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History of Rome

Index History of Rome

Roman history has been among the most influential to the modern world, from supporting the tradition of the rule by law to influencing the American Founding Fathers to the creation of the Catholic church. [1]

212 relations: A. N. Sherwin-White, Abel Hendy Jones Greenidge, Alans, Albano Laziale, Alexandre Grandazzi, American Heroes Channel, Anatoly Bokschanin, Ancient history, Ancient Rome, Ancient Rome (disambiguation), Anna Clark (historian), Annalists, Anne Strachan Robertson, Annibale Annibaldi, Antiquitates rerum humanarum et divinarum, Aquitani, Architecture of Kerala, Arnavāz, Arnold Schaefer, Auctoritas, Augustan Age, Bartolomeo Platina, Battle of Garigliano, Battle of Sarmisegetusa, Bertrand Lançon, Brinsop Court, Camunni, Canegrate culture, Capture of Rome, Carsulae, Castra Alteium, Cato the Elder, Celts, Certamen (quiz bowl), Champion warfare, Charles François Lhomond, Chianciano Terme, Chilieteris, Civita Castellana Cathedral, Civitella Paganico, Classical Anatolia, Commentarii, Commune of Rome, Conservatore of Rome, Curriculum of the Waldorf schools, Daqin, De mirabilibus urbis Romae, De re publica, Delator, Departmental Museum of archaeology Gilort (Jérôme) Carcopino, ..., Did Jesus Exist? (Ehrman), Divine twins, Duumviri, Edmund Groag, Eduard Schwartz, Elena Shtaerman, Elio Lo Cascio, Emma Dench, Empúries, Epigraphy, Ercavica, Europeans in Medieval China, Eutropius (historian), Festus (historian), Flag and seal of Virginia, Founding of Rome, Fra Moriale, François Chausson, Free Dacians, Fregellae, Garrett G. Fagan, George Hamartolos, Giardino, Capalbio, Gil Álvarez Carrillo de Albornoz, Giusto Traina, Goeblange, Gustave Bloch, Henry C. Boren, Henry Francis Pelham, Historical development of the doctrine of papal primacy, History of agriculture, History of Carthage, History of Europe, History of Italy, History of Roman-era Tunisia, History of Rome, History of Rome (disambiguation), History of Rome (Mommsen), History of the Roman Empire, History of Western civilization before AD 500, Ilidža, Imperial Roman army, Infanticide, Italian unification, Italophilia, Ivan Jensen, Jedi, John Crescentius, John Thelwall, Joseph Vogt, Juggling, Julius Caesar (play), Karl Gottlob Zumpt, Karl Kirchwey, Khosrow I, LACTOR, Las Damas Romanas, Lays of Ancient Rome, Library of Congress Classification:Class D -- History, General and Old World, Liri, List of ancient Illyrian peoples and tribes, List of oldest continuously inhabited cities, List of people from Veneto, List of Rees's Cyclopædia articles, Literae Humaniores, Lobetani, Marcus Terentius Varro, Mariya Sergeyenko, Martin Goodman (historian), Marton, Lincolnshire, Mason Hammond, Miami University, Michel Labrousse, Michelle Rocca, Mike Duncan (podcaster), Mosaics of Delos, Muntic, National Roman Museum, Nikolai Mashkin, Nora, Italy, Onorato I Caetani, Otto Cuntz, Outline of ancient Rome, Outline of classical studies, Outline of Italy, Outline of Rome, Ovid, Palaeography, Papal States, Patrick Le Roux, Paul Veyne, Pella, Persius, Perusia, Poggio Murella, Pontey, Pontus (region), Porcius Festus, Portus, Potentia (ancient city), Prefetti di Vico, Prehistoric Italy, Procas, Pyotr Kakhovsky, Regensburg, Regillus, Richard Alston (classicist), Richard Laqueur, Richard Miles (historian), Roman Castles, Roman currency, Roman Empire (disambiguation), Roman furnaces in Alcamo, Roman gardens, Roman mosaic, Romanist, Rome, Rome (disambiguation), Romolo ed Ersilia (Hasse), Romulus and Remus, Rosalia (festival), S. E. Winbolt, Sack of Rome (1084), Santo Mazzarino, Scythians, Sergey Kovalev (historian), Shahrnāz, Simon Strousse Baker, Sith, Societal collapse, Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, Star Wars sources and analogues, Temple of Antas, Terry Jones' Barbarians, Tharros, The Dream of Scipio (novel), The Myth of Persecution, The Scarlet Fig, The Way of the World (short story), Theodor Mommsen, Thomas Nugent (travel writer), Timeline of ancient history, Timeline of food, Timeline of Niccolò Machiavelli, Timeline of the city of Rome, Tivoli, Lazio, Trajan, Transport in Rome, Turnus, Urban history, Vae victis, Vaga (Tunisia), Vatican Historical Museum, Vicus Martis Tudertium, Viterbo Papacy, Western world, Wilhelm Ihne, Wilhelm Kubitschek, William Fulbecke, Women Gladiators (Ribera), 29 BC, 8th century BC. Expand index (162 more) »

A. N. Sherwin-White

Adrian Nicholas Sherwin-White, FBA (10 August 1911 – 1 November 1993) was a British academic and ancient historian.

