Rome: From the Earliest Times to 44 B.C.P. F. Collier & son, 1913 - 418 pages |
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Page xiii
... PLEBEIANS . 445-265 B. C. VIII . FALL OF ETRUSCAN POWER AND THE COMING OF THE CELTS . 500-343 B. C. IX . ADVANCE OF ROME TO THE CONQUEST OF ITALY . 500- 290 B. C. X. WAR WITH PYRRHUS - UNION WITH ITALY . 280-268 B. C. 7 . II • 20 : 29 ...
... PLEBEIANS . 445-265 B. C. VIII . FALL OF ETRUSCAN POWER AND THE COMING OF THE CELTS . 500-343 B. C. IX . ADVANCE OF ROME TO THE CONQUEST OF ITALY . 500- 290 B. C. X. WAR WITH PYRRHUS - UNION WITH ITALY . 280-268 B. C. 7 . II • 20 : 29 ...
Page 18
... plebeians primarily only duties , not rights . Military service was now changed from a burden upon birth to a burden ... plebeian class . For a discussion of the question see Soltau , " Entstehung der alts römischen Volks- versammlungen ...
... plebeians primarily only duties , not rights . Military service was now changed from a burden upon birth to a burden ... plebeian class . For a discussion of the question see Soltau , " Entstehung der alts römischen Volks- versammlungen ...
Page 29
... plebeians , freedmen , Latins , or Italians , who keenly re- sented their political inequality . The third movement was an equally prolific source of trouble in Roman history ; it arose from the embittered relations between landholders ...
... plebeians , freedmen , Latins , or Italians , who keenly re- sented their political inequality . The third movement was an equally prolific source of trouble in Roman history ; it arose from the embittered relations between landholders ...
Page 33
... plebeians ; all the non - burgesses , who were neither slaves nor citizens of foreign states , living at Rome under the jus hospitii , were admitted into the curies , and the old burgesses , who had hitherto formed the curies , lost the ...
... plebeians ; all the non - burgesses , who were neither slaves nor citizens of foreign states , living at Rome under the jus hospitii , were admitted into the curies , and the old burgesses , who had hitherto formed the curies , lost the ...
Page 34
... plebeians into the senate - house was a most important step , and one fraught with no slight consequences . The consuls in office did not vote , but they selected the new members of the senate , alike the patres and the plebeian ...
... plebeians into the senate - house was a most important step , and one fraught with no slight consequences . The consuls in office did not vote , but they selected the new members of the senate , alike the patres and the plebeian ...
Common terms and phrases
Africa alliance allies Alps aristocracy arms Asia Minor attack attempt battle became burgesses Caesar Campania cantons capital Capua Carthage Carthaginian Cato caused cavalry Celtic Celts Cimbri citizens civil clan coast colonies comitia command communities constitution consul consulship Crassus death decree defeated democratic East Egypt elected empire enemy Etruria Etruscans favor fleet force Gaius Gracchus Gaul governor Greece Greek Hannibal Hasdrubal infantry Italian Italy Jugurtha king land Latin Latium latter leaders league legions Lucanians Luceria Lucius Lucullus Macedonia magistrates Marcus Marius Massinissa Metellus military Mithradates monarchy nation Numidian occupied once Parthian party patricians peace Phoenician plebeians political Pompeius position possession pretor proposed provinces Publius Pyrrhus Quintus refused remained restored revolt Roman army Rome rule Samnites Samnium Sardinia Scipio senate senatorial ships Sicily slaves soldiers soon Spain struggle Sulla Sulla's Syracuse Syria Tarentum territory thousand tion towns tribes tribunes troops victory voting whole