This article argues that the colleges of Tribuni Militum Consulari Potestate, which in the surviving histories of the early Roman Republic largely replaced the consulship during the period 444 to 367 B. C., are inventions of the Roman annalists. The members of these colleges were leaders of private war bands dignified by the title tribuni militum, whose commands, the annalists reasoned, gave them consular powers. The sources of this information were family traditions and especially funeral eulogies. In the development of the argument examination is given to the problem of the pontifical Annales Maximi, which, as the Elder Cato made clear, had no value as a source of military or political history. The conclusion is also reached that the Roma...
In this paper, the author discusses the sources upon which the list of ordinary consuls during the P...
International audienceWith the advent of the Augustan Principate in 27 B.C., the equestrian and sena...
This paper deals with the Roman policy of colonization from 393 B. C. to 134 B. C. First of all, the...
This article argues that the colleges of Tribuni Militum Consulari Potestate, which in the surviving...
Si l’on en croit la tradition que nous ont transmise les récits de Tite-Live et de Denys d’Halicarna...
Lors de la période de guerres civiles (49-31 a.C.) qui marqua la fin de la République, les armées, g...
Summary: This article traces the fourth century term temonarius in three different contexts. The ter...
The use of the suffect consulship began to change with Caesar in 45 b.c., after a number of decades ...
A lot of clues tend to show that there existed an original tribunate cumulating civil and military p...
© 2020 Christopher Stephen BendleThe magistri militum were the highest-ranking generals of the late ...
The author analyses and criticizes the annalists' data about the army of pre-servian Rome. He shows ...
The subject of the thesis is that of the transformation of the Roman empire in the third and fourth ...
A new military diploma for the province Dalmatia mentions the pair of suffect consuls Q. Antonius I[...
This article explores and examines the consulship as an institution in the Eastern and Western halve...
In the doctrine of the last century the use of the literary sources on the birth of the plebeian pow...
In this paper, the author discusses the sources upon which the list of ordinary consuls during the P...
International audienceWith the advent of the Augustan Principate in 27 B.C., the equestrian and sena...
This paper deals with the Roman policy of colonization from 393 B. C. to 134 B. C. First of all, the...
This article argues that the colleges of Tribuni Militum Consulari Potestate, which in the surviving...
Si l’on en croit la tradition que nous ont transmise les récits de Tite-Live et de Denys d’Halicarna...
Lors de la période de guerres civiles (49-31 a.C.) qui marqua la fin de la République, les armées, g...
Summary: This article traces the fourth century term temonarius in three different contexts. The ter...
The use of the suffect consulship began to change with Caesar in 45 b.c., after a number of decades ...
A lot of clues tend to show that there existed an original tribunate cumulating civil and military p...
© 2020 Christopher Stephen BendleThe magistri militum were the highest-ranking generals of the late ...
The author analyses and criticizes the annalists' data about the army of pre-servian Rome. He shows ...
The subject of the thesis is that of the transformation of the Roman empire in the third and fourth ...
A new military diploma for the province Dalmatia mentions the pair of suffect consuls Q. Antonius I[...
This article explores and examines the consulship as an institution in the Eastern and Western halve...
In the doctrine of the last century the use of the literary sources on the birth of the plebeian pow...
In this paper, the author discusses the sources upon which the list of ordinary consuls during the P...
International audienceWith the advent of the Augustan Principate in 27 B.C., the equestrian and sena...
This paper deals with the Roman policy of colonization from 393 B. C. to 134 B. C. First of all, the...