History of Rome: Early history to the burning of Rome by the GaulsT. Fellowes, 1857 - Rome |
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Page 16
... grounds between the hills by a great dyke , which was called the dyke of the Quirites 62. And he built a prison under the hill Saturnius , towards the forum , because as the people grew in numbers , offenders against the laws became ...
... grounds between the hills by a great dyke , which was called the dyke of the Quirites 62. And he built a prison under the hill Saturnius , towards the forum , because as the people grew in numbers , offenders against the laws became ...
Page 26
... ground immediately not , however , reach as far as any of The valley between the Palatine and the Aventine , afterwards the site of the Circus Maxi- mus , was in the earliest times covered with water ; so also was the greater part of ...
... ground immediately not , however , reach as far as any of The valley between the Palatine and the Aventine , afterwards the site of the Circus Maxi- mus , was in the earliest times covered with water ; so also was the greater part of ...
Page 28
... ground rises to a greater height than that of the Roman hills , but its summit is a level unbroken line , while the heights , which op- posite to Rome itself rise immediately from the river , under the names of Janiculus and Vaticanus ...
... ground rises to a greater height than that of the Roman hills , but its summit is a level unbroken line , while the heights , which op- posite to Rome itself rise immediately from the river , under the names of Janiculus and Vaticanus ...
Page 29
... ground rising and falling , as in the heath country of Surrey and Berkshire . The streams are dull and sluggish , but the hill sides above them con- stantly break away into little rocky cliffs , where on every ledge the wild fig now ...
... ground rising and falling , as in the heath country of Surrey and Berkshire . The streams are dull and sluggish , but the hill sides above them con- stantly break away into little rocky cliffs , where on every ledge the wild fig now ...
Page 32
... ground around it for shops or stalls , and made a covered walk round it . Next he set about building a wall of stone 3 Cicero , Livy , and Dionysius , in locis citatis . 4 Livy , I. 35-38 . 5 Livy , I. 39. 35. Dionysius , III . 67 , 68 ...
... ground around it for shops or stalls , and made a covered walk round it . Next he set about building a wall of stone 3 Cicero , Livy , and Dionysius , in locis citatis . 4 Livy , I. 35-38 . 5 Livy , I. 39. 35. Dionysius , III . 67 , 68 ...
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according Æmilius afterwards agrarian law Alban Alban hills amongst ancient annalists Appius aristocracy army Aventine battle burghers Caius called Camillus Capitol Carthage Carthaginians Cassius censors centuries CHAP Cicero citizens Claudius coast colony comitia commons Commonwealth conquest consuls consulship curiæ decemvirs Diodorus Dionysius dominion Duilius elected enemy Equians Etruria Etruscan Fabius famous Fasti father favour followed Fragm Furius Gaius Gaulish Gauls gods Greece Greek Hernicans hill Italy Kæso Keltic king Tarquinius land language Latins Latium Livy Lucius Mælius magistrates Manlius ment Milit military nations Niebuhr Opican party patricians period plebeian plunder Plutarch Polybius Porsenna possession Quinctius reign Roman Rome Romulus Sabines says Scylax seems senate Servius Tullius Sicily slaves soldiers Spurius story Syracuse Tarquinii temple territory Thucydides Tiber tion Tribb tribes tribunes tribuneship twelve tables Valerius Varro Veientians Veii Virginius Volscians whole καὶ τῶν
Popular passages
Page 125 - Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him. The evil, that men do, lives after them ; The good is oft interred with their bones ; So let it be with Caesar. The noble Brutus Hath told you, Caesar was ambitious; If it were so, it was a grievous fault; And grievously hath Caesar answer'd it. Here, under leave of Brutus, and the rest (For Brutus is an honourable man ; So are they all; all honourable men), Come I to speak in Caesar's funeral.
Page 29 - Ferentia, where the Latins held the great civil assemblies of their nation. Further to the north, on the edge of the Alban Hills looking towards Rome, was the town and citadel of Tusculum ; and beyond this, a lower summit crowned with the walls and towers of Labicum seems to connect the Alban hills with the line of the Apennines just at the spot where the citadel of...
Page 28 - The hills of Rome are such as we rarely see in England, low in height, but with steep and rocky sides. In early times the natural wood still remained in patches amidst the buildings, as at this day it grows here and there on the green sides of the Monte Testaceo.
Page 86 - Upon this they all mounted their horses and rode first to Rome ; and there they found the wives of Titus, and of Aruns. and of Sextus, feasting and making merry. Then they rode on to Collatia, and it was late in the night; but they found Lucretia, the wife of Tarquinius of Collatia, neither feasting, nor yet sleeping, but she was sitting with all her handmaids around her, and all were working at the loom. So when they saw this, they all said, ' Lucretia is the worthiest lady.
Page 132 - ... yet it is in human nature that a long undisturbed possession should give a feeling of ownership ; the more so as, while the state's claim lay dormant, the possessor was, in fact, proprietor, and the land would thus be repeatedly passing by regular sale from one occupier to another.
Page 173 - Rome in the year 261, thirteen were now either destroyed, or were in the possession of the Opicans ; that on the Alban hills themselves Tusculum alone remained independent ; and that there was no other friendly city to obstruct the irruptions of the enemy into the territory of Rome. Accordingly, that territory was plundered year after year, and whatever defeats the plunderers may at times have sustained, yet they were never deterred from renewing a contest which they found in the main profitable...
Page 165 - Caius sitting on the general's seat in the midst of the camp, and the Volscian chiefs were standing round him. When he first saw them, he wondered what it could be, but presently he knew his mother, who was walking at the head of the train, and then he could not contain himself, but leapt down from his seat, and ran to meet her, and was going to kiss her, but she stopped him and said, 'Ere thou kiss me, let me know whether I am speaking to an enemy or to my son ; whether I stand in thy camp as thy...
Page 132 - ... state. It is easy, however, to see what motive the patricians, as a body, had to oppose all such measures, since it was their interest, though not their right, to keep the lands unallotted. The enactment of A.
Page 88 - Meanwhile King Tarquinius set out with speed to Rome to put down the tumult. But Lucius turned aside from the road that he might not meet him, and came to the camp; and the soldiers joyfully received him, and they drove out the sons of Tarquinius.
Page 91 - Then the horsemen on both parts fought, and afterward the main battles, and the Veientians were beaten, but the Tarquinians beat the Romans, and the battle was neither won nor lost; but in the night there came a voice out of the wood that was hard by, and it said, "One man more has fallen on the part of the Etruscans than...