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The Roman Republic
Michael Crawford
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The Roman Republic
Michael Crawford
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Between the Sack of Rome by the Gauls in 390 BC and the middle of the second century BC, a part-time army of Roman peasants, under the leadership of the ruling oligarchy, conquered first Italy and then the whole of the Mediterranean.
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Topic
HistoireSubtopic
Histoire de la Rome antiqueIndices
Index of Sources
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book readerβs search tools.
(Each source is followed by a brief characterization or by a reference to such a characterization in the main text)
Anonymus, de viris illustribus (fourth century AD collection of short biographies of famous men of the Republic) 72β124; 73β126
APPIAN (see p. 11)
Macedonian Wars 11, 1β87
Iberian Wars 39, 158β90
Mithridatic Wars 11, 41β145
Civil Wars i, 7, 27β31β103; 9, 35β6β96; 10, 38β107; 27, 121β4β125; 38, 170β141; 57, 253β146; 77, 350β2β148 v, 17, 68β71β190
ASCONIUS (commentator on Cicero of the age of Augustus) 67Cβ130
C. ASINIUS POLLIO (see p. 13)β181
ATHENAEUS (second century AD writer of belles lettres) vi, 274C-E-28 xiv, 632A 18
AUGUSTINE (fourth to fifth century AD theologian)
City of God iii, 4β178
CAESAR (see pp. 181β2)
De bello Gallico vii, 6β181
De bello civili i, 4, 4β179; 7β183; 13β183; 85, 8β180 iii, 32, 1β6β176
Bellum Africum (transmitted as a work of Caesar, but from another hand) 22β148
CASSIUS HEMINA (second century BC historian)
Fr. 17 Peter-102
CATO (see pp. 82β3)
Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta (ed. E. Malcovati) 8, xii, 44β75 xxii, 98β75 xxxi, 132β75 xlii, 167β101 xliv, 173β73β4 lxxi, 224β6β75
Origines, Fr. 20 Peter-39
CICERO (see p. 13)
Ad Atticum i, 19, 4β161 iv, 1, 7β156 vi, 1, 3β172 viii, 13, 2β189, ix, 10, 2β3β184 xi, 6, 2β189 xi, 7, 3β189 xi, 23, 3β167
Ad familiares v, 1β166
Ad Quintum fratrem ii, 3, 4β164
De re publicai, 31β110, 112, 115, 167 ii, 16β27 ii, 39β40β169 iii, 41β115 iv, 2β201
De legibus ii, 5β192 ii, 13β14β27 ii, 23β93 ii, 31β27 iii, 27β152 iii, 33β78
De officiis i, 150β160 ii, 89β105
Paradoxa Stoicorum vi, 2, 46β171
De senectute 21 and 61β11
De natura deorum i, 3β93 ii, 8β93 iii, 5β93
De divinatione ii, 70β93
Brutus 62β9; 97β78
De oratore i, 225β124 iii, 2β5β141
II in Verrem ii, 122β137
Pro Cluentio 148β152; 153β138
De imperio Cn. Pompei 60β94
De lege agraria ii, 73β38
Pro Murena 51β163
Pro Sestio 86β169; 97β168
De provinciis consularibus 24β32β157
Pro Balbo 21β40
In Pisonem 4β153; 10β152
Pro Rabirio Postumo 14β195; 16β138
Philippica ii, 110β185 iv, 14β26 xii, 27β149
CORNELIUS NEPOS (late first century BC biographer)
Cato 2, 2β191
Fumenes 8, 2β190
DIO (see p. 12) xxxviii, 5, 3β197
DIODORUS (see p. II) xx, 36, 1β6β44 xxxiv, 6, 1β2β107 xxxiv-xxxv, 25, 1β119 xxxvii, 2, 4β5 142; 5 and 6β135; 8, 1β2β136; 12, 2β3β128
DIONYSIUS OF HALICARNASSVS (see p.7) iii, 61β20 xx, 11β197
ENNIUS (second century BC poet)
Annates, line 169Vβ42; 183Vβ198; 202β3Vβ45; 284Vβ198; 373Vβ75; 465Vβ46
Q. FABIUS PICTOR (see p. 5)
Quoted via Polybiusβ38
C. FANNIUS (second century BC politician)
Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta (ed. E. Malcovati) 32, i, 3β121
FLORUS (popularizer dependent on Livy) i, 11, 8β17
AULUS GELLIUS (second century AD writer of belles lettres) xi, 10, 1β6β119 xviii, 12, 7β39
TI. GRACCHUS (see pp. 107β8)
Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta (ed. E. Malcovati) 32, i, 13β102
C. GRACCHUS (see p. 116)
Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta (ed. E. Malcovati) 48, v, 28β120 xii, 44β75
LIVY (see p. 7) ii, 1, 7β8β22 iv, 13β14β24 vi, 32, 1β33 viii, 14, 10β36 xxi, 63, 3β4β54 xxii, 34, 8β55 xxvii, 9, 7β53 xxix, 37, 5β97 xxxii, 7, 8β73 xxxvii, 56, 2β67 xxxviii, 36, 5β97 xli, 22, 7β8β87 xlii, 5, 1β87 xlii, 11, 4β5β86
Epitome 71β139
LUCILIUS (see p. 12)
159β60 Warmington β 35β6;
456β7 Warmington β 74;
1016 Warmington β 74;
1017 Warmington β 93
I MACCABEES 8, Iβ4β74
PLAUTUS (see p. 12)
Amphitruo 192 and 196β47; 205β210β68...