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Abel Hendy Jones Greenidge

Abel Hendy Jones Greenidge (22 December 1865 – 11 March 1906) was a writer on ancient history and law.

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Alans

The Alans (or Alani) were an Iranian nomadic pastoral people of antiquity.

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Albano Laziale

Albano Laziale (Albanum, Romanesco: Arbano) is a comune in the Metropolitan City of Rome, on the Alban Hills, in Latium, central Italy.

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Alexandre Grandazzi

Alexandre Grandazzi (born 8 February 1957) is a French university professor, a specialist of archaeology and Roman history.

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American Heroes Channel

American Heroes Channel (AHC; formerly Military Channel and originally Discovery Wings Channel) is an American digital cable and satellite television network that is owned by Discovery Inc. The network carries programs related to the military, warfare, and military history and science.

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Anatoly Bokschanin

Anatoly Georgiyevich Bokschanin (28 March 1903, Moscow – 24 January 1979, Moscow) was a Soviet scholar of classical antiquity.

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Ancient history

Ancient history is the aggregate of past events, "History" from the beginning of recorded human history and extending as far as the Early Middle Ages or the post-classical history.

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Ancient Rome

In historiography, ancient Rome is Roman civilization from the founding of the city of Rome in the 8th century BC to the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD, encompassing the Roman Kingdom, Roman Republic and Roman Empire until the fall of the western empire.

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Ancient Rome (disambiguation)

Ancient Rome was the city, state and civilisation of Rome during antiquity.

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Anna Clark (historian)

Dr.

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Annalists

Annalists (from Latin annus, year; hence annales, sc. libri, annual records), were a class of writers on Roman history, the period of whose literary activity lasted from the time of the Second Punic War to that of Sulla.

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Anne Strachan Robertson

Professor Anne Strachan Robertson FRSE FSA FSA Scot FNA DLitt (3 May 1910 – 4 October 1997) was an archaeologist, numismatist and writer, who was a professor of archaeology at the University of Glasgow and a keeper of coin collections at the Hunterian Museum.

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Annibale Annibaldi

Annibale Annibaldi, also known as Annibaldo degli Annibaldi, (died 1 September 1271) was an Italian Catholic theologian,.

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Antiquitates rerum humanarum et divinarum

Antiquitates rerum humanarum et divinarum was one of the chief works of Marcus Terentius Varro (1st century BC).

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Aquitani

The Aquitanians (Latin: Aquitani) were a people living in what is now southern Aquitaine and southwestern Midi-Pyrénées, France, called Gallia Aquitania by the Romans in the region between the Pyrenees, the Atlantic ocean, and the Garonne, present-day southwestern France.

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Architecture of Kerala

Kerala architecture is a kind of architectural style that is mostly found in Indian state of Kerala and all the architectural wonders of kerala stands out to be ultimate testmonials for the ancient vishwakarma sthapathis of kerala.

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Arnavāz

Arnavāz (اَرْنَواز) (Arənauuāčī in Avestā) is one of the two daughters (or possibly sisters) of Jamshid, the mythological king of parsia.

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Arnold Schaefer

Arnold Dietrich Schaefer (16 October 1819 in Seehausen, today part of Bremen – 19 November 1883 in Bonn) was a German historian.

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Auctoritas

Auctoritas is a Latin word and is the origin of English "authority".

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Augustan Age

Augustan Age may refer to.

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Bartolomeo Platina

Bartolomeo Sacchi (1421 – 21 September 1481), known as Platina (in Italian il Platina) after his birthplace (Piadena), and commonly referred to in English as Bartolomeo Platina, was an Italian Renaissance humanist writer and gastronomist.

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Battle of Garigliano

The Battle of Garigliano was fought in 915 between Christian forces and the Saracens.

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Battle of Sarmisegetusa

The Battle of Sarmizegetusa (also spelled Sarmizegethuza) was a siege of Sarmizegetusa, the capital of Dacia, fought in 106 between the army of the Roman Emperor Trajan, and the Dacians led by King Decebalus.

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Bertrand Lançon

Bertrand Lançon (born 1952, Le Mans) is a French historian and novelist, a specialist of late Antiquity.

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Brinsop Court

Brinsop Court is a romantic Grade I listed English country manor house located in the village of Brinsop, Herefordshire, England.

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Camunni

The Camuni or Camunni were an ancient population located in Val Camonica during the Iron Age (1st millennium BC); the Latin name Camunni was attributed to them by the authors of the 1st century.

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Canegrate culture

The Canegrate culture was a civilization of Prehistoric Italy who developed from the recent Bronze Age (13th century BC) until the Iron Age,Agnoletto, 1992 in the areas of what are now western Lombardy, eastern Piedmont, and Ticino.

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Capture of Rome

The capture of Rome (Presa di Roma) on 20 September 1870 was the final event of the long process of Italian unification known as the Risorgimento, marking both the final defeat of the Papal States under Pope Pius IX and the unification of the Italian peninsula under King Victor Emmanuel II of the House of Savoy.

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Carsulae

Carsulae is an archaeological site in the region of Umbria in central Italy.

