![]() Praetores ad aerarium, later again quaestores. From 28-23 BC the treasurers were 2 Praefecti aerarii, from 23 BC (q.v.) answerable to the Senate, which controlled the state money. and (b) the money alone (obtained by taxation, supporting publicĮxpenditure). Standards of the legions, copies of the laws and senate decrees engraved on brass,Įtc. Of Forum (near the Capitol), containing the public coin and bullion, the (a) the physical treasury, located in the Temple of Saturn in the SW end D some provincial city offices,ĪERARIUM (from aes, aeris: money): the treasury Some legal offices are only in Appendix A some military, only inĪpp. Make an entry containing only references (e.g. To be looked up yet I did not wish to write separately about it, I sometimes Sentence numbers are sometimes skipped, and may differ from edition to Referred to by book number + chapter (or letter) number + sentenceĨ.15.9" = Livy, ( Annals,) book VIII, chapter 15, sentence 9", Taylor, Party Politics in the Age of Caesar (Berkeley 1949). Junior Officers of the Roman army in the Republican Period (Helsinki Stavely, Greek and Roman Voting and Elections Reinhold.ĭictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (London 1975), online at: Sourcebook II: The Empire (Harper 1966), ed. 377-389, is a useful glossary, with page references,ĭictionary, 2nd ed. 1: The Republic (NY 1968).ĭecline of the Ancient World (NY/London 1966). History of Rome Through the Fifth Century, Vol. Generation of the Roman Republic (Berkeley 1974). II: Filippo Coarelli, Il Foro Romano (Rome 1983, 1992) (The famous 11th edition., oftenįar superior to any later edition., has long been out of print, but is now 49 BC" = "thatĬonflicts in The Roman Republic (NY 1971). Or " Imperium (see s.v.)" = "see under Imperium". ( sub vocibus) = "under the heading(s)", e.g. = "at the beginning" or "towards the beginning" (used likeĬitatus) = "the passage which I just cited" "see Imperium ad fin." = "see the entry for Imperium "see Imperiumįin." = "see the entry for Imperium, at the very end" "for the sake of an example") = "for example"įin., ad. little or not at all to the Republic (see App.Īpp. Since even a brief description of that place tells much about the very nature Įxclude purely topographical entries-with one exception, for the Comitium, Two periods or blur the focus, I usually marked descriptions of the Empire: F. M, N, O and S) and in order not to confuse the mainly as they were in the last decades of the Republic or in the earlyĮmpire, because that is the background of most of the Latin authors read inĮven in the brief space between those two periods (for summaries and analysis Quaestores (with Aerarium), Tresviri, Tribuni Plebis (again), Vigintiviri and (Here the most important item by far is ‘Patron & Client’-itĮdictum, Imperium, Praetores, Princeps Senatus, Prorogatio (with App. ![]() ‘Principate’), Senatus (again), Tribuni plebis. Nobilitas, Publicani, Patron & Client (with Appendix L, ‘Patronate’ & Give a rough initial impression of the Roman state as a whole, if you read themĬonsecutively, in these groupings (I here include only the items that seem bestĬomitia (all 4), Senatus, Senatus Consultum Ultimum, Tribuni Plebis, ‘machinery’ of the late Republic or the early Empire (for example, so that theyĬan compare it with governments of the present day), it should contain food forĬross-references and Appendices, and made some entries in the Politicalīrief reference than for continuous reading but you will find that they do Wish to get a picture, rough but right in its main features, of the entire And (II) for more thoughtful readers, who ‘definition’ such as they could get from a lexicon, but a more completeĭescription that lets them sense what the thing really was. What such readers need is not a five-word It tries to give quick but sufficiently detailed information. To know what a legatus is, a senatus consultum, a tribune, etc., Undergraduates taking Roman history courses or Latin reading courses, who need ![]() 2 BC: Wars, Treaties, Other Main EventsīC: Persons Involved in Catiline Conspiracyġ21 Z M a p s o f t h e F o r u m R o m a n u m R e p u b l i c v e r s u s P r i n c i pĦ9 K ‘Division of Powers’ in the Republicħ3 L ‘Principate’ & ‘Patronate’ in the Republic (Ericħ6 M Relation Between Republic and Principateħ8 N (I) Character & Strategy of the Principate Ĩ8 O Syme & Meier on the Disintegration of the Republic T t l e P o l i t i c a l D i c t i o n a r y (assemblies, magistrates, social groups, ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |