Livy, Books I-X.Clarendon Press, 1874 - 199 Seiten |
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Seite 20
... Aeneas . Aeneas is presented to us in three aspects : ( 1 ) as the founder of a dynasty which ruled in Ida over the remnant of the Trojans after the destruction of Troy ; ( 2 ) As the founder of several cities in Greece ; ( 3 ) As the ...
... Aeneas . Aeneas is presented to us in three aspects : ( 1 ) as the founder of a dynasty which ruled in Ida over the remnant of the Trojans after the destruction of Troy ; ( 2 ) As the founder of several cities in Greece ; ( 3 ) As the ...
Seite 21
... Aeneas , rather than with the victorious . Greek Ulysses , whose descendants were supposed to reign in the neigh- bouring town of Tusculum . ( See on 1. 49 , 11. ) The belief of the Romans that they were of Trojan descent can be traced ...
... Aeneas , rather than with the victorious . Greek Ulysses , whose descendants were supposed to reign in the neigh- bouring town of Tusculum . ( See on 1. 49 , 11. ) The belief of the Romans that they were of Trojan descent can be traced ...
Seite 22
... Aeneas as the Trojan oikίorns . The latter is much easier than the former . In the Iliad itself Aeneas is the only Trojan hero who appears to have a future . The famous lines ( Il . 20 . 306 ) show that the poet knew of descendants of ...
... Aeneas as the Trojan oikίorns . The latter is much easier than the former . In the Iliad itself Aeneas is the only Trojan hero who appears to have a future . The famous lines ( Il . 20 . 306 ) show that the poet knew of descendants of ...
Seite 23
... Aeneas , back to the Sicilian poet Stesichorus , who belongs to the first half of the sixth century , and to the Regal Period of Rome . The Iliac Table in the Capitoline Museum has representations of different Trojan legends , the last ...
... Aeneas , back to the Sicilian poet Stesichorus , who belongs to the first half of the sixth century , and to the Regal Period of Rome . The Iliac Table in the Capitoline Museum has representations of different Trojan legends , the last ...
Seite 24
... Aeneas with Cumae , is plainly visible in the Aeneid ( Book 6 ) , and it is remarkable that the Iliac Table , profess- ing to quote from Stesichorus , introduces the trumpeter Misenus . Misenus was the name of a headland over Cumae : it ...
... Aeneas with Cumae , is plainly visible in the Aeneid ( Book 6 ) , and it is remarkable that the Iliac Table , profess- ing to quote from Stesichorus , introduces the trumpeter Misenus . Misenus was the name of a headland over Cumae : it ...
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Acca Larentia accensi Aeneas Alba Albani Ancus animo arma assembly atque auctores bello bellum centuriae centuries Cicero circa comitia centuriata comitia curiata curiae deinde deities Dionysius eius enim eorum erant erat esset etiam Euhemerus exercitus Faunus fetiales fuisse fuit Gabii gentes Greek haec haud Hertz Hist inde inquit inter interrex ipse Juppiter king Kühnast Latin Lavinium legend Livy Livy's Madvig magis Mettius Mommsen neque nunc omnes omnium original passage patres patrician patris patrum populi primum Prisci probably quae quaestores quam quia quibus quidem Quirinus Quirites quod quoque regal period rege regem regis regnum religious Röm Romae Romam Roman Rome Romulus Sabine says seems senate Servius Servius Tullius story sunt tamen Tarquin Tarquinii Tarquinius temple tradition tribes tribus Trojan Tullus urbe urbem urbis Virg viri word worship καὶ
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Seite 102 - Datur haec venia antiquitati, ut miscendo humana divinis primordia urbium augustiora faciat; et si cui populo licere oportet consecrare origines suas et ad deos referre auctores, ea belli gloria est populo Romano ut cum suum conditorisque sui parentem Martem potissimum ferat tam et hoc gentes humanae patiantur aequo animo quam imperium patiuntur.
Seite 141 - Id ubi dixit porcum saxo silice percussit. Sua item carmina Albani suumque ius iurandum per suum dictatorem suosque sacerdotes peregerunt.
Seite 156 - ... quod populi Priscorum Latinorum hominesque Prisci Latini adversus populum Romanum Quiritium fecerunt deliquerunt, quod populus Romanus Quiritium bellum cum Priscis Latinis iussit esse senatusque populi Romani Quiritium censuit, consensit, conscivit, ut bellum cum Priscis Latinis fieret, ob eam rem ego populusque Romanus populis Priscorum Latinorum hominibusque Priscis Latinis bellum indico facioque.
Seite 149 - si ipse discere posses fidem ac foedera servare, vivo tibi ea disciplina a me adhibita esset; nunc, quoniam tuum insanabile ingenium est, at tu tuo supplicio doce humanum genus ea sancta credere, quae a te violata sunt. Ut igitur paulo ante animum inter Fidenatem Romanamque rem ancipitem gessisti, ita iam corpus passim distrahendum dabis.
Seite 102 - ... ego contra hoc quoque laboris praemium petam, ut me a conspectu malorum, quae nostra tot per annos vidit aetas, tantisper certe, dum prisca illa tota mente repeto, avertam omnis expers curae, quae scribentis animum etsi non flectere a vero, sollicitum tarnen efficere posset.
Seite 140 - Cum trigeminis agunt reges, ut pro sua quisque patria i5 dimicent ferro: ibi imperium fore, unde victoria fuerit. Nihil recusatur. Tempus et locus convenit. Priusquam dimicarent...
Seite 115 - Cacus, ferox viribus, captus pulchritudine bourn cum avertere earn praedam vellet, quia si agendo armentum in speluncam compulisset ipsa vestigia quaerentem dominum eo deductura erant, aversos boves eximium quemque pulchritudine caudis in speluncam traxit.
Seite 65 - Sextius de plebe primus consul factus. Et ne is quidem finis certaminum fuit. Quia patricii se auctores futuros negabant, prope secessionem plebis res terribilesque alias minas civilium certaminum venit: quum tamen per dictatorem conditionibus sedatae discordiae sunt, concessumque ab nobilitate plebi de consule plebeio ; a plebe nobilitati de praetore uno , qui ius in urbe diceret, ex Patribus creando.
Seite 102 - Imperium patiuntur. sed haec et his similia, utcumque animadversa aut existimata erunt, haud in magno equidem 9 ponam discrimine : ad illa mihi pro se quisque acriter intendat animum, quae vita, qui mores fuerint, per quos viros quibusque artibus domi militiaeque et partum et auctum Imperium sit...
Seite 181 - Sabini cives additi consederunt, qui a bono omine " id appellarunt ; nam cyprum Sabine bonum.