Punic war contributed greatly to his understanding of military tactics - Marcellus’s principle of starving out Hannibal during the second Punic war was remarkably similar to Titus’s tactic of leaving Nabis to gradually disintegrate rather than fully ...
... Titus’s actions as a military Tribune in the 2nd Punic war contributed greatly to his understanding of military tactics - Marcellus’s principle of starving out Hannibal during the second Punic war was remarkably similar to Titus’s tactic of leaving Nabis to gradually disintegrate rather than fully ...
ROMAN CONQUEST OF SPAIN: THE ECONOMIC MOTIVE
... that indigenous metallurgy remained unchanged throughout."20 Although Phoenician pottery has been recovered, mining clearly remained an indigenous industry. Rothenberg and Freijiero argue that from the seventh century, Phoenician mining production intensified. They further argue that the Phoenicians ...
... that indigenous metallurgy remained unchanged throughout."20 Although Phoenician pottery has been recovered, mining clearly remained an indigenous industry. Rothenberg and Freijiero argue that from the seventh century, Phoenician mining production intensified. They further argue that the Phoenicians ...
The Glory of Rome Campaign
... statesmen, doomed gladiators, bold charioteers, rebel slaves, or even missionary Christian priests. DMs should make two decisions before starting a Roman campaign. First, decide whether magic and monsters exist. This book assumes they do. Its focus is on Rome as the Romans believed it to be, and the ...
... statesmen, doomed gladiators, bold charioteers, rebel slaves, or even missionary Christian priests. DMs should make two decisions before starting a Roman campaign. First, decide whether magic and monsters exist. This book assumes they do. Its focus is on Rome as the Romans believed it to be, and the ...
Spartacus - Edublogs
... his mind. He turned his troops around and headed back south again. The Roman senate was not ready to trust the two consuls to fight again. So it picked a new chief, Marcus Licinius Crassus, for the task. Before the showdown, Crassus asked a commander, Mummius, to move his troops south. He specifical ...
... his mind. He turned his troops around and headed back south again. The Roman senate was not ready to trust the two consuls to fight again. So it picked a new chief, Marcus Licinius Crassus, for the task. Before the showdown, Crassus asked a commander, Mummius, to move his troops south. He specifical ...
A Sacred People: Roman Identity in the Age of Augustus
... this culture to the rest of its non-Greek domains. Implicit is the idea that Rome had no culture of its own – no great myths, no cultural attachments – prior to its cultural takeover by Greece. Romanization, the process of Rome‟s spreading common culture across the Mediterranean, is simply the last ...
... this culture to the rest of its non-Greek domains. Implicit is the idea that Rome had no culture of its own – no great myths, no cultural attachments – prior to its cultural takeover by Greece. Romanization, the process of Rome‟s spreading common culture across the Mediterranean, is simply the last ...
Knowledge and preservation of ancient Rhodes. From a - Hal-SHS
... urban development was probably not yet accomplished in the mid-4th century BC, when the Greeks began to endow the city with the first great public buildings IV. The Greek city of Rhodes covered, it is said, an area of more than 120 hectares and had a regular urban structure inspired hippodamian cons ...
... urban development was probably not yet accomplished in the mid-4th century BC, when the Greeks began to endow the city with the first great public buildings IV. The Greek city of Rhodes covered, it is said, an area of more than 120 hectares and had a regular urban structure inspired hippodamian cons ...
OF THE ANCIENT ROMAN EMPIRE THE TEN EUROPEAN REVIVALS
... but it was to be revived ten times and would endure until the time of Jesus Christ’s return. Proof for these statements can be found in our literature, including in our free booklet, Europe in Prophecy. In that booklet, we also state the following: “The Roman Empire fell and the world believed it wo ...
... but it was to be revived ten times and would endure until the time of Jesus Christ’s return. Proof for these statements can be found in our literature, including in our free booklet, Europe in Prophecy. In that booklet, we also state the following: “The Roman Empire fell and the world believed it wo ...
