The Historians' History of the World: The Roman republicHenry Smith Williams Outlook Company, 1904 - World History |
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Page 38
... senate to the order of equites , the moneyed , as distinguished from the aristocratic class . This measure weakens the power of the senate but does not render the admin- istration of justice less corrupt . By the lex de provincia Asia ...
... senate to the order of equites , the moneyed , as distinguished from the aristocratic class . This measure weakens the power of the senate but does not render the admin- istration of justice less corrupt . By the lex de provincia Asia ...
Page 39
... senate , and ( b ) pro- viding for a redistribution of lands . These laws , passed by the popular assembly , are declared invalid by the senate . Drusus proceeds to execute them and to introduce a measure for admitting Italians to the ...
... senate , and ( b ) pro- viding for a redistribution of lands . These laws , passed by the popular assembly , are declared invalid by the senate . Drusus proceeds to execute them and to introduce a measure for admitting Italians to the ...
Page 83
... senate house to the ground ; and he went into the senate house , and called together the senators , as if he were already king . Servius meanwhile arose , and began to make his way home to his house ; but when he was come near to the ...
... senate house to the ground ; and he went into the senate house , and called together the senators , as if he were already king . Servius meanwhile arose , and began to make his way home to his house ; but when he was come near to the ...
Page 108
... senate ; but the houses thus ennobled , to use a modern term , were distinguished from the old by the title of the " lesser houses " and their senators did not vote till after the senators of the greater houses . According to the same ...
... senate ; but the houses thus ennobled , to use a modern term , were distinguished from the old by the title of the " lesser houses " and their senators did not vote till after the senators of the greater houses . According to the same ...
Page 109
... senate and to the centuries , the new citizens must have been more than a third of the old ones ; and indeed here the story supposes that in military matters , at any rate , the Luceres were already on an equality with the Ramnes and ...
... senate and to the centuries , the new citizens must have been more than a third of the old ones ; and indeed here the story supposes that in military matters , at any rate , the Luceres were already on an equality with the Ramnes and ...
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Common terms and phrases
allies ancient Antony arms assembly attack battle Brutus Cæsar Caius called camp Campania Capitol Capua Carthage Carthaginians Cassius Cato cavalry centuries chief Cicero Cimbrians citizens Claudius Clodius coast command conquered consul consulship Crassus death declared defeated dictator elected enemy Etruria Etruscans Fabius favour fell fleet force fortune Forum friends Gauls gave gods Gracchus Greek hands Hannibal Hasdrubal honour horse hundred Italians Italy Jugurtha Julius Cæsar king land Latin Latium legions Lilybæum Lucanians Marius Masinissa Metellus military Mithridates night nobles Octavian Octavius party passed patricians peace person plebeians political Polybius Pompey possession prætor proconsul province Punic Pyrrhus remained republic returned Roman army Rome Romulus Sabines Samnites Samnium Scipio senate sent ships Sicily slain slaves soldiers Spain Sulla Tarentum Tarquinius temple thousand tion took town tribes tribunes triumph troops victory Volscians whole
Popular passages
Page 588 - But yesterday the word of Caesar might Have stood against the world : now lies he there, And none so poor to do him reverence.
Page 609 - 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.
Page 88 - Tarqninius 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. King Tarquinius came to Rome, but the gates were shut, and they declared to him.
Page 63 - Romulus appeared to him in more than mortal beauty, and grown to more than mortal stature, and said to him, ' ' Go and tell " my people that they weep not for me any more ; but bid them to " be brave and warlike, and so shall they make my city the
Page 606 - ... had faded. The action of Caesar was no longer, like that of Alexander, a joyous marching onward towards a goal indefinitely remote; he built on, and out of, ruins, and was content to establish himself as tolerably and as securely as possible within the ample...
Page 652 - Rome was enabled to give that combination of stability and magnitude which distinguishes all her works, achieved its greatest triumph ; and here was seen the first of those great vaulted domes which became the distinctive attribute of the Christian Architecture of modern Italy. By these and many other works, — politic both because they increased the magnificence and the health of the capital, and also gave constant employment to workmen who might otherwise have been turbulent, — the Emperor Augustus...
Page 89 - So when Marcus was going to begin the dedication, and had his hand on the doorpost of the temple, and was speaking the set words of prayer, there came a man running to tell him that his son was dead. But he said, " Then let them carry him out and bury him...
Page 80 - There he married a noble Etruscan lady, and by her he had two sons. But his son found, that for his father's sake he was still looked upon as a stranger; so he left Tarquinii, and went with his wife Tanaquil to Rome, for there, it was said, strangers were held in more honour. Now as he came near to the gates of Rome, as he was sitting in his chariot with Tanaquil his wife, an eagle came and plucked the cap from his head, and bore it aloft into the air ; and then flew down again and placed it upon...
Page 115 - ... to effect his overthrow. But the evil of his tyranny survived him ; it was not so easy to restore what he had destroyed as to expel him and his family: the commons no longer stood beside the patricians as an equal order, free, wealthy, well armed, and well organized ; they were now poor, ill armed, and with no bonds of union; they therefore naturally sank beneath the power of the nobility, and the revolution which drove out the Tarquins established at Rome not a free commonwealth, but an exclusive...
Page 64 - He begged them only to assuage the fierceness of their anger, and cheerfully surrender their affections to those to whom fortune had consigned their persons." [He added,] "That from injuries love and friendship often arise ; and that they should find them kinder husbands on this account, because each of them, besides the performance of his conjugal duty, would endeavour to the utmost of his power to make up for the want of their parents , and native country.