The Roman History, Bind 1C. and J. Rivington, 1827 |
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Side 67
... equal certainty , distinguishes the Tuscan language from the Sabine and the Oscan , a notion has been main- tained by the Italian literati , that , amongst all the nations of Italy , fragments of whose languages have been found in ...
... equal certainty , distinguishes the Tuscan language from the Sabine and the Oscan , a notion has been main- tained by the Italian literati , that , amongst all the nations of Italy , fragments of whose languages have been found in ...
Side 68
... equal justice , Dionysius rejects the Greek opinion , that the Tyrrhenians were Pelasgi , as the Lydian fable of the Ionians ; but not with equal success ; for a few passages of the ancients , which strongly express that opinion , have ...
... equal justice , Dionysius rejects the Greek opinion , that the Tyrrhenians were Pelasgi , as the Lydian fable of the Ionians ; but not with equal success ; for a few passages of the ancients , which strongly express that opinion , have ...
Side 82
... equal to them in nobility , though , as Romans , counted only amongst the people . Even in the time of Hannibal's war , the govern- ment of the Etruscan cities was vested exclusively in the senators or nobility . In southern Italy ...
... equal to them in nobility , though , as Romans , counted only amongst the people . Even in the time of Hannibal's war , the govern- ment of the Etruscan cities was vested exclusively in the senators or nobility . In southern Italy ...
Side 92
... were neither equal to each other , nor had the same mea- 91 Professor Vater . 92 Plutarch , Sylla . p . 456. a . 93 Varro , in Censorinus , cap . 17 . , sure with the astronomical . The mundane week thus 92 HISTORY OF ROME .
... were neither equal to each other , nor had the same mea- 91 Professor Vater . 92 Plutarch , Sylla . p . 456. a . 93 Varro , in Censorinus , cap . 17 . , sure with the astronomical . The mundane week thus 92 HISTORY OF ROME .
Side 97
... equal to his inclination for calumnious tales . At the utmost , we may concede the possibility , that some Etruscans of rank , relying on their wealth and impunity , may have abandoned themselves to those horrible de- baucheries which ...
... equal to his inclination for calumnious tales . At the utmost , we may concede the possibility , that some Etruscans of rank , relying on their wealth and impunity , may have abandoned themselves to those horrible de- baucheries which ...
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according Æneas æra Alba already amongst ancient annals appears assembly Ausonians authority belonged Brutus called Campania Cato Censorinus certainly chronology citizens clients coast colony commencement conquest constitution consul Curiæ Diodorus Dionysius district earlier earliest early emigration Enotrians equal Etruria Etruscan existed Fabius fable Fasti Festus fifth century foreign former Gauls Grecian Greece Greek historians hundred Iapygia inhabitants Italian Italy king land language later Latium league Livius Livy Lucanians Lycophron ment mentioned mythic narrative nations native Olympiad Opica opinion original partly Patricians Pelasgi Pelasgian period Plebeians Plinius Plutarch poet Polybius possession preserved probably race reign respecting Roman history Rome Romulus Sabelli Sabines Sæcular Sæculum Samnites scarcely Scylax seems senate Servius Tullius Siculi story Strabo supra Tarquinius Thucydides Tiber Timæus tion tradition tribes tribunes Trojan Tullus Tuscan Tyrrhenians Umbri Varro Volsci Volscians whole καὶ