|
| |
| | The Baldwin Project: Romulus by Jacob Abbott |
 | | Accordingly, while he and Romulus were at Lavinium offering the sacrifices, news came that the murderers of the envoys, on their way from Rome to Lavinium, had been rescued and allowed to escape. |  | | He could not openly defend such a deed as the murder of the envoys; and so he consented to accompany Romulus to Lavinium, to make the offering, but he secretly arranged a plan for rescuing the murderers from the Lavinians, after they had been given up. |  | | Romulus sent them back unharmed, directing them to say to the Lavinian government, that he considered the death of Tatius, though inflicted in a mode lawless and unjustifiable, as nevertheless, in itself, only a just expiation for the murder of the Lavinian embassadors, which Tatius had instigated or authorized. |
|
http://www.mainlesson.com/display.php?author=abbott&book=romulus&story=conclusion
(2046 words)
|
|
| |
| | Titus Livius: The History of Rome, Book 1 |
 | | Romulus is reported to have been less distressed at this incident than his position demanded, either because of the insincerity inherent in all joint sovereignty, or because he thought he had deserved his fate. |  | | After the government of Alba was thus transferred to Numitor, Romulus and Remus were seized with the desire of building a city in the locality where they had been exposed. |  | | The consequence was that he brought upon himself the punishment due to them, for when he had gone to the annual sacrifice at Lavinium, a tumult arose in which he was killed. |
|
http://www.forumromanum.org/literature/livius/trans1.html
(19290 words)
|
|
| |
| | NUMINA |
 | | Lavinium was believed to have been founded by Aneneas when he landed in Italy. |  | | Lavinium (Practica die Mare, 30 km south of Rome) |  | | Then after commanding the Trojans to shift their camp to the hill, he placed the images of the gods in the best part of it and immediately made preparations for the building of the city…” |
|
http://www.albany.edu/faculty/lr618/1numen.html
(2935 words)
|
|
| |
| | History of Rome |
 | | Romulus is reported to have been less distressed at this incident than his position demanded, either because of the insincerity inherent in all joint sovereignty, or because he thought he had deserved his fate. |  | | The consequence was that he brought upon himself the punishment due to them, for when he had gone to the annual sacrifice at Lavinium, a tumult arose in which he was killed. |  | | They came to seek redress from him in accordance with international law, but the influence and importunities of his friends had more weight with Tatius than the remonstrances of the Laurentines. |
|
http://members.lycos.nl/romans/hor1/LIV1_14.htm
(389 words)
|
|
| |
| | Livy: Early Rome |
 | | Ascanius then, who was certainly Aeneas' son, whatever his birthplace and whoever his mother, left Lavinium, by now a populous and flourishing city by current standards, to his mother or stepmother, and himself founded a new city under the Alban Mount. |  | | The population of Albans and Latins was excessive, and there were also the shepherds; their combined numbers made it likely that Alba and Lavinium would be eclipsed by the city which they would build. |  | | When the Alban state was in the hands of Numitor, Romulus and Remus conceived a desire to build a city in the area where they had been exposed and reared. |
|
http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/dunkle/courses/livy.htm
(7699 words)
|
|
| |
| | Iunones |
 | | Its protective goddess was Ceres, who had already been received in Rome. |  | | Something to bear in mind with all these Junoes is that They are not the same goddess, nor are any of Them to be identified with Juno Capitolina. |  | | She was not brought to Rome, but rather Rome to Her, as the consules had to attend the Feriae Latinae each year at Her city. |
|
http://www.ancientworlds.net/aw/Post/325783
(932 words)
|
|
| |
| | [No title] |
 | | Aeneas ruled Lavinium for 3 years before his death. |  | | She had died/became a goddess in the Trojan War. |  | | Aeneas founded a new city in Latium which he named LAVINIUM in honor of his new wife. |
|
http://bol8425-01.k12.fsu.edu/ggchapter19Rome.doc
(971 words)
|
|
| |
| | Search Results for "Lavinium" |
