Theoderic, the Goths, and the Restoration of the Roman
... investigating the process whereby once disparate tribes coalesced and formed into the larger confederacies of late antiquity. 3 Ethnogenesis informed and created the “tribal” memories and identities of peoples like the Goths, memories and identities that accompanied so-called barbarians when they e ...
... investigating the process whereby once disparate tribes coalesced and formed into the larger confederacies of late antiquity. 3 Ethnogenesis informed and created the “tribal” memories and identities of peoples like the Goths, memories and identities that accompanied so-called barbarians when they e ...
Document
... tion, and celebrated. with lavilhpraise.' ·HiS.soft I~~~~~" and tractable. dispolrition: .rocei\ted-the. fait itnpression.oi1heir j.odicious,p~cepts;aiid the absence,ot passion might.~astJ,:be: mist.ken for th~ streDgth. 0(' ~eason. 'Hts;,reCe~fo.s graduaUy rose tc)'therank'and,oobseq1lenceofministe ...
... tion, and celebrated. with lavilhpraise.' ·HiS.soft I~~~~~" and tractable. dispolrition: .rocei\ted-the. fait itnpression.oi1heir j.odicious,p~cepts;aiid the absence,ot passion might.~astJ,:be: mist.ken for th~ streDgth. 0(' ~eason. 'Hts;,reCe~fo.s graduaUy rose tc)'therank'and,oobseq1lenceofministe ...
Άλλα Ονόματα Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Τόπος και Χρόνος
... Most of 70 B.C. was taken up by Lucullus’ administration of Asia. He levied taxes to pay for the province’s defence but more notably took several steps to relieve the debt crisis of the cities. To meet the financial penalties Sulla imposed on them, these cities had borrowed heavily and were now in d ...
... Most of 70 B.C. was taken up by Lucullus’ administration of Asia. He levied taxes to pay for the province’s defence but more notably took several steps to relieve the debt crisis of the cities. To meet the financial penalties Sulla imposed on them, these cities had borrowed heavily and were now in d ...
Άλλα Ονόματα Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Τόπος και Χρόνος
... Most of 70 B.C. was taken up by Lucullus’ administration of Asia. He levied taxes to pay for the province’s defence but more notably took several steps to relieve the debt crisis of the cities. To meet the financial penalties Sulla imposed on them, these cities had borrowed heavily and were now in d ...
... Most of 70 B.C. was taken up by Lucullus’ administration of Asia. He levied taxes to pay for the province’s defence but more notably took several steps to relieve the debt crisis of the cities. To meet the financial penalties Sulla imposed on them, these cities had borrowed heavily and were now in d ...
Polybius, Syracuse, and the - Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies
... 2 For moderns, the classic case of Polybian obscurity is 36.9, describing Greek views on Roman policy towards Carthage at the beginning of the Third Punic War. Four Greek opinions of Roman behavior are presented, two positive and two negative; it remains unclear which (if any) of these is Polybius' ...
... 2 For moderns, the classic case of Polybian obscurity is 36.9, describing Greek views on Roman policy towards Carthage at the beginning of the Third Punic War. Four Greek opinions of Roman behavior are presented, two positive and two negative; it remains unclear which (if any) of these is Polybius' ...
View - OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
... Here similarity is asserted, and difference is ignored (although at the same time the difference must constitute the totality). Difference exists only to be eliminated or subordinated. For Vico, it is a move from the particular to the universal: the head (caput) signifies the entire man. A further ...
... Here similarity is asserted, and difference is ignored (although at the same time the difference must constitute the totality). Difference exists only to be eliminated or subordinated. For Vico, it is a move from the particular to the universal: the head (caput) signifies the entire man. A further ...
chasing the sun - University of Canterbury
... First and foremost, I would like to sincerely thank my supervisor Alison Griffith for countless hours spent reading drafts and providing guidance, suggestions and encouragement for the improvement of this thesis. It has been a privilege, once again. I would also like to express my gratitude to other ...
... First and foremost, I would like to sincerely thank my supervisor Alison Griffith for countless hours spent reading drafts and providing guidance, suggestions and encouragement for the improvement of this thesis. It has been a privilege, once again. I would also like to express my gratitude to other ...
106744620 - BORA - UiB
... Associate Professor Aidan Keally Conti, who has been a tremendous help not only for my translations, but also for the entire setup of the thesis. His commentaries on the structure, and on my style and language, as well as his propositions for books, papers, and articles on similar subjects have been ...
... Associate Professor Aidan Keally Conti, who has been a tremendous help not only for my translations, but also for the entire setup of the thesis. His commentaries on the structure, and on my style and language, as well as his propositions for books, papers, and articles on similar subjects have been ...
life love legacy hadrian empire and conflict
... Background information Hadrian’s Wall ‘He set out for Britain, and there he corrected many abuses and was the first to construct a wall, eighty miles in length, which was to separate the barbarians from the Romans.’ From the Historia Augusta Roman Britain Julius Caesar had led two military expedition ...
... Background information Hadrian’s Wall ‘He set out for Britain, and there he corrected many abuses and was the first to construct a wall, eighty miles in length, which was to separate the barbarians from the Romans.’ From the Historia Augusta Roman Britain Julius Caesar had led two military expedition ...
X - York University
... are given for the fall of the Roman Empire. Possibly they were no longer able to feed themselves by importing food from their colonies. ...
... are given for the fall of the Roman Empire. Possibly they were no longer able to feed themselves by importing food from their colonies. ...
