10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «TRIBUNESHIP»
Discover the use of
tribuneship in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
tribuneship and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Ideal Empires and Republics: Rousseau's Social Contract, ...
CHAPTER V. The Tribuneship. When an exact relation cannot be established
among the constituent parts of the State, > or when indestructible causes are
incessantly changing their relations, a special magistracy is instituted, which is
not ...
2
Ideal empires and republics: Rousseau's Social contract, ...
Rousseau's Social contract, More's Utopia, Bacon's New Atlantis, Campanella's
City of the sun Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Sir Thomas More (Saint), Francis Bacon
, Tommaso Campanella. CHAPTER V. The Tribuneship. When an exact relation ...
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Sir Thomas More (Saint), Francis Bacon, 1901
3
The Roman History: From the Building of Rome to the Ruin of ...
... and cattle. 354. To avert thit evil the ceremony of the lectitternium is observed.
IV. The senate take advantage of the people's fears and superstition, to get the
military tribuneship for patricians only; pretending that the gods were angry at tlic
...
4
IDEAL EMPIRES AND REPUBLICS
CHAPTER V. The Tribuneship. When an exact relation cannot be established
among the constituent parts of the State, or when indestructible causes are
incessantly changing their relations, a special magistracy is instituted, which is
not ...
CHARLES M. ANDREWS, PhD, 1901
But in no other state do we find an office that bears the slightest resemblance to
the Roman tribuneship. And this office was not an unimportant element in Rome,
a trifling appendage which might have been removed without altering the ...
6
Plutarch's lives of the Gracchi
Again, no special stress is put by Plutarch upon the popularity resulting to Gaius
from the lex fmmentaria, nor does he make it out to be his earliest proposal, or the
only law carried in his first tribuneship ; and though he assigns a prominent ...
Plutarch, George Edward Underhill, 1892
and servants belonging (as he found) to Metellus Nepos, who was going to
Rome to apply for the tribuneship. This put him to a stand: he remained some
time in deep thought, and then gave his people orders to turn back. To his friends
, who ...
Plutarch, Francis Wrangham, 1916
8
The twentieth century cyclopedia
In 1 33 B.C. he offered himself as a candidate for the tribuneship, which office
rendered his person inviolable so long as he was invested with it, and placed him
in a situation to advance his great plans for the improvement of the condition of
the ...
Charles Annandale, Ainsworth Rand Spofford, 1902
9
The American encyclopedia of history, biography and travel, ...
his own colleagues in the tribuneship, he had gained his end. Three
commissioners were appointed to superintend the execution of the law —
Tiberius himself, his father-in-law Appius Claudius, and his younger brother
Caius. Loud and deep ...
10
Lectures on the History of Rome from the First Punic War to ...
He would, after the expiration of his tribuneship, still have been triumvir agrorum
dividendorum, but he would not have been inviolable. He therefore offered
himself, in accordance with the law, as a candidate for the tribuneship for the year
...
Barthold Georg Niebuhr, 1844