 | | Tradition adds that he founded his city, and called it after her name, Lavinium. |  | | It is said that he was at Lavinium offering a public sacrifice to the ancestral gods, when some... |  | | ...reproaches against each other; until news was brought that the enemy had laid close siege to Lavinium, where were the images and sacred things of their tutelar gods,... |
|
http://www.bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=Lavinium
(240 words)
|
|
| |
| | Tales of Rome |
 | | Aeneas founded a new city called Lavinium or the hero renamed the city of Lauretum to Lavinium, after his new wife. |  | | Though, Ascanius (Iulus) succeeded his father, Lavinium became overcrowded after thirty years since it was founded. |  | | Ascanius decided to find another city in Latium, which he called Alba Longa. |
|
http://www.timelessmyths.com/classical/rome.html
(5263 words)
|
|
| |
| | BIGpedia - Juturna - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online |
 | | Juturna had an affair with Jupiter but the secret was betrayed by a nymph named Lara, whom Jupiter struck with muteness as punishment. |  | | Jupiter turned her into a nymph and gave her a sacred well in Lavinium, Latium, as well as another one near the temple to Vesta in the Forum Romanum. |  | | She was also the mother of Fontus by her husband, Janus. |
|
http://www.bigpedia.com/encyclopedia/Juturna
(109 words)
|
|
| |
| | Roman States |
 | | Ascanius left Lavinium to found his own city at nearby Alba Longa. |  | | Contains: Alba Longa, Ancona, Bologna, Camerino, Cesena, Faenza, Ferrara, Forli, Imola, Lavinium, the Marsi, Matelica, the Papacy, Perugia, Pesaro, Ponte Corvo, the Pontifex Maximus, Ravenna, Rimini, Rome and the Papal States, San Marino, San Severino, Spoleto, Tusculum, Urbino, and Viterbo. |  | | These provinces represent the core of ancient Latium, together with the districts controlled by the Papacy during the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and early modern eras. |
|
http://www.hostkingdom.net/rome.html
(1781 words)
|
|
| |
| | Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, page 468 |
 | | Afterwards it was supposed that the original Penates, brought from Samo-thrace to Troy, and thence conveyed by tineas to Lavinium, were identical with certain symbols kept, with the Palladium, in a secret part of the temple of Vesta. |  | | The Penates of the Latin League, which were at first regarded as the Trojan Penates, were enshrined in the sanctuary at Lavinium. |  | | Annual offerings were brought to them by the Roman priests, and also by consuls, praetors, and dictators on assuming or laying down office, and by generals on their departure for their provinces. |
|
http://www.ancientlibrary.com/seyffert/0471.html
(794 words)
|
|
| |
| | Hitchhiker's Guide to Rukl Chart 26 |
 | | The easiest way to find it is from Proclus, the prominent crater near the eastern point of diamond-shaped Palus Somni (which stands out as a dark highland area adjacent to Sinus Amoris). |  | | Bystanders may be amused to note that the Sea of Crises resembles the face of a teddy bear, or perhaps a hedgehog. |  | | O'Neill believed he was seeing an artificial "bridge" on the moon. |
|
http://www.shallowsky.com/moon/rukl26.html
(1066 words)
|
|
| |
| | Commentary on Vergil's Aeneid -- Ascanius / Iulus |
 | | Alternately, Livy (1.3) tells the story that Ascanius was the son of Aeneas and Lavinia, became King of Lavinium after Aeneas' death, then left Lavinium to found Alba Longa, where his own son Silvius succeeded him in turn. |  | | According to Dionysius Halicarnassus (1.47, 53), Ascanius became king of the land of Dascylitis after the Trojan war, but before long went back to Troy where he ruled after Aeneas' death. |  | | Ascanius accompanies his father to Italy after the fall of |
|
http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/comm2/names/ascanius.html
(178 words)
|
|
| |
| | Appian's History of early Rome |
 | | But some say that the Ascanius who succeeded to the government was the son of Aeneas and Lavinia. |  | | The Aborigines of this part of Italy were then ruled by Faunus, the son of Mars, who gave to Aeneas his daughter Lavinia in marriage, and also a tract of land 75 kilometers in circuit. |  | | Here Aeneas built a town, which he named after his wife, Lavinium. |
|
http://www.livius.org/ap-ark/appian/appian_kings.html
(1064 words)
|
|
| |
| | Juturna |
 | | Jupiter turned her into a nymph and gave her a well near Lavinium in Latium. |  | | She also gave her name to a well near the Vesta-temple of the Forum Romanum, called the Lacus Juturnae. |