A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON THE EARLY ROMAN DICTATORSHIP
... Neapolis in Campania.1 This event ignited the Second Samnite War, which lasted until 304. This war strained the magisterial structure of the Roman polity more than any conflict in its history up to that point. The Romans confronted this challenge by employing the office of dictator. In fact, during ...
... Neapolis in Campania.1 This event ignited the Second Samnite War, which lasted until 304. This war strained the magisterial structure of the Roman polity more than any conflict in its history up to that point. The Romans confronted this challenge by employing the office of dictator. In fact, during ...
The Political Borderlines of Herod the Great
... Judaea and its environs actually fell into the empire of Parthia, when its prince Pacorus led a force west of the Euphrates that conquered the Roman east, from Idumaea to Caria in Asia Minor. This is just the most striking example of how the geopolitical world of the Near East was not only Rome’s pl ...
... Judaea and its environs actually fell into the empire of Parthia, when its prince Pacorus led a force west of the Euphrates that conquered the Roman east, from Idumaea to Caria in Asia Minor. This is just the most striking example of how the geopolitical world of the Near East was not only Rome’s pl ...
Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome
... and the games to punishment and social order. Recently, Plass’ 1995 The Game of Death in Ancient Rome pursues further the role of institutionalized violence in Roman society, and ties both the arena and political suicide to a desire for order and security. Finally, 1996 saw the appearance of valuabl ...
... and the games to punishment and social order. Recently, Plass’ 1995 The Game of Death in Ancient Rome pursues further the role of institutionalized violence in Roman society, and ties both the arena and political suicide to a desire for order and security. Finally, 1996 saw the appearance of valuabl ...
spectacles of death in ancient rome
... and the games to punishment and social order. Recently, Plass’ 1995 The Game of Death in Ancient Rome pursues further the role of institutionalized violence in Roman society, and ties both the arena and political suicide to a desire for order and security. Finally, 1996 saw the appearance of valuabl ...
... and the games to punishment and social order. Recently, Plass’ 1995 The Game of Death in Ancient Rome pursues further the role of institutionalized violence in Roman society, and ties both the arena and political suicide to a desire for order and security. Finally, 1996 saw the appearance of valuabl ...
romanbathpaper - Ross School Senior Projects
... catch up. The Romans made many structures that have lasted to these very days. Not only was their engineering incredibly sound and precise but it was also very innovative. They made aqueducts that ran through many of their grandiose cities carrying water to houses, fountains, and public facilities l ...
... catch up. The Romans made many structures that have lasted to these very days. Not only was their engineering incredibly sound and precise but it was also very innovative. They made aqueducts that ran through many of their grandiose cities carrying water to houses, fountains, and public facilities l ...
Engineering Power: The Roman Triumph as Material Expression of
... luxury goods that Mummius had seized on campaign.1 After the parade, Mummius set about enhancing his reputation by building temples, including the Temple of Hercules Victor in the Forum Boarium, decorating them with spoils, and dedicating many of the plundered statues in Italy, Greece, and Spain.2 E ...
... luxury goods that Mummius had seized on campaign.1 After the parade, Mummius set about enhancing his reputation by building temples, including the Temple of Hercules Victor in the Forum Boarium, decorating them with spoils, and dedicating many of the plundered statues in Italy, Greece, and Spain.2 E ...
A COMPANION TO THE ROMAN ARMY Edited by
... Anthony R. Birley was Professor of Ancient History at the universities of Manchester from 1974 to 1990 and Düsseldorf from 1990 to 2002. His publications include biographies of the emperors Hadrian, Marcus Aurelius, and Septimius Severus. He is Chair of the Trustees of the Vindolanda Trust. Lukas de ...
... Anthony R. Birley was Professor of Ancient History at the universities of Manchester from 1974 to 1990 and Düsseldorf from 1990 to 2002. His publications include biographies of the emperors Hadrian, Marcus Aurelius, and Septimius Severus. He is Chair of the Trustees of the Vindolanda Trust. Lukas de ...
THE ROMAN ARMY`S EMERGENCE FROM ITS ITALIAN ORIGINS
... regard to the period in question. By looking at the sources available, it is possible to use them in a way that sheds more light on the nature of relationships between the Romans and the other peoples of Italy than has been generally recognized for the period before the Punic Wars and, in turn, how ...
... regard to the period in question. By looking at the sources available, it is possible to use them in a way that sheds more light on the nature of relationships between the Romans and the other peoples of Italy than has been generally recognized for the period before the Punic Wars and, in turn, how ...
Dissertation - Emory University
... of non-elite artistic commissions known today, and typically belong to a few wellestablished types, most notably the group relief and the altar with portrait. Both monument types are urban Roman phenomena, with the overwhelming majority discovered in the capital itself or its immediate environs. How ...
... of non-elite artistic commissions known today, and typically belong to a few wellestablished types, most notably the group relief and the altar with portrait. Both monument types are urban Roman phenomena, with the overwhelming majority discovered in the capital itself or its immediate environs. How ...
Daqin
Daqin (Chinese: 大秦; pinyin: Dàqín; Wade–Giles: Ta4-ch'in2; alternative transliterations include Tachin, Tai-Ch'in) is the ancient Chinese name for the Roman Empire or, depending on context, the Near East, especially Syria. It literally means ""Great Qin"", Qin (Chinese: 秦; pinyin: Qín; Wade–Giles: Ch'in2) being the name of the founding dynasty of the Chinese Empire. Historian John Foster defined it as ""...the Roman Empire, or rather that part of it which alone was known to the Chinese, Syria.""