subject | book bibliographic info |
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praetor | Nikolsky and Ilan, Rabbinic Traditions Between Palestine and Babylonia (2014) 278 Rüpke, The Roman Calendar from Numa to Constantine Time, History and the Fasti (2011) 36, 45, 46, 48, 88, 148, 149 Tuori, The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication< (2016) 37, 40, 49, 53, 54, 64, 69, 117, 151, 162, 179, 222, 238, 277, 278, 280 Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 100, 101, 110, 278 |
praetor, abdication, of | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 72, 201, 202 |
praetor, actio fiduciae | Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 114 |
praetor, actio pigneraticia directa | Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 208, 209 |
praetor, actio serviana | Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 112, 113 |
praetor, adaptation of formula | Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 100, 101, 102, 246, 250, 251, 371 |
praetor, auspicato, of | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 35, 36, 43, 97, 98, 114, 117, 120, 121, 124, 125, 126, 127 |
praetor, cassius longinus, l. | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 352 |
praetor, cato’s time | Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 91, 92 |
praetor, dictator, named by | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 35, 104, 134 |
praetor, elected under same as consuls, auspicato | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 16, 171 |
praetor, imperium, of | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 35, 36, 37, 94, 95, 117, 125, 126 |
praetor, in formulary and legisactio procedures | Verhagen, Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca (2022) 47 |
praetor, in lupanar, lictors, not with | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 74 |
praetor, naevius surdinus, l. | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 475 |
praetor, naming dictator, augurium, and | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 104, 138, 139, 140, 142, 143, 171, 172 |
praetor, of the urban, general | Ferrándiz, Shipwrecks, Legal Landscapes and Mediterranean Paradigms: Gone Under Sea (2022) 32, 55 |
praetor, over, lutatius catulus, c., triumph, dispute with | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 36, 116, 117, 119, 200 |
praetor, peregrinus | Balbo and Santangelo, A Community in Transition: Rome between Hannibal and the Gracchi (2022) 233, 251, 252, 254, 271, 275, 276, 284, 285 Tuori, The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication< (2016) 63 |
praetor, peregrinus, valerius messala, marcus | Marek, In the Land of a Thousand Gods: A History of Asia Minor in the Ancient World (2019) 193 |
praetor, praetor, urbanus, city | Tuori, The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication< (2016) 90, 113, 115, 230, 262, 268 |
praetor, presides at races | Sider, Christian and Pagan in the Roman Empire: The Witness of Tertullian (2001) 99 |
praetor, roscius, l. | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 351 |
praetor, sestius, p. | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 684 |
praetor, suspended as, iulius caesar, c. | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 72, 73, 75, 76 |
praetor, terentius varro | Marek, In the Land of a Thousand Gods: A History of Asia Minor in the Ancient World (2019) 279 |
praetor, to name dictator, comitia, legislation authorizing | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 134, 139, 140, 141, 142, 171, 172 |
praetor, to name, iulius caesar, c., dictator, wants | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 35, 137, 138, 139, 140, 171, 172 |
praetor, urbanus | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 487 |
praetor, urbanus, edict of | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 487 |
praetor, urbanus, in charge of inventory | Rutledge, Ancient Rome as a Museum: Power, Identity, and the Culture of Collecting (2012) 300 |
praetor, vulcacius tullus, l. | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 351 |
praetore, legati augusti pro | Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 209, 211, 213, 290 |
praetore, quaestors, pro | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 73 |
praetors | Arthur-Montagne, DiGiulio and Kuin, Documentality: New Approaches to Written Documents in Imperial Life and Literature (2022) 47, 203, 204 Bruun and Edmondson, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Epigraphy (2015) 211, 213, 261, 262, 304, 306, 313, 314 Czajkowski et al., Law in the Roman Provinces (2020) 79, 80, 84, 91, 108, 143, 210, 218, 245, 247, 276, 277, 291, 352, 363, 367, 474, 480, 489 Lampe, Christians at Rome in the First Two Centuries: From Paul to Valentinus (2003) 133 Shannon-Henderson, Power Play in Latin Love Elegy and its Multiple Forms of Continuity in Ovid’s |
praetors, army/fleet, command of | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 37, 116, 117, 120, 121, 200, 201, 232, 258, 259 |
praetors, auspices, elected under same as consuls | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 16, 171 |
praetors, city, defense of | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 256 |
praetors, collega minor of consul | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 85, 201 |
praetors, constitutional position vis-à-vis consul | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 30, 33, 35, 85, 96, 97, 98, 114, 117, 125, 126, 200, 201 |
praetors, dictator, named by | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 35, 104, 134, 140, 141, 142 |
praetors, edicts, of | Czajkowski et al., Law in the Roman Provinces (2020) 79 |
