Work-Book

 1  T-II|        only they love the name of Roman,~by our country, of which
 2  T-II|        Justice forbids any man of Roman blood~to suffer barbarian
 3  T-II|        Book TII:421-470 His Plea: Roman Precedents~ ~I’ll not defend
 4  T-II|          so many foreign weapons,~Roman books too have plenty of
 5 T-III|         Samos’s words are true,~a Roman will wander among Sarmatian
 6 T-III|            of prayers made to our Roman Jupiter, and that you~rebellious
 7  T-IV|    Offering her proud neck to the Roman axe~she wears chains on
 8  T-IV|       bettered by no other in the Roman forum -~little though I
 9   T-V|   security~of all the gods of the Roman people is assured,~O glory,
10   T-V|      Latin while speaking.~I, the Roman poetforgive me, Muses! –~
11  ExII|            chief eloquence of the Roman language,~in mercy, take
12  ExII|           t delight in me, or any Roman, being taken~by the enemy,
13   ExI|      spears,~the buildings of the Roman forum gilded~by the gold
14   ExI|        son, Tiberius, extends the Roman Empire:~Germanicus, by his
15   Ind|      passage.~ ~Accius (Lucius)~A Roman tragic poet, born c170BC
16   Ind|          Marcus)~Mark Antony, the Roman general and triumvir, who
17   Ind|       Appia (Via)~The first great Roman Road from Rome to Capua (
18   Ind|        lyre.~Book TV.II:45-79 The Roman people.~Book EI.II:53-100
19   Ind|     people.~Book EI.II:53-100 The Roman military machine.~Book EIV.
20   Ind|         land on the border of the Roman area.~ ~Bato~A Dalmatian,
21   Ind|           for Ulysses.~ ~Camena~A Roman term for Muse.~ ~Camerinus~
22   Ind|        Marcius Portius Cato), the Roman grammarian and poet an older
23   Ind|       Caius Valerius Catullus the Roman lyric poet (c.87-c54BC)
24   Ind|      Danube region.~ ~Claudia~The Roman woman, Claudia Quinta, a
25   Ind|           It was destroyed by the Roman general Mummius in 146BC
26   Ind|        Julius Caesar in 44BC as a Roman colony.~Book TI.X:1-50 The
27   Ind|       from there.~ ~Cornificius~A Roman erotic poet, possibly Quintus
28   Ind|           Identified with Ops the Roman goddess of plenty.~Book
29   Ind|        and feathers.~ ~Dalmatia~A Roman province bordering the eastern
30   Ind|         75-126 Separated out from Roman Illyricum after the Pannonian
31   Ind|     Calabria, the important early Roman poet and tragedian. His
32   Ind|          The Danube delta was the Roman boundary on the west coast.~
33   Ind|        The Parcae were originally Roman goddesses of childbearing
34   Ind|        Via~The Flaminian Way, the Roman road, ran from Rome to Ariminum (
35   Ind|     contemporaries.~ ~Fortuna~The Roman goddess of Fortune, Chance
36   Ind|           Egypt (Cassius Dio: The Roman History 51.9 and 17). However
37   Ind|     Cannae when Hannibal sent ten Roman survivors under oath to
38   Ind|           established a rule that Roman soldiers must conquer or
39   Ind|          the field. (Polybius The Roman History VI.57)~ ~Harpagus~
40   Ind|           Greek myth) or Numitor (Roman version), the Vestal who
41   Ind|            Book EII.II:75-126 The Roman Illyricum roughly the Eastern
42   Ind|     concern to revive traditional Roman values). ~Book TII:253-312
43   Ind|        Janus~Book EIV.IV:1-50 The Roman two-headed god of doorways
44   Ind|       Capitoline (Cassius Dio The Roman History 54.4)~Book EII.VIII:
45   Ind|  grandfather  ~Juventa~An ancient Roman goddess later identified
46   Ind|         the Alban Hills. With the Roman conquest it was extended
47   Ind|           c95-c54BC) the greatest Roman didactic poet and author
48   Ind|          god, son of Jupiter, the Roman name for the Greek god Ares.
49   Ind|      wrote Trabeatae, comedies of Roman manners among the Equestrian
50   Ind|       known in adaptations by the Roman dramatists Terence and Plautus. ~
51   Ind|         Range, on the frontier of Roman Moesia. Modern Nesebur.~
52   Ind|         of Miletus.~ ~Minerva~The Roman name for Athene the goddess
53   Ind|           under Jason.~ ~Moesia~A Roman province covering roughly
54   Ind|     temple there to Athens, or in Roman myth to Aricia. The rites
55   Ind| remembrance of his writing in his Roman garden, or on his familiar
56   Ind|        covering six months of the Roman year, are mentioned here,
57   Ind|        the offer of the return of Roman standards captured by the
58   Ind|      Propertius (c.50-c.15BC) the Roman elegiac poet, from Asisium (
59   Ind|         Danube delta the furthest Roman region on the west coast
60   Ind|       note.~Book EI.II:53-100 The Roman language, Latin, the tongue
61   Ind|       then vanished, becoming the Roman god Quirinus.~ ~Rufinus~
62   Ind|         land on the border of the Roman area.~Book TIII. X:1-40
63   Ind|         and remained important in Roman times, but declined after
64   Ind|          in 78BC, and author of a Roman history praised by Varro
65   Ind|        The border for Ovid of the Roman region round Tomis.~Book
66   Ind|      ancient sources close to the Roman Forum, the Temple of Saturn,
67   Ind|           and Apollodorus for the Roman stage, often blending material
68   Ind|       Romans.~ ~Ticidas, Ticida~A Roman elegiac poet, contemporary
69   Ind|       Augustus. (Cassius Dio, The Roman History 54.11)~Book TIII.
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