Roman Imperialism in the Late RepublicCornell University Press, 1968 - 117 Seiten |
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Seite 14
... Rome and its territory , as Rome came into contact with places and peoples more and more remote - first to Italy , then to the provinces , ' free ' cities and even neighbouring monarchs . Both collectively and as individuals , men ...
... Rome and its territory , as Rome came into contact with places and peoples more and more remote - first to Italy , then to the provinces , ' free ' cities and even neighbouring monarchs . Both collectively and as individuals , men ...
Seite 32
... Rome ) to an unneces- sary war ; and it was probably as a result of this patriotic and successful firmness that Marius ' enemies in Rome agreed to the signal honour of his augurate in absence — an unexpected honour , difficult to ...
... Rome ) to an unneces- sary war ; and it was probably as a result of this patriotic and successful firmness that Marius ' enemies in Rome agreed to the signal honour of his augurate in absence — an unexpected honour , difficult to ...
Seite 89
... Rome's good fortune that Parthia , essentially unstable , was in no position to take advantage of her own strength and Rome's weakness- and that no better opponent remained . We have seen the attested hatred for Rome among the subjects ...
... Rome's good fortune that Parthia , essentially unstable , was in no position to take advantage of her own strength and Rome's weakness- and that no better opponent remained . We have seen the attested hatred for Rome among the subjects ...
Inhalt
THE ECONOMIC MOTIVE | 16 |
THE SENATE AGAINST EXPANSION | 29 |
NEW INTERESTS AND NEW ATTITUDES | 44 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted action actual administration already annexation appear Asia attempt became become benefit Caesar certainly CHAPTER Cicero cities citizens claim clear clearly clients collection command concerned connection consideration consul course Cyrene developed discussion doubt early East economic effect empire Equites especially evidence extent fact force foreign friends further Gaul give given governed governor Gracchus Greek honour idea imperialism important increasing interests Italian Italy king land later least look major Marius matter mention merely MICHIGAN Mithridates motives Naturally never NOTES obvious perhaps political Pompey probably profits province reason references Republic Roman Rome second century seems seen Senate settlement Social sources success surely taken talents territory tion traditional wars whole
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Space, Geography, and Politics in the Early Roman Empire, Band 19 Claude Nicolet Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1991 |