The Decline of the Roman Republic, Volum 1Bell & Daldy, 1864 |
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Side iii
... Livy , it probably contains nearly all the facts which the original contained and some also that Livy may have omitted . I do not know if there is any edition of Freinsheim's Supplement which contains the references to the numerous ...
... Livy , it probably contains nearly all the facts which the original contained and some also that Livy may have omitted . I do not know if there is any edition of Freinsheim's Supplement which contains the references to the numerous ...
Side iv
... Livy's narrative , but I have not followed the Supplement so far as to place all the events of each year under one year in the Annalistic fashion . Such a mode of writing history , while it maintains a strict chronological order ...
... Livy's narrative , but I have not followed the Supplement so far as to place all the events of each year under one year in the Annalistic fashion . Such a mode of writing history , while it maintains a strict chronological order ...
Side viii
... Livy , and he also wrote a trea- tise on the art of war , which he has illustrated chiefly from the practice of the Romans . In the Prince he has given his opinions on what he calls mixed principalities , and he shows how a prince must ...
... Livy , and he also wrote a trea- tise on the art of war , which he has illustrated chiefly from the practice of the Romans . In the Prince he has given his opinions on what he calls mixed principalities , and he shows how a prince must ...
Side x
... Livy are so different from any thing else both in the matter and the form , that a man must make a close acquaintance with them before he will fully understand their meaning . Machiavelli's Discourses do not touch the matters which have ...
... Livy are so different from any thing else both in the matter and the form , that a man must make a close acquaintance with them before he will fully understand their meaning . Machiavelli's Discourses do not touch the matters which have ...
Side xi
... Livy ) to which Machiavelli has confined himself is scarcely entitled to more credit than our Chronicle of British Kings who reigned before the Roman invasion . But the commentator ( Machiavelli ) is indebted to Livy for little more ...
... Livy ) to which Machiavelli has confined himself is scarcely entitled to more credit than our Chronicle of British Kings who reigned before the Roman invasion . But the commentator ( Machiavelli ) is indebted to Livy for little more ...
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Agrarian law antient Appian Appian says Arevaci Aristonicus army Asia attack Attalus authority body Brutus Caepio Caius camp Carthage Celtiberi censors Centuriae Cicero Comitia commander commissioners constitution consul consulship Crassus cultivation Damophilus death defeated Duero elected enemy Eunous evidence Fabius five hundred jugera Flaccus Galba gave Gracchus Greek Henna honour Italian Italy killed king kingdom of Pergamum labour Laelius Lepidus Licinia Lex Livy Livy's Epitome Lucullus Lusitani Mancinus matter means Metellus military modern Mummius Nasica nobility nobles Numantia Numantini Octavius oration original Orosius Patres Patricians Pergamum Plebeians Plebs Plutarch political Polybius Pompeius Pontifex Maximus poor possession Possessors praetor probably proposed province Public Land Publicani punished quaestor republic rich Roman citizens Roman history Rome Scipio Senate sent Servilianus Sicily slaves soldiers Spain Spanish story suppose surrendered thing thousand Tiberius tion told town treaty tribune Vaccaei Valerius Viriathus vote writers