Mason Tjuanta - 2010
... He increased the efficiency of the harbors at Rhegium and Sicily to increase the imports from Egypt. Caligula would construct temples in honor of himself. The Egyptian obelisk now known as the Vatican obelisk was transported overseas and placed in Rome. Caligula maintained and built more roads to ma ...
... He increased the efficiency of the harbors at Rhegium and Sicily to increase the imports from Egypt. Caligula would construct temples in honor of himself. The Egyptian obelisk now known as the Vatican obelisk was transported overseas and placed in Rome. Caligula maintained and built more roads to ma ...
A Chronology of the Roman Empire
... periodicization is well established, as much as anything because it was devised by the Romans themselves. The great Latin historian Tacitus opens his Annals with a deft summary of the evolution of the Roman state, beginning with the words ‘The city of Rome was, from the start, ruled by kings’.3 As h ...
... periodicization is well established, as much as anything because it was devised by the Romans themselves. The great Latin historian Tacitus opens his Annals with a deft summary of the evolution of the Roman state, beginning with the words ‘The city of Rome was, from the start, ruled by kings’.3 As h ...
analecta romana instituti danici xxxvii
... Abstract. There existed an ancient consensus on the awarding of triumphs, clearly apparent during the Late Republic and Early Empire: a general could expect to triumph after a civil war victory if it could also be represented as being over a foreign enemy. A triumph after a victory in an exclusively ...
... Abstract. There existed an ancient consensus on the awarding of triumphs, clearly apparent during the Late Republic and Early Empire: a general could expect to triumph after a civil war victory if it could also be represented as being over a foreign enemy. A triumph after a victory in an exclusively ...
ROMAN HISTORY
... to be a very just estimate of his character. We have epitomes of all the lost books, with the exception of ten; but these are so scanty as to amount to little more than tables of contents. Their probable date is not later than the time of Trajan. To summarize the result, then, thirty-five books have ...
... to be a very just estimate of his character. We have epitomes of all the lost books, with the exception of ten; but these are so scanty as to amount to little more than tables of contents. Their probable date is not later than the time of Trajan. To summarize the result, then, thirty-five books have ...
Thesis
... Numerous scholarly articles treat smaller aspects of the Conspiracy and its attendant personalities and circumstances. Duane A. March’s “Cicero and the “Gang of Five’” is a study on the fate of the urban conspirators that Cicero had executed based on his authority given by the senatus consultum ult ...
... Numerous scholarly articles treat smaller aspects of the Conspiracy and its attendant personalities and circumstances. Duane A. March’s “Cicero and the “Gang of Five’” is a study on the fate of the urban conspirators that Cicero had executed based on his authority given by the senatus consultum ult ...
- Nottingham ePrints
... helped in numerous ways, especially on Nicopolis and Apollo. The Department of Classics, University of Nottingham, especially Katharina Lorenz and Lisa Trentin for helping with questions on art history and Kyriaki Konstantinidou. I would also like to thank my former MA supervisor Jesper Carlsen, Itt ...
... helped in numerous ways, especially on Nicopolis and Apollo. The Department of Classics, University of Nottingham, especially Katharina Lorenz and Lisa Trentin for helping with questions on art history and Kyriaki Konstantinidou. I would also like to thank my former MA supervisor Jesper Carlsen, Itt ...
The Elogia of the Augustan Forum - MacSphere
... Romulus, and lining the walls of both porticoes, were the statues of the summi viri, the illustrious men of the Republic.28 Some, if not all, ofthe statues and elogia displayed in the Forum were duplicated and set up in several municipalities throughout Italy, and elsewhere. These cities, as the res ...
... Romulus, and lining the walls of both porticoes, were the statues of the summi viri, the illustrious men of the Republic.28 Some, if not all, ofthe statues and elogia displayed in the Forum were duplicated and set up in several municipalities throughout Italy, and elsewhere. These cities, as the res ...
мнемон - Центр антиковедения СПбГУ
... came into more and more contradiction, which means that it became more and more difficult to apply the principle of single command. The main reason for this development was that the geographical dimension of war had changed. In former times, there were no problems to sign a province to a commander. ...
... came into more and more contradiction, which means that it became more and more difficult to apply the principle of single command. The main reason for this development was that the geographical dimension of war had changed. In former times, there were no problems to sign a province to a commander. ...
Politics and policy: Rome and Liguria, 200-172 B.C.
... overarching theory since I do not believe any is relevant to this subject.”16 But he acknowledges having read and subtly incorporated various anthropological theories, and his work explicitly responds to historians who have hitherto privileged the role of personal politics and aristocratic competiti ...
... overarching theory since I do not believe any is relevant to this subject.”16 But he acknowledges having read and subtly incorporated various anthropological theories, and his work explicitly responds to historians who have hitherto privileged the role of personal politics and aristocratic competiti ...
Print this article - New Jersey Studies
... nymphs), sea horses, and tritons. But then he steps back: “but to ravish two nymphs would be too much even for a god and Neptune is among the least lascivious of the heathen deitys [sic]—for he is only charged with one absolute rape which was poor Amphitrite—enough of this in all conscience.”14 Anci ...
... nymphs), sea horses, and tritons. But then he steps back: “but to ravish two nymphs would be too much even for a god and Neptune is among the least lascivious of the heathen deitys [sic]—for he is only charged with one absolute rape which was poor Amphitrite—enough of this in all conscience.”14 Anci ...
Aeneas or Numa? Rethinking the Meaning of the Ara Pacis
... media, continued well into the Roman Imperial period. He was represented in this guise, for example, in one of the sculptural assemblages in the hemicycles of the Forum of Augustus; this statue has not survived, but a wall painting from Pompeii and several sculptural copies or adaptations allow us t ...
... media, continued well into the Roman Imperial period. He was represented in this guise, for example, in one of the sculptural assemblages in the hemicycles of the Forum of Augustus; this statue has not survived, but a wall painting from Pompeii and several sculptural copies or adaptations allow us t ...
Competition Between Public and Private Revenues in Roman Social
... known Roman politician, Münzer allowed the adherents of his prosopographical school to depict politics as the manoeuvring of elite factions to win elected offices, offices which would in turn facilitate the domination of aristocratic peers and the rest of the population. The mechanism for this elect ...
... known Roman politician, Münzer allowed the adherents of his prosopographical school to depict politics as the manoeuvring of elite factions to win elected offices, offices which would in turn facilitate the domination of aristocratic peers and the rest of the population. The mechanism for this elect ...
fO*^ .3? - IDEALS @ Illinois
... well-known work 18 to the "Conquest of Germania," concedes, nevertheless, that Augustus was opposed to expansion by conquest, and that the first fifteen years of his rule unmistakably contradict such a policy 19 "he had persistently avoided hazardous adventures beyond the frontiers of the empire and ...
... well-known work 18 to the "Conquest of Germania," concedes, nevertheless, that Augustus was opposed to expansion by conquest, and that the first fifteen years of his rule unmistakably contradict such a policy 19 "he had persistently avoided hazardous adventures beyond the frontiers of the empire and ...