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Castra Alteium

The Castra Alteium (Kastell Alzey) is a former late-Roman border fort on the Danube-Iller-Rhine Limes (DIRL).

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Cato the Elder

Cato the Elder (Cato Major; 234–149 BC), born and also known as (Cato Censorius), (Cato Sapiens), and (Cato Priscus), was a Roman senator and historian known for his conservatism and opposition to Hellenization.

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Celts

The Celts (see pronunciation of ''Celt'' for different usages) were an Indo-European people in Iron Age and Medieval Europe who spoke Celtic languages and had cultural similarities, although the relationship between ethnic, linguistic and cultural factors in the Celtic world remains uncertain and controversial.

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Certamen (quiz bowl)

Certamen, Latin for "competition", is a quiz bowl-style competition with classics-themed questions.

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Champion warfare

Champion warfare refers to a type of battle, most commonly found in the epic poetry and myth of ancient history, in which the outcome of the conflict is determined by single combat, an individual duel between the best soldiers ("champions") from each opposing army.

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Charles François Lhomond

Charles François Lhomond (1727 – December 31, 1794) was a French priest, grammarian, and educator who was a native of Chaulnes, Somme.

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Chianciano Terme

Chianciano Terme is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Siena in the Italian region Tuscany, located about southeast of Florence and about southeast of Siena.

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Chilieteris

The Chilieteris (Χιλιετηρίς, "The Millennium") was a history of Rome in fifteen books, written in Ionic Greek by Gaius Asinius Quadratus, which spanned a thousand years, from the founding of Rome until his time.

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Civita Castellana Cathedral

Civita Castellana Cathedral (Cattedrale di Santa Maria Maggiore or Santa Maria di Pozzano) is a cathedral in Civita Castellana, central Italy.

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Civitella Paganico

Civitella Paganico is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Grosseto in the Italian region Tuscany.

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Classical Anatolia

Anatolia, also known by the Latin name of Asia Minor, is considered to be the westernmost extent of Asia.

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Commentarii

Commentarii (Latin, Greek: ''hupomnemata'') are notes to assist the memory, or memoranda.

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Commune of Rome

The Commune of Rome (Comune di Roma) was established in 1144 after a rebellion led by Giordano Pierleoni.

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Conservatore of Rome

A Conservatore of Rome (Italian - Conservatore di Roma) was one of three magistrates in medieval Rome, dividing power on the model of the ancient Roman consuls.

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Curriculum of the Waldorf schools

In the curriculum of the Waldorf schools, much of the education in academic subjects takes place in blocks, generally of 3–5 weeks duration.

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Daqin

Daqin (alternative transliterations include Tachin, Tai-Ch'in) is the ancient Chinese name for the Roman Empire or, depending on context, the Near East, especially Syria.

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De mirabilibus urbis Romae

De mirabilibus urbis Romae, preserved in a single manuscript in Cambridge, England, is a medieval guide in Latin to the splendours of Rome, which was written in the mid-twelfth century by a certain Magister Gregorius ("Master Gregory") of Oxford.

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De re publica

De re publica (On the Commonwealth; see below) is a dialogue on Roman politics by Cicero, written in six books between 54 and 51 BC.

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Delator

Delator (plural Delatores) is Latin for a denouncer, i.e. who indicates to a court another as having committed a punishable deed.

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Departmental Museum of archaeology Gilort (Jérôme) Carcopino

The Departmental Museum of archaeology Gilort (Jérôme) Carcopino is situated in the commune of Aleria in Corsica (France) at around 70 kilometers from Bastia and at 120 kilometers from Ajaccio.

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Did Jesus Exist? (Ehrman)

Did Jesus Exist?: The Historical Argument for Jesus of Nazareth is a 2012 book by the academic and author Bart Ehrman, a leading scholar of the New Testament and writer of over twenty-five books (including three college textbooks) in that field of study.

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Divine twins

The Divine twins are a mytheme of Proto-Indo-European religion.

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Duumviri

The duumviri (Latin for "two men"), originally duoviri and also known in English as the duumvirs, were any of various joint magistrates of ancient Rome.

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Edmund Groag

Edmund Groag (2 February 1873, in Prerau – 19 August 1945, in Vienna) was an Austrian classical scholar, who specialized in Roman history.

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Eduard Schwartz

Eduard Schwartz (22 August 1858 – 13 February 1940) was a German classical philologist.

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Elena Shtaerman

Elena Mikhailovna Shtaerman (28 September 1914, St. Petersburg – 22 October 1991, Moscow) was a prominent Soviet scholar of Roman history and translator of ancient authors (Julius Paulus Prudentissimus, Dionysius Cato, Publilius Syrus).

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Elio Lo Cascio

Elio Lo Cascio (born 31 May 1948) is an Italian historian and teacher of Roman history at the Sapienza University of Rome.

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Emma Dench

Emma Dench is an English ancient historian, classicist, and academic.

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Empúries

Empúries, also known as Ampurias (Ἐμπόριον, Empúries, Ampurias), was a town on the Mediterranean coast of the Catalan comarca of Alt Empordà in Catalonia, Spain.

