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Attitudes to work and workers in classical Greece and Rome
Published 2014-03-01Get full text
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Malaysia and the Rome Statute : Domestic Debate Over?
Published 2019“…In a span of a month, Malaysia first ratified the Rome Statute and then withdrew from the International Criminal Court that the treaty governs. …”
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Latin poetry and the idea of Rome in the Greek novel
Published 2015“…It draws two major conclusions: (i) that the Greek novels are deeply invested in Latin literature and Roman cultural narratives at the level of poetics, and (ii) that this literary engagement is part of a more subterranean political agenda through which the texts articulate a resistance to Rome and empire.</p> <p>Chapter 1 explores the novelists' literary and ideological appropriation of the elegiac metaphors of <em>seruitium</em> and <em>militia amoris</em>. …”
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Rome in ninth-century Anglo-Saxon England
Published 2010“…This thesis explores the impact of Rome upon Anglo-Saxon politics, religion, and culture in the ninth century. …”
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Constantine's donation to the 'bishop and pope of the city of Rome'
Published 2005“…The salutation <em>urbis Romae episcopo et pape</em> in the forged Donation of Constantine is generally supposed to mean 'to the bishop of the city of Rome and Pope', not 'to the bishop and pope of the city of Rome', on the grounds that a Western writer of the eighth century would not have added any qualifier to the term 'Pope'. …”
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The church of Ravenna, Constantinople and Rome in the seventh century
Published 2016“… <p style="text-align:justify;"> Throughout the seventh century, great mutual amity was professed by the churches of Ravenna, Constantinople and Rome. Sometimes, therewasamity. But the situation of the Byzantine empire was often so precarious as to threaten, directly and indirectly, the churches of Rome and Ravenna and hence preclude even a pretence of amity.…”
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Lucy Grig & Gavin Kelly (eds.), Two Romes: Rome and Constantinople in Late Antiquity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012)
Published 2015-03-01Subjects: Get full text
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The Phenomenon of Two Romes in Late Antiquity. Review of Grig, L., & Kelly, G. (Eds). (2012). Two Romes: Rome and Constantinople in Late Antiquity....
Published 2016-07-01“…The review describes the conceptual and content side of the collection of articles, mainly authored by English-speaking specialists that focus on the development of Rome and Constantinople between the 4th and the 6th century. …”
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