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rolled 1
rolling 1
rom 9
roman 33
romans 23
rome 12
romulus 2
Frequency    [«  »]
33 great
33 nothing
33 public
33 roman
33 shall
33 whole
32 divine
Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus
The Apology

IntraText - Concordances

roman

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1 Int | intimately acquainted with Roman law (H. E. ii. 2). That 2 Int | particularly, and in the Roman Empire generally, at the 3 Int | groundwork and fabric of the Roman religion of the time. This 4 Ana | ch. 24). ~You assert that Roman prosperity is due to Roman 5 Ana | Roman prosperity is due to Roman piety. Yet your chief deities 6 Ana | that the continuance of the Roman Empire delays the end of 7 I | provincial governors of the Roman Empire, presiding for the 8 V(15) | references of Tertullian to the Roman archives, see ch. 21. ~ 9 VI | rebuilt the altars of the now Roman Serapis, although you may 10 X | old, barbarian, Greek, Roman, foreign, captive, adopted, 11 XIV | Hercules, and Varro, the Roman Cynic, introduces three 12 XVI(40) | m 'In every Roman camp there was a small chapel 13 XXI | procurator of Syria under the Roman government, and by the violence 14 XXIV | religion, and especially to the Roman religion. For if it be certain 15 XXIV | I have named, I believe, Roman provinces, and yet I have 16 XXIV | yet I have not mentioned Roman gods as being worshipped 17 XXV | CHAPTER XXV. ~You claim that Roman prosperity is due to Roman 18 XXV | Roman prosperity is due to Roman piety. Yet your chief deities 19 XXV | reference was made to the Roman name, I will not evade an 20 XXV | foreign deity, has loved the Roman city as the memorial of 21 XXV | Crete to be shaken by the Roman fasces, forgetful of that 22 XXV | attribute the grandeur of the Roman name to the merits of religious 23 XXV | to make up the sum of the Roman empire were not without 24 XXXII | that the continuance of the Roman Empire delays the end of 25 XXXII | state of the empire and Roman interests; because we know, 26 XXXII | the respite granted to the Roman Empire 81. And so whilst 27 XXXII | favour the duration of the Roman government. Moreover also 28 XXXII(81)| Thess. ii. 6), regarded the Roman Empire as the restraining 29 XXXV | but only as enemies of the Roman princes, should be found 30 XXXV | charge to say whether that Roman tongue of yours spares its 31 XXXIX | Socrates the Greek and Cato the Roman : who shared with their 32 XXXIX | example of Attic wisdom and Roman gravity! —the philosopher 33 App | madness, whom, as they were Roman citizens, I set aside for


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