319 stock, 14
Language
of, 14 Intibili, ii.
The history of Rome; tr. with the sanction of the ... v.5. Mommsen, Theodor, 1817-1903
164
Herodotus, tales of, inserted in the early
history of Rome, iii. 187 n.
Hero-worship un-Roman, 214
Hesiod, his knowledge of Italy, 167.
Graeci mentioned in his Eoai, 169 n. Hexameter introduced by Ennius, ii1. 175 Hiarbas, pretender of Numidia, iv. 92, 93 Hide of land, size of the Roman, 121f. ,
239, 240 n.
Hiempsal I. , son of King Micipsa, iii.
388 ». , 389
Hiempsal II. , king of Numidia, iii. 388«. ,
origin of the Roman view of it, ii . . *(- 107. Of the Greek view, 107-110. Mixture of the two, ii 1oqf. iii. 187. /C In the sixth and seventh centuries, iv. 242-250; v. 492-500. Chronicles, iv. 248^ Metrical, v. 47a
Histri, histrioneS, 300
Holidays kept sacred, 225, 241. /. Holopl1,rrnes, brother of Ariarathes V, of
541
Hiero of Syracuse, 415,/.
iii. 44
Honorary surnames, iii 44
461.
Hiero II. of Syracuse, war against the Hones et Virtue^ ii 30a
Mamertines, ii. 38, 163 f. War with Honour, questions of, how settled, iii
ii. 170. /C Peace and alliance 9*
Cappadocia, iii. 280
Homer, his knowledge of Italy,
169. Data for determining when he lived,
169 ». , 280 ».
Homicide, involuntary, 203
Honorary monuments become conunoa,
I.
i
i. i.
i.
i.
i. ii.
ii.
ii
i. i ; ;
i i
; ii.
;
in
;
i.
; i. ii.
;
i. i.
ii i. i
In Rome, 223/ Forbidden, In Gaul, v. 28
38/ Language, 1%/. Culture: pastoral life, house-building, boats with oars, chariots, clothing, cooking and salting,
iv. 210.
Hydrus,
Hyele.
Hyrcanus, King of the Jews, iv. 425, 430,
176
See Velia
working in metals, political, religious, and scientific fundamental ideas, 18- 22. Measuring and numbering, 263^
Inheritance, law of; all equally entitled received equal shares, the widow taking a child's part, 198. Compare Wills
Inheritance, tax on, iii. 90. Abolished,
iv. 156
Iniuria, damage to body or property,
193
Insubres, 423, 434; ii 221, 226, 227,
259, 263, 268, 357, 369, 370, 372 Insula, 318 M.
Interamna on the Litis, Latin colony,
476, 490
Interamna on the Nar, city-chronicle of
ii. 103
Intercalary system, 270
Intercatia, ii. 386; iii. 219
Interest, originally 1o per cent for a year
448
Iapycians, language of, and affinity with the Greeks, 11 The oldest immi grants into Italy, 13. Maintained their ground in Apulia against the Samnites, 146. Defeat the Tarentines, i. 416
lassus, 413. Pillaged by the pirates,
iv. 308
Iberians in Georgia, iv. 20, 412-414 Iberians Spain, ii. 385
bye us, 172
L. Icilius Ruga [tribune of the people, 298,
=991. -- 306
Idus, 207, 271
Iguvium, v. 207. Tablets of, 145 Ilerda, iv. 283, 300 v. 221-226
Ilians, the senate intercedes for them as
INDEX
SS1
Horatii, clan-village, i. 45. Horatii and Sulla, Iv. 54. Exempt from taxation,
Curiatii, ii. 105
Horatius Cocles, ii. 105 n.
M. Horatius [consul, 30s], i. 398
L. Hortensius [admiral, 584], ii. 501
L. Hortensius, iii. 332
L. Hortensius, lieutenant of Sulla in
Greece, iv. 37
Q. Hortensius, the orator, iv. 78, 207, 269;
▼. 454/i 481,503
Q. Hortensius, son of the orator of that
name, v. 234/
A. Hostilius Mancinus [consul, 584], u.
501
C Hostilius Mancinus [consul, 617], iii.
22S. /C, 319. Statue of, iii. 296
L. Hostilius Mancinus [consul, 609], Iii.
252
C Hostilius Tubulus [praetor, 547], ii. 347 L. Hostilius Tubulus [praetor, 6 12], iii. 348 Tullus Hostilius, ii. 105
Hostius, epic poet, iv. 837 House-architecture, Graeco- Italian, i. 27.
Oldest Italian, i. 27, 301/ Revolution
in, iii. 207
House-father among the Romans, i. 72-77.
Power of, i. 73-76
Household tribunals, i. 73/, 76; iii. 121/ Household government over freedmen and
clients, iii, 39
House-searching lance et lie fa, i. 201/ Human sacrifices in Latium, no proof of,
i. 222.
▼. 3°4i 382 ». Illiturgi, ii. 308
Illyrians, piratical expeditions of the rulers of Scodra, ii. 216/ Subdued by the Romans, ii. 218, 286, 499, 508. In the Hannibalicwar take part with Rome against Macedonia, ii. 317. Against the Aetolians, ii. 476. Dalmatians subdued, iii. 264, 290/, 4=1jC, 426/; iv. 307. Wars in Caesar's time, v. 103, 284/ Roman speculators in Illyria, iii. 307. Taxation by Rome, iii. 509 v. 364. Compare Genthius
of ten months, 196 «. , 364. Laws of kindred lineage, ii. 111. Become regulating, iii. 389, 530, 541 iv. 129,
free, ii. 473. Favours bestowed by 176 v. 40S. /C
va,
Images of the gods foreign to the earliest
Roman worship, 225, 306/ Varro places their introduction after 176 u. c,,
307 n. Imbros, ii. 437
Imperator, meaning of word, iii. 505 tf.