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Epigraphy

Epigraphy (ἐπιγραφή, "inscription") is the study of inscriptions or epigraphs as writing; it is the science of identifying graphemes, clarifying their meanings, classifying their uses according to dates and cultural contexts, and drawing conclusions about the writing and the writers.

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Ercavica

Ercavica (or Arcavica) was an important Roman City whose remains are visible today at the archaeological site.

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Europeans in Medieval China

Given textual and archaeological evidence, it is thought that thousands of Europeans lived in Imperial China during the period of Mongol rule.

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Eutropius (historian)

Flavius Eutropius was an Ancient Roman historian who flourished in the latter half of the 4th century AD.

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Festus (historian)

Festus, whose name also appears in the manuscripts of his work as Rufus Festus, Ruffus Festus, Sextus Festus, Sextus Rufus, and Sextus, was a Late Roman historian and proconsul of Asia whose epitome Breviarium rerum gestarum populi Romani ("Summary of the history of Rome") was commissioned by the emperor Valens in preparation for his war against Persia.

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Flag and seal of Virginia

The Seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia is the official seal of the Commonwealth of Virginia, a U.S. state.

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Founding of Rome

The founding of Rome can be investigated through archaeology, but traditional stories handed down by the ancient Romans themselves explain the earliest history of their city in terms of legend and myth.

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Fra Moriale

Montréal de Albarno, also known as Fra Moriale (1315 ? –August 1354) was a Provençal mercenary and condottiero.

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François Chausson

François Chausson, (born 1966) is a 20th-21st-century French historian, professor of Roman history at the Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne.

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Free Dacians

The so-called Free Dacians (Romanian: Daci liberi) is the name given by some modern historians to those Dacians who putatively remained outside, or emigrated from, the Roman Empire after the emperor Trajan's Dacian Wars (AD 101-6).

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Fregellae

Fregellae was an ancient town of Latium adiectum, situated on the Via Latina between Aquinum (modern Aquino) and Frusino (now in central Italy), near the left branch of the Liris.

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Garrett G. Fagan

Garrett G. Fagan (15 January 1963 - 11 March 2017) was an Irish American historian and writer known for his research in the various areas of Roman history, as well as his critique of pseudoarchaeology.

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George Hamartolos

George Hamartolos or Hamartolus (Γεώργιος Ἁμαρτωλός) was a monk at Constantinople under Michael III (842–867) and the author of a chronicle of some importance.

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Giardino, Capalbio

Giardino is a rural area in Tuscany, central Italy, administratively a frazione of the comune of Capalbio, province of Grosseto.

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Gil Álvarez Carrillo de Albornoz

Gil Álvarez Carrillo de Albornoz (Egidio Albornoz) (1310 – 23 August 1367) was a Spanish cardinal and ecclesiastical leader.

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Giusto Traina

Giusto Traina (born 1959) is an Italian historian and professor of Roman history at the Paris-Sorbonne University, senior member of the Institut Universitaire de France.

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Goeblange

Goeblange (Giewel, Göblingen) is a village in the commune of Koerich, in southern Luxembourg about 13 km west of Luxembourg City.

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Gustave Bloch

Gustave Bloch (July 21, 1848, Fegersheim, Bas-Rhin – December 3, 1923) was a French Jewish historian of ancient history born in Fegersheim, a commune located in the department of Bas-Rhin.

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Henry C. Boren

Henry C. Boren (February 10, 1921 in Pike County, IL - October 17, 2013 in Pittsboro, North Carolina) was a historian and author.

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Henry Francis Pelham

Henry Francis Pelham, FSA, FBA (10 September 1846 in Bergh Apton, Norfolk – 13 February 1907) was an English scholar and historian.

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Historical development of the doctrine of papal primacy

The doctrines of Petrine primacy and papal primacy are perhaps the most contentiously disputed in the history of Christianity.

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History of agriculture

The history of agriculture records the domestication of plants and animals and the development and dissemination of techniques for raising them productively.

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History of Carthage

Carthage was founded in the 9th century BC on the coast of North Africa, in what is now Tunisia.

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History of Europe

The history of Europe covers the peoples inhabiting Europe from prehistory to the present.

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History of Italy

In archaic times, ancient Greeks, Etruscans and Celts established settlements in the south, the centre and the north of Italy respectively, while various Italian tribes and Italic peoples inhabited the Italian peninsula and insular Italy.

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History of Roman-era Tunisia

The history of Roman-era Tunisia begins with the history of the Roman Africa Province.

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History of Rome

Roman history has been among the most influential to the modern world, from supporting the tradition of the rule by law to influencing the American Founding Fathers to the creation of the Catholic church.

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History of Rome (disambiguation)

The History of Rome may concern: I. celebrated Histories of ancient Rome; or, II.

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History of Rome (Mommsen)

The History of Rome (Römische Geschichte) is a multi-volume history of ancient Rome written by Theodor Mommsen (1817–1903).

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History of the Roman Empire

The history of the Roman Empire covers the history of Ancient Rome from the fall of the Roman Republic in 27 BC until the abdication of the last Western emperor in 476 AD.

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History of Western civilization before AD 500

Western civilization describes the development of human civilization beginning in Greece, and generally spreading westwards.

