Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Τόπος και Χρόνος Θανάτου Κύρι
... A title initially given to Octavian in 27 BC, a few years after his victory over Mark Anthony in Actium. In Greek the epithet means "Honoured''. Eventually, the title was used to complement the names of the Roman emperors. ...
... A title initially given to Octavian in 27 BC, a few years after his victory over Mark Anthony in Actium. In Greek the epithet means "Honoured''. Eventually, the title was used to complement the names of the Roman emperors. ...
Print this article - New Jersey Studies
... Eighteenth-century Americans also employed Greco-Roman pseudonyms to combine Latin style with American ingenuity, as in Samuel Adams’ Clericus Americanus or Christopher Gadsden’s Americus Britannicus in 1769, as well as to protect their identities, particularly when offering words that were seditiou ...
... Eighteenth-century Americans also employed Greco-Roman pseudonyms to combine Latin style with American ingenuity, as in Samuel Adams’ Clericus Americanus or Christopher Gadsden’s Americus Britannicus in 1769, as well as to protect their identities, particularly when offering words that were seditiou ...
Loraine Balallo - 2011
... the age of seventeen, while Hannibal was defeating Italy, Cato made his first campaign and got his chest all covered in scars. In 207 B.C., Cato distinguished himself at the battle of Metaurus and later in his life, he still bores the scars of the wounds he had during the battle. In 191 B.C., Cato r ...
... the age of seventeen, while Hannibal was defeating Italy, Cato made his first campaign and got his chest all covered in scars. In 207 B.C., Cato distinguished himself at the battle of Metaurus and later in his life, he still bores the scars of the wounds he had during the battle. In 191 B.C., Cato r ...
Not by a Nose: The Triumph of Antony and Cleopatra at Actium, 31 BC
... at Macedonian Philippi, Octavian and Antony, at that time still allies, had eliminated the threat posed by Julius Caesar's assassins, the "Liberators," Brutus and Cassius. But Actium was the finale. At Actilll11, Octavian defeated his la~t ~erious rival and so could finally pl'l1ceed with his master ...
... at Macedonian Philippi, Octavian and Antony, at that time still allies, had eliminated the threat posed by Julius Caesar's assassins, the "Liberators," Brutus and Cassius. But Actium was the finale. At Actilll11, Octavian defeated his la~t ~erious rival and so could finally pl'l1ceed with his master ...
Competition Between Public and Private Revenues in Roman Social
... It is this ability to create patterns of behaviour – even a realm of possible behaviours – that allows scholars to infer such absolute conformity; in theory, people could not defy this kind of acculturation because the ways in which they analysed their situations and formulated responses were themse ...
... It is this ability to create patterns of behaviour – even a realm of possible behaviours – that allows scholars to infer such absolute conformity; in theory, people could not defy this kind of acculturation because the ways in which they analysed their situations and formulated responses were themse ...
Sallust
... though Sallust does not stop to consider its possible justice: “…being robbed of the fruit of my labor and exertion, I did not obtain the post of honor due to me” (35). But Cicero’s election did not stop Catiline who, according to Sallust, now began making preparations to take power by force. And he ...
... though Sallust does not stop to consider its possible justice: “…being robbed of the fruit of my labor and exertion, I did not obtain the post of honor due to me” (35). But Cicero’s election did not stop Catiline who, according to Sallust, now began making preparations to take power by force. And he ...
Rome and Italy
... 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 hardly anyone would seriously utter such a threat’), yet he did believ ...
... 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 hardly anyone would seriously utter such a threat’), yet he did believ ...