CLA231H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Auctoritas, Res Publica, Pietas

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Course: introduction to roman history instructor: michel cottier: rome of the kings. 15 on p. 17 (fira 1, p. 8 = dionysius of halicarnassus, roman antiquities 2. 26-27; especially for the concept of. 190-191 (dionysius of halicarnassus, roman antiquities 4. 23. 4-8; on manumissions); 366-368 (catullus, poem 34, and a book about famous men [anonymous] 220 respectively; on. Greek influence on roman religion and on the introduction of new foreign deities). By around 625 bc, as far as architecture, urbanization and institutions are concerned, rome has become both "city" and a state. Place names and other geographical details to be able to localize on a map: Image 1: lavinium and alba longa (see the map on the inside cover of your textbook). Traditional literary accounts on the foundation of rome, the regal period, and the beginnings of the roman. Republic date to hundreds of years after the events they describe. As a consequence: frequent contradictions between literary accounts and archaeological evidence.

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