10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «GENTILITIAN»
Discover the use of
gentilitian in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
gentilitian and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Down to the reform of Cleisthenes in 508 B.c., membership in a phratria was the
prerequisite for Athenian citizenship. The strength of the gentilitian experience of
order was fully revealed on occasion of the reform of Cleisthenes in 508 B.c. The
...
Eric Voegelin, Athanasios Moulakis, 2000
The gentilitian character of the Senate was symbolized by their appellation as
patres. In the Senate the community constituted itself in perpetuity. Its consent -
auctoritas patrum - was required for all major policy decisions of the king as well
as ...
There is not a hint of Decimus Brutus in Plutarch, who calls him Decius Brutus
Albinus,Decius, says Mr. Craik, being a Gentilitian name?' Shakespeare has
supplied and filled in the portrait, and we see by the Cicero. * Plutarch committed
the ...
Manchester Literary Club, 1893
4
Rome: 1000 years of civilization
The ambition of gentilitian society was the total control of power through the
dominion exercised over economic and social procedures and over the running
of family and collective religious rites. Each aristocrat thought of himself as rex
and ...
Adriano La Regina, Palais de la civilization (Montreal, Quebec), 1992
5
The Edinburgh Review, Or Critical Journal
There were no gentilitian names, she says ; that is, names of clans, as in ancient
Rome, comprehending many families who might or might not be connected in
blood. In mortuary inscriptions, it is common to find four names. First, what Mrs
Gray ...
6
The Edinburgh Review, Or Critical Journal: ... To Be ...
There were no gentilitian names, she says; that is, names of clans, as in ancient
Rome, comprehendin many families who might or might not be connected in
blood. n mortuary inscriptions, it is common to findjbur names. First, what' Mrs
Gray ...
There were family sepulchres too, and gentilitian sepulchres, from the earliest
periods in Rome. The Christians would consider themselves very naturally as
one great family, and would speedily grow to a gens; and every religious feeling
...
Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell, 1865
8
The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal
There were no gentilitian names, she says ; that is, names of clans, as in ancient
Rome, comprehending many families who might or might not be connected in
blood. In mortuary inscriptions, it is common to find four names. First, what Mrs
Gray ...
9
The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal
There were no gentilitian names, she says ; that is, names of clans, as in ancient
Rome, comprehending many families who might or might not be connected in
blood. In mortuary inscriptions, it is common to find four names. First, what Mrs
Gray ...
Sydney Smith, Lord Francis Jeffrey Jeffrey, Macvey Napier, 1841
10
Numismata: A discourse of Medals: Together with some Account ...
For a Majestic Comliness, the Terfians and Armenian: have been remarkable, in
the Aquiline Royal Nose; which with other virile Features, seems in a manner
Gentilitian, and no where else so universal. 'Plutarclz tells us, Artaxerxes had
Vicle ...