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Ilidža

Ilidža (Илиџа) is a municipality located in Sarajevo Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Imperial Roman army

The Imperial Roman army are the terrestrial armed forces deployed by the Roman Empire from about 30 BC to 476 AD.

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Infanticide

Infanticide (or infant homicide) is the intentional killing of infants.

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Italian unification

Italian unification (Unità d'Italia), or the Risorgimento (meaning "the Resurgence" or "revival"), was the political and social movement that consolidated different states of the Italian peninsula into the single state of the Kingdom of Italy in the 19th century.

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Italophilia

Italophilia is the admiration, appreciation or emulation of Italy, its people, its ideals, its civilization or its culture.

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Ivan Jensen

Tage Ivan Jensen, was mostly known as Ivan Jensen for short (November 10, 1922 – January 26, 2009) was a Danish association footballer, who won three Danish championships with amateur club Akademisk Boldklub and played professionally for Italian club Bologna FC.

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Jedi

The Jedi are the main protagonists in the Star Wars universe.

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John Crescentius

John Crescentius (Italian: Giovanni Crescenzio) also John II Crescentius or Crescentius III (d. 1012) was the son of Crescentius the Younger (Crescentius II).

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John Thelwall

John Thelwall (27 July 1764 – 17 February 1834), was a radical British orator, writer, and elocutionist.

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Joseph Vogt

Joseph Vogt (23 June 1895 in Schechingen – 14 July 1986 in Tübingen) was a German classical historian, one of the leading 20th-century experts on Roman history.

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Juggling

Juggling is a physical skill, performed by a juggler, involving the manipulation of objects for recreation, entertainment, art or sport.

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Julius Caesar (play)

The Tragedy of Julius Caesar is a history play and tragedy by William Shakespeare, believed to have been written in 1599.

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Karl Gottlob Zumpt

Karl or Carl Gottlob Zumpt (Carolus Timotheus Zumpt; 1 April 179225 June 1849) was a German classical scholar known for his work in the field of Latin philology.

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Karl Kirchwey

Karl Kirchwey (born February 25, 1956) is an award–winning American poet who has lived in both Europe and the United States and whose work is strongly influenced by the Greek and Roman past.

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Khosrow I

Khosrow I (also known as Chosroes I and Kisrā in classical sources; 501–579, most commonly known in Persian as Anushiruwān (انوشيروان, "the immortal soul"; also known as Anushiruwan the Just (انوشيروان دادگر, Anushiruwān-e Dādgar), was the King of Kings (Shahanshah) of the Sasanian Empire from 531 to 579. He was the successor of his father Kavadh I (488–531). Khosrow I was the twenty-second Sasanian Emperor of Persia, and one of its most celebrated emperors. He laid the foundations of many cities and opulent palaces, and oversaw the repair of trade roads as well as the building of numerous bridges and dams. His reign is furthermore marked by the numerous wars fought against the Sassanid's neighboring archrivals, the Roman-Byzantine Empire, as part of the already centuries-long lasting Roman-Persian Wars. The most important wars under his reign were the Lazic War which was fought over Colchis (western Georgia-Abkhazia) and the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 572–591. During Khosrow's ambitious reign, art and science flourished in Persia and the Sasanian Empire reached its peak of glory and prosperity. His rule was preceded by his father's and succeeded by Hormizd IV. Khosrow Anushiruwan is one of the most popular emperors in Iranian culture and literature and, outside of Iran, his name became, like that of Caesar in the history of Rome, a designation of the Sasanian kings. He also introduced a rational system of taxation, based upon a survey of landed possessions, which his father had begun, and tried in every way to increase the welfare and the revenues of his empire. His army was in discipline decidedly superior to the Byzantines, and apparently was well paid. He was also interested in literature and philosophical discussions. Under his reign chess was introduced from India, and the famous book of Kalilah and Dimnah was translated. He thus became renowned as a wise king.

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LACTOR

LACTOR (London Association of Classical Teachers - Original Records) are a series of sourcebooks published by the LACTOR committee since 1968.

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Las Damas Romanas

Las Damas Romanas (literally, "The Roman Dames"), also known as The Roman Maidens, The Roman Women,, from "Luna Y Novicio, Juan", bookrags.com or The Roman Ladies, is an oil on canvas painting by Juan Luna, one of the most important Filipino painters of the Spanish period in the Philippines.

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Lays of Ancient Rome

Lays of Ancient Rome is a collection of narrative poems, or lays, by Thomas Babington Macaulay.

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Library of Congress Classification:Class D -- History, General and Old World

Class D: History, General and Old World is a classification used by the Library of Congress Classification system.

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Liri

The Liri (Latin Liris or Lyris, previously, Clanis; Greek: Λεῖρις) is one of the principal rivers of central Italy, flowing into the Tyrrhenian Sea a little below Minturno under the name Garigliano.

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List of ancient Illyrian peoples and tribes

The following is a list of ancient Illyrian peoples and tribes.

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List of oldest continuously inhabited cities

This is a list of present-day cities by the time period over which they have been continuously inhabited.

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List of people from Veneto

Veneto, a region of Italy, has been the native land of many notable people, some of whom are listed below.