|
http://www.pantheon.org/articles/j/juturna.html
(103 words)
|
|
| |
| | Roman History Lecture 4 |
 | | After thirty years Ascanius, the son of Aeneas leaves Lavinium to found his own city, Alba Longa. |  | | Foundation Legend: Aeneas, son of Anchises and Venus (she's a goddess), and a refugee from Troy, sailed with his band of Trojan followers to the coast of Latium and reached the territory of Laurentum. |  | | After defeating the Rutulians and Etruscans in war, he married Lavinia, the daughter of the native king, Latinus and founded Lavinium. |
|
http://www.pitt.edu/~possanza/RHL4.html
(414 words)
|
|
| |
| | Enée sacrifiant sur le site de Lavinium |
 | | This temple contains statues of the gods; its shape would have been inspired by the Temple of the Penates, reconstructed in Rome by Augustus. |  | | There is a temple above their heads, positioned at a height, most probably the temple to the Penates which Aeneas built on the Lavinium hilltop. |  | | One leads the victim, a sow, and the other carries a dish of fruit and an ewer (an earthenware jug). |
|
http://www.educnet.education.fr/musagora/arapacis-en/basrelief/enee.htm
(278 words)
|
|
| |
| | Latin Online |
 | | Aeneas called it Lavinium after the name of his wife. |  | | This event definitely confirmed the hope of the Trojans of having ended their wanderings in a stable and certain home. |  | | The sentence also includes an adverbial phrase placed, as frequently, before the object, which typically stands directly before the verb. |
|
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/lrc/eieol/latol-1-R.html
(1686 words)
|
|
| |
| | Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, page 687 |
 | | This worship was introduced by Numa from Lavinium, whither jEneas had brought the Pgnates and the sacred fire from Troy. |  | | Hence it was that Roman consuls and dictators, on taking up and laying down their office, sacrificed in the temple of Vesta at Lavinium. |  | | It was customary in Italy as in Greece for the colonies to kindle the fire of their own Vesta at the hearth of the mother city. |
|
http://www.ancientlibrary.com/seyffert/0690.html
(787 words)
|
|
| |
| | LAURENTINA, VIA - Online Information article about LAURENTINA, VIA |
 | | Lavinium (Pratica), which crosses the other road at right angles not far from its destination (the Laurentina there See also: |  | | Pomona) and which later belonged to See also: |  | | running S.W. and that to Lavinium S.E.) may for convenience be called Lavinatis, though this name does not occur in ancient times. |
|
http://encyclopedia.jrank.org/LAP_LEO/LAURENTINA_VIA.html
(415 words)
|
|
| |
| | Sunset Activities on Western Mare Crisium |
 | | I did capture some video images of the fan of light and partial bridge between Lavinium and Olivium. |  | | At one point there was some evidence of the bridge between Olivium and Lavinium, but not all that notable. |  | | As the sun continued to set on Crisium the fan of light on the floor disappeared leaving the illuminated section of ridge sitting isolated in the shadow of the mountains along Crisium's western boarder. |
|
http://observers.org/reports/99.09.27.html
(140 words)
|
|
| |
| | HighBeam Research: Library Search: Results |
 | | of having confused the three old Latian towns of Lavinium, Lanuvium and Lanivium, of denying the authenticity of vv. |  | | to Greek sources (Strabo, in the mentioned case of Lavinium, Lanuvium and Lanivium; Aristarchus in the case of Iliad 24, 29-30, and... |
|
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=SS&search_newspapers=on&search_magazines=on&q=Lanuvium&refid=ency_botnm
(299 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Aeneid |
 | | Lavinium was reputed to have been the first Trojan settlement in Italy and to have been named for Lavinia, an Italian princess whom Aeneas married. |  | | of means, Lāvīn(i)a: of Lavinium, an ancient city on the western coast of Italy, near the spot where Rome was later founded. |  | | came exiled by fate to Italy and the coast of Lavinium— |
|
http://aeneid.timshel.org/mockup.html
(342 words)
|
|
| |
| | jolt.co.uk public forums - LAVINIUM - Somewhere to call home... |
 | | - - LAVINIUM - Somewhere to call home... |  | | LAVINIUM would be great place to learn the game, make friends and get a handle on things. |  | | jolt.co.uk public forums - LAVINIUM - Somewhere to call home... |
|