praetors, elections, held by | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 35 |
praetors, maximus | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 93 |
praetors, of latin league | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 46, 48, 49, 91 |
praetors, origin of title | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 93 |
praetors, senate, convened by | Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 256 |
praetor’s, edict | Kehoe, Law and the rural economy in the Roman Empire (2007) 19 McGinn, The Economy of Prostitution in the Roman world: A study of Social History & The Brothel (2004) 19, 24, 35, 150, 151, 206 |
3 validated results for "praetor" |
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1. Varro, On The Latin Language, 6.30 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: • Latin League, praetors of • praetor Found in books: Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 46; Rüpke, The Roman Calendar from Numa to Constantine Time, History and the Fasti (2011) 45, 46, 48 " 6.30 The opposite of these are called dies nefasti unrighteous days, on which it is nefas unrighteousness for the praetor to say do I give, dico I pronounce, addico I assign; therefore no action can be taken, for it is necessary to use some one of these words, when anything is settled in due legal form. But if at that time he has inadvertently uttered such a word and set somebody free, the person is none the less free, but with a bad omen in the proceeding, just as a magistrate elected in spite of an unfavourable omen is a magistrate just the same. The praetor who has made a legal decision at such a time, is freed of his sin by the sacrifice of an atonement victim, if he did it unintentionally; but if he made the pronouncement with a realization of what he was doing, Quintus Mucius said that he could not in any way atone for his sin, as one who had failed in his duty to God and country." |
2. Livy, History, 25.7, 27.5.15, 34.10.5 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: • auspicato, of praetor • praetor peregrinus • praetor urbanus, in charge of inventory • praetors • praetors, army/fleet, command of • praetors, constitutional position vis-à-vis consul Found in books: Balbo and Santangelo, A Community in Transition: Rome between Hannibal and the Gracchi (2022) 233; Konrad, The Challenge to the Auspices: Studies on Magisterial Power in the Middle Roman Republic (2022) 114, 121, 258; Rutledge, Ancient Rome as a Museum: Power, Identity, and the Culture of Collecting (2012) 300; Shannon-Henderson, Power Play in Latin Love Elegy and its Multiple Forms of Continuity in Ovid’s sub haec dicta ad genua Marcelli procubuerunt. Marcellus id nec iuris nec potestatis suae esse dixit: senatui scripturum se omniaque de sententia patrum facturum esse. cum Tarentinorum defectio iam diu et in spe Hannibali et in suspicione Romanis esset, causa forte extrinsecus maturandae eius intervenit. Phileas Tarentinus diu iam per speciem legationis Romae cum esset, vir inquieti animi et minime otium, quo tum diutino senescere videbatur, patientis, aditum sibi ad obsides Tarentinos et Thurinos invenit. custodiebantur in atrio Libertatis minore cura, quia nec ipsis nec civitatibus eorum fallere Romanos expediebat. hos crebris conloquiis sollicitatos corruptis aedituis duobus cum primis tenebris custodia eduxisset, ipse comes occulti itineris factus profugit. luce prima volgata per urbem fugai est, missique qui sequerentur ab Tarracina comprensos omnis retraxerunt. deducti in comitium virgisque adprobante populo caesi de saxo deiciuntur. eae litterae ad novos consules allatae ac per eos in senatu recitatae sunt, consultusque de iis litteris ita decrevit senatus, militibus, qui ad Cannas commilitones suos pugtis deseruissent, senatum nihil videre cur res publica committenda esset. si M. Claudio proconsuli aliter videretur, faceret quod e re publica fideque sua duceret, dum ne quis eorum munere vacaret neu dono militari virtutis ergo donaretur neu in Italiam reportaretur, done donec hostis in terra Italia esset. Comitia. comitia deinde a praetore urban urbano de senatus sententia plebique scitu sunt habita, quibus creati sut sunt quinqueviri muris et turribus reficiendis, et triumviri bini, uni sacris conquirendis donisque persigdis alteri reficiendis aedibus Fortunae et matris Matutae intra portam Carmentalem et Spei extra portam, quae priore anno incendio consumptae fuerant. — tempestates foedae fuere: in Albano monte biduum continenter lapidibus pluvit. tacta de caelo multa, duae in Capitolio aedes, vallum in castris multis locis supra Suessulam, et duo vigiles exanimati; murus turresque quaedam Cumis non ictae modo fulminibus sed etiam decussae. Reate saxum ingens visum volitare, sol rubere solito magis sanguineoque similis. horum prodigiorum causa diem unum supplicatio fuit; et per aliquot dies consules rebus divinis operam dederunt; et per eosdem dies sacrum novemdiale fuit. illa disceptatio tenebat, quod consul in ad Sicilia se M. Valerium Messallam, qui tum classi praeesset, dictatorem dicturum esse aiebat, patres extra Romanum agrum — eum autem in ad Italia terminari — negabant dictatorem dici posse. causa triumphi negandi senatui fuit, quod alieno auspicio et in aliena provincia pugnasset. ceterum biennio post redierat, cum provincia successori Q. Minucio tradita annum insequentem retentus ibi longo et gravi fuisset morbo. NA> |
3. Gellius, Attic Nights, 14.7.9 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: • praetor • praetor, and senate powers Found in books: Rüpke, The Roman Calendar from Numa to Constantine Time, History and the Fasti (2011) 149; Talbert, The Senate of Imperial Rome (1984) 235 NA> |