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List of Rees's Cyclopædia articles

The Cyclopædia; or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Literature is an important 19th century British encyclopædia edited by Rev.

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Literae Humaniores

Literae Humaniores is the name given to an undergraduate course focused on Classics (Ancient Rome, Ancient Greece, Latin, ancient Greek and philosophy) at the University of Oxford and some other universities.

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Lobetani

The Lobetani (Greek: Lobetanoi), were a small pre-Roman Iberian people of ancient Spain mentioned only once by Ptolemy in the 2nd century AD, situated around the mountainous Albarracín area of the southwest Province of Teruel.

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Marcus Terentius Varro

Marcus Terentius Varro (116 BC – 27 BC) was an ancient Roman scholar and writer.

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Mariya Sergeyenko

Mariya Yefimovna Sergeyenko (9 December 1891 – 28 October 1987) was a Soviet scholar of Roman history and philologist (Professor from 1948).

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Martin Goodman (historian)

Martin David Goodman, FBA (born 1 August 1953) is a British historian and academic, specialising in Roman history and the history and literature of the Jews in the Roman period.

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Marton, Lincolnshire

Marton is a village and civil parish in the West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.

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Mason Hammond

Mason Hammond (1903 – 13 October 2002), was an American educator and scholar.

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Miami University

Miami University (also referred to as Miami of Ohio or simply Miami) is a public research university on a 2,138-acre campus in Oxford, Ohio, 35 miles north of Cincinnati.

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Michel Labrousse

Michel Labrousse (25 December 1912, Brive-la-Gaillarde – 1988) was a 20th-century French historian.

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Michelle Rocca

Michelle Rocca (born 1961, Dublin) is an Irish former model, television presenter, and beauty queen who, in 1980, won the Miss Ireland title.

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Mike Duncan (podcaster)

Mike Duncan is an American podcaster and author known for his award-winning podcast The History of Rome (THoR), Revolutions, and the book The Storm before the Storm.

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Mosaics of Delos

The mosaics of Delos are a significant body of ancient Greek mosaic art.

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Muntic

Muntić (mǔnːtich, latin Monticolum, ital. Monticchio (Polesano)) is a village in Southeastern Istria, Croatia.

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National Roman Museum

The National Roman Museum (Italian: Museo Nazionale Romano) is a museum, with several branches in separate buildings throughout the city of Rome, Italy.

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Nikolai Mashkin

Nikolai Alexandrovich Mashkin (9 February 1900, Sokolki – 15 September 1950, Moscow) was a Soviet scholar of Roman history (Doctor of Historical Sciences and Professor from 1942).

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Nora, Italy

Nora (Nuras in the mediaeval Sardinian language) is an ancient Roman and pre-Roman town on a peninsula near Pula, near to Cagliari in Sardinia.

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Onorato I Caetani

Onorato I Caetani (1336 – 20 April 1400) was an Italian nobleman, who was the count of Fondi from 1348 and the Great Conestable of the Kingdom of Naples also from 1348.

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Otto Cuntz

Otto Cuntz (10 September 1865, Stettin – 1 December 1932, Graz) was a German-Austrian classical historian, who specialized in ancient geography and topography.

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Outline of ancient Rome

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to ancient Rome: Ancient Rome – former civilization that thrived on the Italian Peninsula as early as the 8th century BC.

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Outline of classical studies

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to classical studies: Classical studies (Classics for short) – earliest branch of the humanities, which covers the languages, literature, history, art, and other cultural aspects of the ancient Mediterranean world.

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Outline of Italy

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Italy: Italy – unitary parliamentary republic in South-Central Europe, located primarily upon the Italian Peninsula.

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Outline of Rome

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Rome: Rome – capital of Italy and a special comune (named Comune di Roma Capitale).

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Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso (20 March 43 BC – 17/18 AD), known as Ovid in the English-speaking world, was a Roman poet who lived during the reign of Augustus.

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Palaeography

Palaeography (UK) or paleography (US; ultimately from παλαιός, palaiós, "old", and γράφειν, graphein, "to write") is the study of ancient and historical handwriting (that is to say, of the forms and processes of writing, not the textual content of documents).

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Papal States

The Papal States, officially the State of the Church (Stato della Chiesa,; Status Ecclesiasticus; also Dicio Pontificia), were a series of territories in the Italian Peninsula under the direct sovereign rule of the Pope, from the 8th century until 1870.

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Patrick Le Roux

Patrick Le Roux (born 3 October 1943 in Morlaix) is a 20th–21st-century French historian.

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Paul Veyne

Paul Veyne (born 13 June 1930 in Aix-en-Provence) is a French archaeologist and historian, and a specialist on Ancient Rome.

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Pella

Pella (Πέλλα, Pélla) is an ancient city located in Central Macedonia, Greece, best known as the historical capital of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon and birthplace of Alexander the Great.

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Persius

Persius, in full Aulus Persius Flaccus (4 December 34, in Volterra24 November 62), was a Roman poet and satirist of Etruscan origin.

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Perusia

The ancient Perusia, now Perugia, first appears in history as one of the 12 confederate cities of Etruria.

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Poggio Murella

Poggio Murella is a village in Tuscany, central Italy, administratively a frazione of the comune of Manciano, province of Grosseto.

