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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database



7456
Livy, History, 1.58.5
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Intertexts (texts cited often on the same page as the searched text):

4 results
1. Cicero, Republic, 2.12-2.14 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)

2.12. Atque haec quidem perceleriter confecit; nam et urbem constituit, quam e suo nomine Romam iussit nominari, et ad firmandam novam civitatem novum quoddam et subagreste consilium, sed ad muniendas opes regni ac populi sui magni hominis et iam tum longe providentis secutus est, cum Sabinas honesto ortas loco virgines, quae Romam ludorum gratia venissent, quos tum primum anniversarios in circo facere instituisset, Consualibus rapi iussit easque in familiarum amplissimarum matrimoniis collocavit. 2.13. Qua ex causa cum bellum Romanis Sabini intulissent proeliique certamen varium atque anceps fuisset, cum T. Tatio, rege Sabinorum, foedus icit matronis ipsis, quae raptae erant, orantibus; quo foedere et Sabinos in civitatem adscivit sacris conmunicatis et regnum suum cum illorum rege sociavit. 2.14. Post interitum autem Tatii cum ad eum dominatus omnis reccidisset, quamquam cum Tatio in regium consilium delegerat principes (qui appellati sunt propter caritatem patres) populumque et suo et Tatii nomine et Lucumonis, qui Romuli socius in Sabino proelio occiderat, in tribus tris curiasque triginta discripserat (quas curias earum nominibus nuncupavit, quae ex Sabinis virgines raptae postea fuerant oratrices pacis et foederis)—sed quamquam ea Tatio sic erant discripta vivo, tamen eo interfecto multo etiam magis Romulus patrum auctoritate consilioque regnavit.
2. Livy, History, 1.9-1.13 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)

3. Ovid, Fasti, 3.167, 3.170, 3.177, 3.183-3.188, 3.218 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. CE)

3.167. ‘If it’s right for the secret promptings of the god 3.183. If you ask where my son’s palace was 3.184. See there, that house made of straw and reeds. 3.185. He snatched the gifts of peaceful sleep on straw 3.186. Yet from that same low bed he rose to the stars. 3.187. Already the Roman’s name extended beyond his city 3.188. Though he possessed neither wife nor father-in-law.
4. Plutarch, Romulus, 15, 19-20, 14 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)



Subjects of this text:

subject book bibliographic info
cicero Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
dionysus of halicarnassus Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
horatia Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
lex lucretia' Perry, Gender, Manumission, and the Roman Freedwoman (2014) 210
livy Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
lucretia Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
marriage Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
plutarch Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
rape Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
sabine, and marriage Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
sabines as austere, women rape of Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
susanna, and lucretia Ashbrook Harvey et al., A Most Reliable Witness: Essays in Honor of Ross Shepard Kraemer (2015) 141
susanna, feminist concerns in story of Ashbrook Harvey et al., A Most Reliable Witness: Essays in Honor of Ross Shepard Kraemer (2015) 141
susanna, tale of, different versions of Ashbrook Harvey et al., A Most Reliable Witness: Essays in Honor of Ross Shepard Kraemer (2015) 141
women, capacity for virtue Ashbrook Harvey et al., A Most Reliable Witness: Essays in Honor of Ross Shepard Kraemer (2015) 141
women and girls, as objects and subjects Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146
women and girls Welch, Tarpeia: Workings of a Roman Myth (2015) 146