The censor was a magistrate in ancient Rome who was responsible for maintaining the census, supervising public morality, and overseeing certain aspects...
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Cato the Elder (redirect from Cato the Censor)
to Rome. He was successively military tribune (214 BC), quaestor (204), aedile (199), praetor (198), consul (195) together with Flaccus, and censor (184)...
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In modern historiography, ancient Rome encompasses the founding of the Italian city of Rome in the 8th century BC, the Roman Kingdom (753–509 BC), Roman...
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Fall of the Western Roman Empire (redirect from Fall of Rome)
Western Roman Empire, also called the fall of the Roman Empire or the fall of Rome, was the loss of central political control in the Western Roman Empire, a...
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This list of Roman censors includes all holders through to its subsumption under that of Roman emperor in 22BC. Censors were elected by the Centuriate...
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Roman Republic (redirect from Rise of Rome)
term ended, constitutional government was restored. The censor was a magistrate in ancient Rome who was responsible for maintaining the census, supervising...
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Roman consul (redirect from Consul of Rome)
sequence of public offices to which politicians aspired—after that of the censor, which was reserved for former consuls. Each year, the Centuriate Assembly...
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Comitia tributa Concilium plebis aedile – Office of the Roman Republic censor – Roman magistrate and census administrator comes – Latin word for companion...
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Roman Kingdom (redirect from List of Kings of Rome)
Kingdom, also referred to as the Roman monarchy or the regal period of ancient Rome, was the earliest period of Roman history when the city and its territory...
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Republic 1946–present The history of Rome includes the history of the city of Rome as well as the civilisation of ancient Rome. Roman history has been influential...
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Augustus (redirect from Augustus, Emperor of Rome)
the Senate grant him lifetime tenure as commander-in-chief, tribune and censor. A similar ambiguity is seen in his chosen names, the implied rejection...
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Appian Way (category Cemeteries and tombs in Rome)
Neapolitans appealed to Rome, which sent an army and expelled the Samnites from Neapolis. In 312 BC, Appius Claudius Caecus became censor at Rome. He was of the...
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Homosexuality in ancient Rome often differs markedly from the contemporary West. Latin lacks words that would precisely translate "homosexual" and "heterosexual"...
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founding of Rome was a prehistoric event or process later greatly embellished by Roman historians and poets. Archaeological evidence indicates that Rome developed...
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were ultimately subject to the approval and regulation of the censor and pontifices. Rome had no separate priestly caste or class. The highest authority...
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Roman magistrate (redirect from Magistrates of ancient Rome)
"major powers" than any other magistrate, and after the Dictator was the censor, and then the consul, and then the praetor, and then the curule aedile,...
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The king of Rome (Latin: rex Romae) was the ruler of the Roman Kingdom. According to legend, the first king of Rome was Romulus, who founded the city...
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Scipio Africanus (category Ancient Roman censors)
Roman general and statesman, most notable as one of the main architects of Rome's victory against Carthage in the Second Punic War. Often regarded as one...
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the entirety of the existence of ancient Rome. Patricians also exclusively controlled the office of the censor, which controlled the census, appointed...
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sexual transgressions in both the Republican and Imperial periods. The censors—public officials who determined the social rank of individuals—had the...
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Cursus honorum (section Censor)
remained at least a mile outside of Rome. After a term as consul, the final step in the cursus honorum was the office of censor. This was the only office in...
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Roman aqueduct (redirect from Aqueducts in Rome)
by the censor Appius Claudius Caecus. The Aqua Appia was one of two major public projects of the time; the other was a military road between Rome and Capua...
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Roman roads (redirect from Roads in ancient Rome)
committed in the earliest times to the censors. They eventually made contracts for paving the street inside Rome, including the Clivus Capitolinus, with...
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Sumptuary law (section Ancient Rome)
2000-01-17. Retrieved 2019-08-11. "In Support of the Oppian Law by Cato the Censor. Rome (218 B.C.–84 A.D.). Vol. II. Bryan, William Jennings, ed. 1906. The World's...
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Latin: patricius) were originally a group of ruling class families in ancient Rome. The distinction was highly significant in the Roman Kingdom and the early...
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Rome, Open City (Italian: Roma città aperta), also released as Open City, is a 1945 Italian neorealist war drama film directed by Roberto Rossellini and...
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Classical antiquity (redirect from Classical Greece and Rome)
ancient Rome known together as the Greco-Roman world, centered on the Mediterranean Basin. It is the period during which ancient Greece and ancient Rome flourished...
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Roman emperor (redirect from Emperor of Rome)
office of censor was not fully absorbed into the imperial office until the reign of Domitian, who declared himself "perpetual censor" (censor perpetuus)...
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Gaius Duilius (category Ancient Roman censors)
Punic War, he won Rome's first ever victory at sea by defeating the Carthaginians at the Battle of Mylae. He later served as censor in 258, and was appointed...
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Battle of the Allia (redirect from First Sack of Rome)
Allia brook, 11 Roman miles (16 km, 10 mi) north of Rome. The Romans were routed and subsequently Rome was sacked by the Senones. According to scholar Piero...
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