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Pontey

Pontey (Valdôtain: Pounté) is a town and comune in the Aosta Valley region of north-western Italy.

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Pontus (region)

Pontus (translit, "Sea") is a historical Greek designation for a region on the southern coast of the Black Sea, located in modern-day eastern Black Sea Region of Turkey.

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Porcius Festus

Porcius Festus was procurator of Judea from about AD 59 to 62, succeeding Antonius Felix.

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Portus

Portus was a large artificial harbour of Ancient Rome.

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Potentia (ancient city)

Potentia was a Roman town along the central Adriatic Italian coast, near the modern town of Porto Recanati, in the province of Macerata.

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Prefetti di Vico

The Prefetti di Vico were an Italian noble family, of German origin, who established in Rome from the 10th century.

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Prehistoric Italy

The prehistory of Italy began in the Paleolithic, when the Homo species colonized for the first time the Italian territory and ends in the Iron Age, when the first written records appeared in the peninsula and in the islands.

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Procas

Procas or Proca (said to have reigned 817-794 BC) was one of the Latin kings of Alba Longa in the mythic tradition of the founding of Rome.

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Pyotr Kakhovsky

Pyotr Grigoryevich Kakhovsky (Пётр Григо́рьевич Кахо́вский, 1799 –) was a Russian officer and active participant of Decembrist revolt, known for the murder of General Mikhail Miloradovich and Colonel Ludwig Niklaus von Stürler.

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Regensburg

Regensburg (Castra-Regina;; Řezno; Ratisbonne; older English: Ratisbon; Bavarian: Rengschburg or Rengschburch) is a city in south-east Germany, at the confluence of the Danube, Naab and Regen rivers.

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Regillus

Regillus was an ancient lake of Latium, Italy, famous in the legendary history of Rome as the lake in the neighborhood of which occurred (496 B.C.) the battle which finally decided the hegemony of Rome in Latium.

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Richard Alston (classicist)

Richard Alston is professor of Roman history at Royal Holloway, University of London.

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Richard Laqueur

Richard Laqueur (27 March 1881 – 25 November 1959) was a German historian and philologist born in Strassburg.

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Richard Miles (historian)

Richard Miles (born in Pembury, Kent, 1969) is a British historian and archaeologist, best known for presenting two major historical documentary series: BBC2's Ancient Worlds (2010), which presented a comprehensive overview of classical history and the dawn of civilisation, and BBC Four's Archaeology: a Secret History (2013).

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Roman Castles

The so-called Roman Castles (Castelli Romani in Italian) are a group of comunes in the Metropolitan City of Rome.

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Roman currency

Roman currency for most of Roman history consisted of gold, silver, bronze, orichalcum and copper coinage.

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Roman Empire (disambiguation)

The Roman Empire usually refers to the post-republican, autocratic government period of Roman civilization, centered on the city of Rome on the Italian peninsula from 27 BC to 330 AD, and in Constantinople on the Bosphorus from 330 to 1453 AD.

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Roman furnaces in Alcamo

The Roman furnaces in Alcamo are part of the archaeological complex of Alcamo Marina (in contrada Foggia) and were discovered in 2000.

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Roman gardens

Roman gardens and ornamental horticulture became highly developed under Roman civilization.

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Roman mosaic

A Roman mosaic is a mosaic made during the Roman period, throughout the Roman Republic and later Empire.

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Romanist

Romanist may refer to.

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Rome

Rome (Roma; Roma) is the capital city of Italy and a special comune (named Comune di Roma Capitale).

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Rome (disambiguation)

Rome is the capital city of Italy, formerly of the Roman Empire and seat of the papacy.

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Romolo ed Ersilia (Hasse)

Romolo ed Ersilia is an opera in three acts composed by Johann Adolph Hasse to an Italian-language libretto by Pietro Metastasio.

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Romulus and Remus

In Roman mythology, Romulus and Remus are twin brothers, whose story tells the events that led to the founding of the city of Rome and the Roman Kingdom by Romulus.

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Rosalia (festival)

In the Roman Empire, Rosalia or Rosaria was a festival of roses celebrated on various dates, primarily in May, but scattered through mid-July.

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S. E. Winbolt

Samuel Edward Winbolt (1868-1944) was a British classics and history teacher, author and amateur archaeologist.

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Sack of Rome (1084)

The Sack of Rome of May 1084 was a Norman sack, the result of the pope's call for aid from the duke of Apulia, Robert Guiscard.

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Santo Mazzarino

Santo Mazzarino (27 January 1916 – 18 May 1987) was an Italian historian, considered a leading 20th-century historian of ancient Rome.

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Scythians

or Scyths (from Greek Σκύθαι, in Indo-Persian context also Saka), were a group of Iranian people, known as the Eurasian nomads, who inhabited the western and central Eurasian steppes from about the 9th century BC until about the 1st century BC.

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Sergey Kovalev (historian)

Sergey Ivanovich Kovalev (Сергей Иванович Ковалёв, – 12 November 1960) was a Soviet scholar of classical antiquity.