Caesar Fill-in-the-Blank Content (Word Document
... northern Gaul). He orders ___ to take three legions to the land of the Aduatuci (just south of the Eburones). He himself takes three legions to the River Scheldt. 6.34 The Eburones are scattered over a very wide area, so the Romans cannot just attack them and defeat them at once using traditional mi ...
... northern Gaul). He orders ___ to take three legions to the land of the Aduatuci (just south of the Eburones). He himself takes three legions to the River Scheldt. 6.34 The Eburones are scattered over a very wide area, so the Romans cannot just attack them and defeat them at once using traditional mi ...
sample - Karwansaray Publishers
... In the near future – perhaps already when you read this – we will also have added a podcast, an internet audio show, which we are producing in cooperation with thehistorynetwork.org. We are quite excited about this new feature and hope you’ll like it too. The first episode will feature several of th ...
... In the near future – perhaps already when you read this – we will also have added a podcast, an internet audio show, which we are producing in cooperation with thehistorynetwork.org. We are quite excited about this new feature and hope you’ll like it too. The first episode will feature several of th ...
revolts in isauria during the hellenistic and roman periods in the light
... they thought that Romans abandoned their fortifications. However, it was not the case as Isaurians hoped. Romans made use of their weapons from their more favourable positions and prevented them to reach the target zone. After a short while, nearly half of the ditches were filled by dead Isaurians, ...
... they thought that Romans abandoned their fortifications. However, it was not the case as Isaurians hoped. Romans made use of their weapons from their more favourable positions and prevented them to reach the target zone. After a short while, nearly half of the ditches were filled by dead Isaurians, ...
Roman Castleford - Wakefield Council
... Why is there less evidence for prehistoric Castleford? During prehistory many objects were made from wood, leather and bone. Archaeologists rarely find these ‘organic’ materials on sites because they tend to decay more quickly than the ‘inorganic’ Roman pottery and metal finds. ...
... Why is there less evidence for prehistoric Castleford? During prehistory many objects were made from wood, leather and bone. Archaeologists rarely find these ‘organic’ materials on sites because they tend to decay more quickly than the ‘inorganic’ Roman pottery and metal finds. ...
Document
... special colony with some autonomy from Rome, but under emperor Augustus the city obtained full roman status as colonia with the name Iulia Iuvenalis Honoris et Virtutis Cirta in 27 BC. Since then Cirta started to grow enormously as an economic center of Roman Africa. https://store.theartofservice.co ...
... special colony with some autonomy from Rome, but under emperor Augustus the city obtained full roman status as colonia with the name Iulia Iuvenalis Honoris et Virtutis Cirta in 27 BC. Since then Cirta started to grow enormously as an economic center of Roman Africa. https://store.theartofservice.co ...
Higher Level (EV)
... (iii) What is a stock character? Give one example of a stock character from The Swaggering Soldier. ...
... (iii) What is a stock character? Give one example of a stock character from The Swaggering Soldier. ...
Beiträge zur Alten Geschichte Papyrologie und Epigraphik
... subject. On closer inspection, however, the epigraphic evidence reveals a wider and more complex semantic field of the chrysophoria, which manifested itself in a variety of forms and functions: in fact, the term does not necessarily refer — as commonly taken for granted — to a uniform honorific prac ...
... subject. On closer inspection, however, the epigraphic evidence reveals a wider and more complex semantic field of the chrysophoria, which manifested itself in a variety of forms and functions: in fact, the term does not necessarily refer — as commonly taken for granted — to a uniform honorific prac ...
Roman technology
Roman technology is the engineering practice which supported Roman civilization and made the expansion of Roman commerce and Roman military possible for almost three quarters of a millennium (753 BC–476 AD).The Roman Empire had one of the most advanced set of technologies of its time, some of which was lost during the turbulent eras of Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages. Gradually, some of the technological feats of the Romans were rediscovered and/or improved upon, while others went ahead of what the Romans had done during the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Modern Era. Several Roman technological feats in different areas like civil engineering, construction materials, transport technology, and some inventions such as the mechanical reaper, were surprising achievements until the 19th century. The Romans achieved high levels of technology in large part because they borrowed and absorbed the culture of the pre-existing (Hellenic and others) peoples of the Mediterranean basin.