http://forums.jolt.co.uk/printthread.php?t=377722
(457 words)
|
|
| |
| | Classical Gazetteer, page 198 |
 | | Founded by ^Eneas, and named after his wife. |  | | In Lucan's time, the population had removed to Lavinium. |  | | Lavinium, a town of the Latini, Latium, on Via Severiana, bet. |
|
http://www.ancientlibrary.com/gazetteer/0200.html
(387 words)
|
|
| |
| | Lavinium |
 | | Lavinium was a city named by Aeneas for Lavinia the daughter of Latinus king of the Latins and his wife Amata. |  | | Enée et Lavinium: à propos des découvertes archéologiques récentes (Collection Latomus) |
|
http://www.freeglossary.com/Lavinium
(32 words)
|
|
| |
| | Romulus and Remus |
 | | There Aeneas settled down and founded the town of Lavinium. |  | | Very soon the town wasn't big enough for all the people and therefore he founded a new town, called 'Alba Longa' - 'the long white town'. |  | | After a long journey he ended up in Latium, the region of present-day Rome. |
|
http://intranet.grundel.nl/thinkquest/romulus_and_remus.html
(525 words)
|
|
| |
| | Use of the Cases in Livy 1.1-10 |
 | | (1.1.10) They found a city: Aeneas calls it Lavinium from the name of his wife. |  | | qui omnes facile spem facerent parvam Albam, parvum Lavinium prae ea urbe quae conderetur fore (1.6.3) who all easily created the hope that Alba and Lavinium would be small in relation to this city which was going to be founded |  | | In the following example note the use of the accusative aliquantum where we would expect the ablative measure of difference aliquanto. |
|
http://www.cofc.edu/~fennoj/Livy/LivCa.htm
(5859 words)
|
|
| |
| | Commentary on Vergil's Aeneid -- Latium |
 | | At Lavinium preliminary archaeological reports appear to reflect a not dissimilar urbanisation of the site at about the same period, and highly important sanctuaries were coming into being at that time or a little later: the famous 13 altars were built, it would appear, between the 6th and the 2nd c BC. |  | | No obvious public buildings or sanctuaries were identified, despite extensive trenching, and the burials in the cemeteries were not conspicuously rich, even in the Orientalising period. |  | | Two other settlements in Latium, Lavinium and Satricum, were much greater than Ficana (Guaitoli 182-191; |
|
http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/comm2/archaeology/latium.html
(396 words)
|
|
| |
| | Kings and not-kings |
 | | To name a few: Menelaus at Sparta; Odysseus at Ithaca; Oedipus at Thebes; Aeneas at Lavinium, and his son Iulus at Alba Longa. |  | | It is possible that the Tarquinii sought to extend their dynasty and supplant rivals by a forced marriage to the woman whose husband would be king. |  | | A glance at the literature reveals a long list of kings who thus gained a throne. |
|
http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/hines/050929
(1417 words)
|
|
| |
| | WHY JUST ROME |
 | | Lavinium is left to Lavinia, and we are not interested in the fate of the Lavinium Kings. |  | | However even now we can see that Rome may have been formed and developed under Etruscan/Sabin cultural/linguistic influences while this may have been much weaker in an average community of Latium, and practically nil in Lavinium or Alba Longa. |  | | Then Latinus is killed in a battle (or miraculously vanishes); Aeneas is the chief of the tribe in a new capitol, Lavinium. |
|
http://www.rmki.kfki.hu/~lukacs/WHYROME.htm
(3553 words)
|
|
| |
| | CliffsNotes::Aeneid:Book Summary and Study Guide |
 | | Virgil begins his epic poem with a succinct statement of its theme: He will sing of war and the man—Aeneas—who, driven by fate, sailed from Troy& shores to Italy, where he founded a city called Lavinium, the precursor of Rome. |
|
http://www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/LitNote/id-3,pageNum-10.html
(605 words)
|
|
| |
| | LAVINIUM - A new future... [Archive] - jolt.co.uk public forums |
 | | If you have any questions you would like to ask before you join the region, I'd be more than happy to answer them. |  | | If you are interested in joining then feel free to move your nation. |  | | The region now contains a good mixture of new and veteran players, which makes it an exciting place to be and if you feel that you can bring some value to the region, either through experience or otherwise, then feel free to join LAVINIUM. |
|
http://forums.jolt.co.uk/archive/index.php/t-373816.html
(289 words)
|
|
| |
| | [No title] |
