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Rome --- History --- Military antiquities --- Histoire --- Antiquités militaires --- -Military antiquities. --- Antiquities --- Military antiquities. --- Antiquités militaires --- Domitian --- Domitian, 81-96 --- Rome - History - Domitian, 81-96 --- Rome - Military antiquities
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Military architecture --- Architecture militaire --- History --- Histoire --- Rome --- Military antiquities --- Army --- Antiquités militaires --- Armée --- History. --- Military antiquities. --- Army. --- Antiquités militaires --- Armée --- Military architecture - History --- Rome - Military antiquities --- Rome - Army
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Manuscripts (Papyri) --- Papyrus (Manuscrits) --- Rome --- Military antiquities --- Antiquités militaires --- Papyri, Egyptian --- Papyrus manuscripts --- Paleography --- Writing materials and instruments --- Military antiquities. --- Antiquities --- Manuscripts (Papyri). --- Antiquités militaires --- Rome - Military antiquities
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Rome --- Army --- History, Military --- Military antiquities --- Antiquités militaires --- Military antiquities. --- Antiquités militaires --- Army. --- Antiquities --- Armée --- Histoire militaire --- Rome - Army --- Rome - History, Military - 30 BC-476 AD --- Rome - Military antiquities
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Military camps --- Romans --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Camps --- Romains --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Fréjus (France) --- Antiquities, Roman. --- Antiquités romaines --- Rome --- Fréjus (France) --- Military antiquities --- Antiquities, Roman --- Roman Archaeology --- Var --- Provincia --- Fouilles (Archéologie) --- Antiquités romaines --- Archäologie. --- Ausgrabung. --- Bodendenkmalpflege. --- Funde. --- Römerzeit. --- Geschichte 1979-1981. --- Fréjus. --- History, Military --- Military antiquities. --- Excavations (Archaeology) - France - Fréjus --- Rome - Military antiquities --- Fréjus (France) - Antiquities, Roman
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Le triomphe est la cérémonie la plus magnifique de la République romaine, le général est autorisé à entrer dans la ville et à exalter sa victoire. Au début de la période hellénistique, le rituel acquiert une forte dimension politique et permet notamment d’affirmer l’hérédité du pouvoir, c’est pourquoi la nobilitas invente de faux triomphes. Au IIIe siècle, la recherche de triomphes s’amplifie, ce qui conduit le sénat à en réglementer l’octroi. Les conflits entre l’assemblée et les généraux expliquent le développement de l’ovation et du triomphe sur le Mont albain. Les triomphateurs disposent de moyens variés pour commémorer leurs triomphes et en actualiser le souvenir, notamment à l’occasion des élections, le plus efficace est d’utiliser l’argent de leur butin pour la construction de temples. L’adoption de nouveaux cultes permet de célébrer une protection divine, mais aussi d’inscrire le triomphe dans l’espace et le temps de la cité. L’exemple des Caecilii Metelli met au jour des constructions idéologiques complexes qui préfigurent la période augustéenne.
Triumph --- Rites and ceremonies --- Triomphe --- Rites et cérémonies --- Political aspects --- Aspect politique --- Rome --- History, Military --- Politics and government --- Histoire militaire --- Politique et gouvernement --- Rome ancienne --- --Triomphe --- --IIIe-Ier s. av JC, --- Processions --- Military antiquities --- 937.04 --- History Ancient world Italy 264-146 B.C. --- Rites et cérémonies --- Pomp --- Festivals --- Pageants --- History Ancient world Italy 264-146 B.C --- Military antiquities. --- Antiquities --- IIIe-Ier s. av JC, 300-1 av JC --- Rites and ceremonies - Rome --- Processions - Rome --- Rome - Military antiquities
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"Many of the wars of the late Republic were largely civil conflicts. There was, therefore, a tension between the traditional expectation that triumphs should be celebrated for victories over foreign enemies and the need of the great commanders to give full expression to their prestige and charisma, and to legitimize their power. Triumphs in the Age of Civil War rethinks the nature and the character of the phenomenon of civil war during the Late Republic. At the same time it focuses on a key feature of the Roman socio-political order, the triumph, and argues that a commander could in practice expect to triumph after a civil war victory if it could also be represented as being over a foreign enemy, even if the principal opponent was clearly Roman. Significantly, the civil aspect of the war did not have to be denied. Carsten Hjort Lange provides the first study to consider the Roman triumph during the age of civil war, and argues that the idea of civil war as 'normal' reflects the way civil war permeated the politics and society of the Late Roman Republic"--
Civil war --- Triumph --- Processions --- Political customs and rites --- Political culture --- War and society --- Culture politique --- History. --- Histoire --- Rome --- History, Military --- Military antiquities. --- Politics and government --- Histoire militaire --- Antiquités militaires --- Politique et gouvernement --- Guerre civile --- Triomphe --- Défilés --- Moeurs politiques --- Guerre et société --- History --- HISTORY / Ancient / Rome. --- HISTORY / Ancient / General. --- HISTORY / Military / General. --- Antiquities. --- Civil war. --- Political culture. --- Political customs and rites. --- Politics and government. --- Processions. --- Triumph. --- War and society. --- Bürgerkrieg --- Römisches Reich --- Triumphzug. --- Bürgerkrieg. --- 265-30 B.C. --- Rome (Empire). --- Römisches Reich. --- History / ancient / general. --- History / ancient / rome. --- History / military / general. --- Römisches reich --- Défilés --- Guerre et société --- Antiquités militaires --- Military antiquities --- Civil war - Rome - History --- Triumph - History --- Processions - Rome - History --- Political customs and rites - Rome - History --- Political culture - Rome - History --- War and society - Rome - History --- Rome - History, Military - 265-30 B.C. --- Rome - Military antiquities --- Rome - Politics and government - 265-30 B.C.
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This book presents a radical new interpretation of Roman expansion in Italy during the fourth and third centuries BCE. Nicola Terrenato argues that the process was accomplished by means of a grand bargain that was negotiated between the landed elites of central and southern Italy, while military conquest played a much smaller role than is usually envisaged. Deploying archaeological, epigraphic, and historical evidence, he paints a picture of the family interactions that tied together both Roman and non-Roman aristocrats and that resulted in their pooling power and resources for the creation of a new political entity. The book is written in accessible language, without technical terms or quotations in Latin, and is heavily illustrated.
Antiquities. --- Historiography --- Historiography. --- Politics and government. --- To 476. --- Italy --- Italy. --- Rome (Empire). --- Rome --- History --- History, Military --- Military antiquities. --- Politics and government --- Rome ancienne --- --Historiographie --- --Histoire --- --Politique et gouvernement --- --VIe s. av JC-Ier s., --- Histoire militaire --- --Italie ancienne --- --Rome --- Military antiquities --- To 476 --- Rome (Empire) --- Foreign relations --- Historiography - Rome --- Rome - History - Republic, 510-265 B.C --- Rome - History, Military - 265-30 B.C --- Rome - Military antiquities --- Rome - Politics and government - 510-30 B.C --- Italy - History - To 476 --- Historiographie --- Histoire --- Politique et gouvernement --- VIe s. av JC-Ier s., 600 av JC-100 --- Italie ancienne --- Rome - History - Republic, 510-265 B.C. --- Rome - History, Military - 265-30 B.C. --- Rome - Politics and government - 510-30 B.C. --- Aristocracy (Social class) --- Elite (Social sciences) --- History. --- Elites (Social sciences) --- Leadership --- Power (Social sciences) --- Social classes --- Social groups --- Aristocracy --- Aristocrats --- Upper class --- Nobility
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