
Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Τόπος και Χρόνος Θανάτου Κύρι
... cult. Marcus Aurelius engaged his daughter Lucilla with Lucius Verus, in order to secure his succession. However, the birth of his sons in 161 overturned these dynastic plans. Right after his succession to the throne, Marcus Aurelius had to face external enemies. Thus, expeditions started in the eas ...
... cult. Marcus Aurelius engaged his daughter Lucilla with Lucius Verus, in order to secure his succession. However, the birth of his sons in 161 overturned these dynastic plans. Right after his succession to the throne, Marcus Aurelius had to face external enemies. Thus, expeditions started in the eas ...
The Republic - La Trobe University
... Cicero and Philosophy • He was the first Roman to aIempt to find La>n words to convey Greek philosophical thought • He did more than just copy Greek philosophy, and he interpreted it through the le ...
... Cicero and Philosophy • He was the first Roman to aIempt to find La>n words to convey Greek philosophical thought • He did more than just copy Greek philosophy, and he interpreted it through the le ...
Dokument_1.
... A similar case is found on another votive inscription, which names a Frontu Tarbetis[o]nios (RIG II.1, L-3). Frontu, here used as individual name exactly like Martialis above, is a Gaulish adaptation of the well attested Latin cognomen Frontō (cf. OPEL II: 153), inflected as an n-stem and apparently ...
... A similar case is found on another votive inscription, which names a Frontu Tarbetis[o]nios (RIG II.1, L-3). Frontu, here used as individual name exactly like Martialis above, is a Gaulish adaptation of the well attested Latin cognomen Frontō (cf. OPEL II: 153), inflected as an n-stem and apparently ...
race mixture in the roman empire
... This passage clearly suggests that foreigners of their own free will have drifted to Rome in great numbers to make it their place of livelihood and their permanent abode. I cannot here treat the whole problem, but, while agreeing that the implication of this passage is true to a certain degree, I wo ...
... This passage clearly suggests that foreigners of their own free will have drifted to Rome in great numbers to make it their place of livelihood and their permanent abode. I cannot here treat the whole problem, but, while agreeing that the implication of this passage is true to a certain degree, I wo ...
Roman Life - Rossview Latin
... 40. What was the preferred color of a parasol? A. red B. yellow C. blue D. green 41. What was the Roman term for the mollusk shell from which the purple color for garments was derived? A. bucinum B. codicilli C. folles D. piscitinum 42. What was the most popular hairstyle for young Roman girls? A. ...
... 40. What was the preferred color of a parasol? A. red B. yellow C. blue D. green 41. What was the Roman term for the mollusk shell from which the purple color for garments was derived? A. bucinum B. codicilli C. folles D. piscitinum 42. What was the most popular hairstyle for young Roman girls? A. ...
Roman society - CLIO History Journal
... enclosed in a bundle of rods) • Toga praetexta - with a purple band • Auspicium - right to take the auspices • Each consul had the right of veto • Only one year in office, ten years before eligible for reelection ...
... enclosed in a bundle of rods) • Toga praetexta - with a purple band • Auspicium - right to take the auspices • Each consul had the right of veto • Only one year in office, ten years before eligible for reelection ...
Society and individuals at Aquae Sulis 1
... variety of ways even before the 3rd century, when it was granted to all free citizens in the Empire. This line-drawing (P9) shows part of a Diploma, or discharge certificate for a soldier. He came from a part of the Empire whose citizens were not also Roman citizens and as part of his retirement pac ...
... variety of ways even before the 3rd century, when it was granted to all free citizens in the Empire. This line-drawing (P9) shows part of a Diploma, or discharge certificate for a soldier. He came from a part of the Empire whose citizens were not also Roman citizens and as part of his retirement pac ...
ROMAN NAMES
... very ancient tradition of the Indo-European peoples, families held a solemn ceremony either at home or in a temple nine days after a boy was born (eight days after a girl was born). After the child was “consecrated” or “purified,” a round or heart-shaped lucky charm (bulla) was hung around the child ...
... very ancient tradition of the Indo-European peoples, families held a solemn ceremony either at home or in a temple nine days after a boy was born (eight days after a girl was born). After the child was “consecrated” or “purified,” a round or heart-shaped lucky charm (bulla) was hung around the child ...
Roman naming conventions

Over the course of some fourteen centuries, the Romans and other peoples of Italy employed a system of nomenclature that differed from that used by other cultures of Europe and the Mediterranean, consisting of a combination of personal and family names. Although conventionally referred to as the tria nomina, the combination of praenomen, nomen, and cognomen that have come to be regarded as the basic elements of the Roman name in fact represent a continuous process of development, from at least the seventh century BC to the end of the seventh century AD. The names developed as part of this system became a defining characteristic of Roman civilization, and although the system itself vanished during the early middle ages, the names themselves exerted a profound influence on the development of European naming practices, and many continue to survive in modern languages.