 | | He was one of the defenders of Troy, and when Troy was defeated he went on a long journey, ending up in Italy where he founded a city called Lavinium, the parent city of Rome. |  | | The poem was intended to glorify Rome, and Augustus in particular, by showing that Augustus was descended from a great hero. |
|
http://www.hyper-former.com/hyper1/ROMAN.HTM
(11296 words)
|
|
| |
| | jolt.co.uk public forums - LAVINIUM - A region for young and old. |
 | | I am sure you must see a great deal of these messages, though I would indebted to you if you would consider taking a moment to read this post. |  | | jolt.co.uk public forums - LAVINIUM - A region for young and old. |  | | I wish to extend an invitation to you in joining the region of LAVINIUM. |
|
http://forums.jolt.co.uk/showthread.php?t=381313
(338 words)
|
|
| |
| | Region |
 | | I think a statue or some memorabilia should be erected for lost and loved nations somewhere in Lavinium. |  | | He’s been a great supporter of our region for a very long time and will be sadly missed. |  | | Excellent in that case all we have to decide is where? |
|
http://www.nationstates.net/cgi-bin/index.cgi/-1/page=display_region/region=lavinium
(456 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Laviniad By Claudio R. Salvucci at Tiber River Catholic Book Reviews - your source for honest ... |
 | | A student of the classics from his earliest years, the author has crafted a work which builds upon the fragmentary record of the founding of Lavinium left us by Livy, Dionysius of Halicarnassus and others; all the while giving an obvious nod towards his Vergilian mentor. |  | | The ancient muse of the golden age of Roman literature has stirred once more, this time within the mind of Claudio Salvucci, native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania but with roots that extend back to his ancestral home in ancient Latium. |  | | Drawing not only from the classical tradition but also from alliterative Anglo-Saxon poetry and classical translations, the author has managed to craft an epic style in modern-day English which is both musical and majestic. |
|
http://www.tiberriver.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/HOME.viewItem/SKU/2581
(411 words)
|
|
| |
| | Lavi meaning and origin |
 | | Variant of Lavinia: In classical mythology, Lavinia was the daughter of King Latinus and the wife of Trojan hero Aeneas, who named the city Lavinium in her honour. |  | | In classical mythology, Lavinia was the daughter of King Latinus and the wife of Trojan hero Aeneas, who named the city Lavinium in her honour. |  | | More baby names at letter L: L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 L7 |
|
http://babynamecollection.com/lavi.html
(66 words)
|
|
| |
| | Bryn Mawr Classical Review 95.03.08 |
 | | But the access to information is not always easy, scattered as it is in exhibition catalogues, specific studies, excavation reports, which are often hard for the non-specialist to find and to use. |  | | Here is a most welcome book, all the more so since archaeological discoveries on the primitive Rome and the Latium have increased in the last decades. |  | | To mention only a few recent and fundamental finds, let us think of the archaic sanctuary of Sant'Omobono, the 600 tombs excavated at Gabii (Osteria dell'Osa) between 1971 and 1986, the inscription of Satricum and, in Lavinium, the Thirteen Altars, the Heroon of Aeneas and the outstanding terracottas. |
|
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1995/95.03.08.html
(1210 words)
|
|
| |
| | Tenuta Rocca |
 | | Appreciation for our Barolo Tenuta Rocca, Nebbiolo Vigna Sorì Ornati and Chiara Langhe Chardonnay that the journalists have tasted in August. |  | | The technical sheets of Lavinium are always available at the http://www.lavinium.com/cgilav/visuazlav.cgi?IDaz=610 web site address. |
|
http://www.tenutarocca.com/user/news.php?id=39&set_lingua=uk
(135 words)
|
|
| |
| | Lavi meaning and origin |
 | | Lavina meaning: Variant of Lavinia: In classical mythology, Lavinia was the daughter of King Latinus and the wife of Trojan hero Aeneas, who named the city Lavinium in her honour. |  | | Lavinia meaning: In classical mythology, Lavinia was the daughter of King Latinus and the wife of Trojan hero Aeneas, who named the city Lavinium in her honour. |  | | Baby names (L): L1 L2 L3 L4 L5 L6 L7 |
|
http://www.cutebabyname.com/lavi.html
(67 words)
|
|
|