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Shahrnāz

Shahrnāz (شَهرناز) (Saŋhauuāčī in Avestā) is one of the two daughters (or possibly sisters) of Jamshid, the mythological king of Iran.

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Simon Strousse Baker

Simon Strousse Baker was the 6th president of Washington & Jefferson College.

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Sith

The Sith are major antagonists in the space opera franchise Star Wars.

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Societal collapse

Societal collapse is the fall of a complex human society.

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Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies (The Roman Society) was founded in 1910 as the sister society to the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies.

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Star Wars sources and analogues

The Star Wars science fiction media franchise is acknowledged to have been inspired by many sources.

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Temple of Antas

The Temple of Antas is an ancient Carthaginian-Roman temple in the commune of Fluminimaggiore, southern Sardinia, Italy.

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Terry Jones' Barbarians

Terry Jones' Barbarians is a 4-part TV documentary series first broadcast on BBC 2 in 2006.

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Tharros

Tharros (also spelled Tharras, Archaic Greek: Θάρρας, Hellenistic Greek, Tarras or Tarrae, Τάρραι) was an ancient city and former bishopric on the west coast of Sardinia, Italy.

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The Dream of Scipio (novel)

The Dream of Scipio is a novel by Iain Pears.

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The Myth of Persecution

The Myth of Persecution: How Early Christians Invented a Story of Martyrdom is a 2013 book by Candida Moss, a professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at the University of Notre Dame.

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The Scarlet Fig

The Scarlet Fig: or, Slowly through a Land of Stone, is a fantasy novel written by American writer Avram Davidson, edited by Grania Davis and Henry Wessells, published in hardcover by Rose Press in 2005.

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The Way of the World (short story)

"The Way of the World" is a short story by Willa Cather.

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Theodor Mommsen

Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen (30 November 1817 – 1 November 1903) was a German classical scholar, historian, jurist, journalist, politician and archaeologist.

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Thomas Nugent (travel writer)

Thomas Nugent (c. 1700 – 27 April 1772 in Gray's Inn, London) was an erudite Irish historian and travel writer.

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Timeline of ancient history

This timeline of ancient history lists historical events of the documented ancient past from the beginning of recorded history until the Early Middle Ages.

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Timeline of food

No description.

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Timeline of Niccolò Machiavelli

This timeline lists important events relevant to the life of the Italian diplomat, writer and political philosopher Niccolò di Bernardo dei Machiavelli (1469–1527).

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Timeline of the city of Rome

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Rome, Italy.

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Tivoli, Lazio

Tivoli (Tibur) is a town and comune in Lazio, central Italy, about east-north-east of Rome, at the falls of the Aniene river where it issues from the Sabine hills.

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Trajan

Trajan (Imperator Caesar Nerva Trajanus Divi Nervae filius Augustus; 18 September 538August 117 AD) was Roman emperor from 98 to 117AD.

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Transport in Rome

Rome has an extensive internal transport system and is one of the most important road, rail and air hubs in Italy.

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Turnus

In Virgil's Aeneid, Turnus was the King of the Rutuli, and the chief antagonist of the hero Aeneas.

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Urban history

Urban history is a field of history that examines the historical nature of cities and towns, and the process of urbanization.

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Vae victis

Vae victis is Latin for "woe to the vanquished", or "woe to the conquered".

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Vaga (Tunisia)

Vaga, Vecca and lately Theodorias is an ancient city in Tunisia built by the Berbers and ruled sequentially by the Carthaginians, the Numidians, the Romans, the Vandals and the Byzantines until it was captured by the Arabs who changed its name to the present day Béja.

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Vatican Historical Museum

The Vatican Historical Museum (Museo storico vaticano) is one of the sections of the Vatican Museums.

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Vicus Martis Tudertium

The Vicus Martis Tudertium is an archaeological site in Umbria, central Italy.

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Viterbo Papacy

With a long history as a vantage point for anti-popes forces threatening Rome, Viterbo became a papal city in 1243.

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Western world

The Western world refers to various nations depending on the context, most often including at least part of Europe and the Americas.

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Wilhelm Ihne

Joseph Anton Friedrich Wilhelm Ihne (2 February 1821 – 21 March 1902) was a German historian who was a native of Fürth.

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Wilhelm Kubitschek

Wilhelm Kubitschek (28 June 1858, in Preßburg – 2 October 1936, in Vienna) was an Austrian classical historian, epigrapher and numismatist.

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William Fulbecke

William Fullbecke (1560–1603?) was an English playwright, historian, lawyer and legal scholar, who did pioneering work in international law.

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Women Gladiators (Ribera)

Women Gladiators (Spanish: Combate de Mujeres) is a painting by Jusepe de Ribera made in oil on canvas.

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29 BC

Year 29 BC was either a common year starting on Friday or Saturday or a leap year starting on Thursday, Friday or Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar (the sources differ, see leap year error for further information) and a leap year starting on Thursday of the Proleptic Julian calendar.

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8th century BC

The 8th century BC started the first day of 800 BC and ended the last day of 701 BC.

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Redirects here:

History of rome, Medieval Rome, Population of Rome, Roman History, Roman civilisation, Roman civilization, Roman history, Rome's history, Rome, Roman Empire, etc.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Rome

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