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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

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20 results for "de"
1. Plautus, Amphitruo, 1132-1133 (3rd cent. BCE - 2nd cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 70
2. Cicero, Orator, 70 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 24
3. Cicero, Letters To Quintus, a b c d\n0 2.12(11).4 2.12(11).4 2 12(11) (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 115
4. Cicero, Letters To His Friends, 5.12, 5.12.4 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 115
5. Cicero, Republic, None (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 185
6. Cicero, De Oratore, 3.54 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 24
3.54. Qui ita dicerent, eos negavit adhuc se vidisse Antonius et eis hoc nomen dixit eloquentiae solis esse tribuendum. Qua re omnis istos me auctore deridete atque contemnite, qui se horum, qui nunc ita appellantur, rhetorum praeceptis omnem oratoriam vim complexos esse arbitrantur neque adhuc quam personam teneant aut quid profiteantur intellegere potuerunt. Vero enim oratori, quae sunt in hominum vita, quandoquidem in ea versatur orator atque ea est ei subiecta materies, omnia quaesita, audita, lecta, disputata, tractata, agitata esse debent.
7. Cicero, Letters, None (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 28
8. Augustus, Res Gestae Divi Augusti, 8.5 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 69
9. Vitruvius Pollio, On Architecture, None (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 24
10. Ovid, Fasti, 2.63 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 69
2.63. templorum positor, templorum sancte repostor, 2.63. Pious one, you who build and repair the temples,
11. Dionysius of Halycarnassus, Letter To Pompeius Geminus, 5 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 115
12. Horace, Odes, 3.30, 3.30.10, 4.14.1-4.14.6 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 9, 63
13. Sallust, Catiline, 3.2 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 115
14. Suetonius, Augustus, 29-30, 89 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 9, 69, 70
15. Juvenal, Satires, 4.20.7 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 69, 70
16. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 53.2.4 (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 69
53.2.4.  As for religious matters, he did not allow the Egyptian rites to be celebrated inside the pomerium, but made provision for the temples; those which had been built by private individuals he ordered their sons and descendants, if any survived, to repair, and the rest he restored himself.
17. Vergil, Aeneis, 1.278-1.279, 4.508  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 8, 9, 70
1.279. Such was his word, but vexed with grief and care, 4.508. She with averted eyes and glance that rolled
18. Strabo, Geography, 5.3.7  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 9, 69, 70
5.3.7. In the interior, the first city above Ostia is Rome; it is the only city built on the Tiber. It has been remarked above, that its position was fixed, not by choice, but necessity; to this must be added, that those who afterwards enlarged it, were not at liberty to select a better site, being prevented by what was already built. The first [kings] fortified the Capitol, the Palatium, and the Collis Quirinalis, which was so easy of access, that when Titus Tatius came to avenge the rape of the [Sabine] virgins, he took it on the first assault. Ancus Marcius, who added Mount Caelius and the Aventine Mount with the intermediate plain, separated as these places were both from each other and from what had been formerly fortified, was compelled to do this of necessity; since he did not consider it proper to leave outside his walls, heights so well protected by nature, to whomsoever might have a mind to fortify themselves upon them, while at the same time he was not capable of enclosing the whole as far as Mount Quirinus. Servius perceived this defect, and added the Esquiline and Viminal hills. As these were both of easy access from without, a deep trench was dug outside them and the earth thrown up on the inside, thus forming a terrace of 6 stadia in length along the inner side of the trench. This terrace he surmounted with a wall flanked with towers, and extending from the Colline to the Esquiline gate. Midway along the terrace is a third gate, named after the Viminal hill. Such is the Roman rampart, which seems to stand in need of other ramparts itself. But it seems to me that the first [founders] were of opinion, both in regard to themselves and their successors, that Romans had to depend not on fortifications, but on arms and their individual valour, both for safety and for wealth, and that walls were not a defence to men, but men were a defence to walls. At the period of its commencement, when the large and fertile districts surrounding the city belonged to others, and while it lay easily open to assault, there was nothing in its position which could be looked upon as favourable; but when by valour and labour these districts became its own, there succeeded a tide of prosperity surpassing the advantages of every other place. Thus, notwithstanding the prodigious increase of the city, there has been plenty of food, and also of wood and stone for ceaseless building, rendered necessary by the falling down of houses, and on account of conflagrations, and of the sales, which seem never to cease. These sales are a kind of voluntary falling down of houses, each owner knocking down and rebuilding one part or another, according to his individual taste. For these purposes the numerous quarries, the forests, and the rivers which convey the materials, offer wonderful facilities. of these rivers, the first is the Teverone, which flows from Alba, a city of the Latins near to the country of the Marsi, and from thence through the plain below this [city], till it unites with the Tiber. After this come the Nera (Nar) and the Timia, which passing through Ombrica fall into the Tiber, and the Chiana, which flows through Tyrrhenia and the territory of Clusiumn. Augustus Caesar endeavoured to avert from the city damages of the kind alluded to, and instituted a company of freedmen, who should be ready to lend their assistance in cases of conflagration; whilst, as a preventive against the falling of houses, he decreed that all new buildings should not be carried so high as formerly, and that those erected along the public ways should not exceed seventy feet in height. But these improvements must have ceased only for the facilities afforded by the quarries, the forests, and the ease of transport.
19. Epigraphy, Cil, 6.1285  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 30
20. Epigraphy, Ils, 81  Tagged with subjects: •de architectura, literariness and textuality Found in books: Oksanish (2019), Benedikt Eckhardt, and Meret Strothmann, Law in the Roman Provinces, 70