330-335
ImperiuHt, 82. Only divisible territori
ally, not functionally, and thus essenti ally always at once military and juris dictional, 371 n.
143
Imports, Italian, iv. 174 Incendiarism, 19s
India, iii. 284
Indigetes, iv. 293
I,tdigitare,
Indo-Germans, original seats of,
213
;
/. i.
i.
1.
I
i. In
i.
ii.
i.
i.
; i. 1.
;
i.
i.
i.
L i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
/. ;;
i.
ii.
i.
i.
i.
II
55*
HISTORY OF ROME
Interrex, i. 99. After abolition of the the north, 13, 39. Indo-Germani monarchy, i.
319 stock, 14 Language of, 14 Intibili, ii. 308 Their near affinity with the Greeks,
Ionian gulf, older name of the Adriatic IS. Contrast to the Greeks in family, sea, i. 165 state, religion, and art, 28-36. Artistic
Ionian islands, Roman, 218 f. , 477. endowments of, 283^ Jo1ned to province of Macedonia, iii. Italus, laws of, 26, 31
26a
Ionian sea, origin of the name, 165 Ipsus, battle of, ii.
Iron mines at Noreia, iii. 424
Iron, workers in, not known at Rome till
late, 249. Taken over from the
Greeks, 304
lsara, battle on the, iii. 448
Isaurians, subdued, iv. 313. / Revolt, iv. his, 189. f1ts and iudicium separated,
322 ii. 68
lu1 gentium, 200 v. 43a
lus imaginum, hereditary distinction
325
Isidorus, Pontic admiral, iv. 329
Isis, worship of, iv. 21o v. 446
Issa, 417 ii. 217, 218 n. , 493 iii. 422. connected with the obtaining of a
Ityraeans, iv. 430
C Iudacilius from Asculum, commander
in the Social war, iii. 513, 520 ludices-consutes, 318
Indices decemviri,
Indicium Ugitimum and quod imperii
continetur, 335 n. Iugerum, 265 «.
352
Standing commandant there, ii. 218 «. Isthmian games, admission of Romans to, ii. 219. Entrusted to Sicyon, iii. 273 Isthmian temple receives gifts from
Mummius, iii. 271
Isthmus, iii. 269
Istrians, ii. 229, 372, 425 iii. 43, 421 Istropolis, iv. 307
Italia (Corfinium), ii1. 504, 522
Italica, iii. 214, 271 n. iv. 295
Italy, its physical conformation and
curule office, 373 iii. 4, 105
Jan1culum, 59, 134, 137 hr. 169 Jannaeu*, iv. 423, 425, 426
Janus, 209, 212. Effigy of, ii. 123 J? pydes, iii. 425, 427
Jazyges, 1v. 14
Jews under the Maccabees, iii. afis. /C hr.
5,316,423-426. Treasures in Cos carried off by Mithradates, iv. 33. Send envoys to Lucullus, iv. 341. Subdued by Pompeius, 1v. 430 /, Placed under high priests, iv. 439. Revolts under Aristobulus, and breaking up of the land, iv. 448 Taxation, iv. 158 «. , 16a n. Their position in Caesar's state, v. 417-419. Jews in Alexandria, v. 281, 418. In Rome, iv. 21o; v. 371 f. , 418
character, 5-7. Primitive races,
gj. Union under the leading of Rome,
ii. 46-58. Original restricted import of
the name, 169. Transference of the
name to the territory from the Sicilian
Straits to the Amus and Aesis, ii. 59.
Denoted after the acquisition of Sicily
the continental territory administered Juba, king of Numidia, v. 203, 230, 231, by the consuls, from the Sicilian Straits 264, 269, 288, 300
to the Alps, it 213 f. , 215 «. , 219 n. Judges, Carthaginian, ii. 147fl
How tar th1s geographical distinction Jugurtha at Numantia, iii. 230, 389. becomes a political one, ii. 213 Jugurthine war, iii. 388-408. Put to Northern Italy separated and first con death in Rome, iii. 409
stituted by Sulla a special province, Julia, Caesar's daughter, iv. 514. Death Pallia Cisalpina, ii. 215 «. Iv. 121 a
The possessions on the east coast of the
Adriatic included, ii. 218 n. Italian
communities beyond Italy Ariminum,
iiV205, 220. Messana, ii. 203. Ravenna, C. Julius Caesar, candidate for the consul ii. an. Sena Gallica, it 12, 220.
Practically bounded by the Po, iii. 518. Legal boundary of, changed by SuTa to the Rubico; and all Italians mac;! ' Roman citizens, iv. 122 ,/C, 132. Norti1 Italy united with Italy, v. qz1f. See Celts, Transpadane
Italians m1grated into the peninsula from
ship in 667, iii. 53a iv. 66, 67
C Julius Caesar, his character, iv. 278/; ▼• 305-314. Year of his birth, iv. 27S n.
His conduct after Sulla's death and during Lepidus' revolt, iv. 208. Sup ports the Plotian law, iv. 303. Serves in Mithradatic war, iv. 325. Brings Sullan partisans to trial, iv. 373. Sup-
of, v. t66
Julia, wife of Marius, iii. 453
Julii from Alba, 128. Family shrine at
Bovillae, 128
i. ;
y.
i. i. ;; i. Li.
:
;
ii. i.
i.
i.
f. i.
i.
i.
;
;
;
;
i. L /.
i. ;
i.
1. ;
i. I.
;
i. i.
f. i. i. f.
;
i.
\.
6
i.
INDEX
ports the Lex Gabinia, It. 393- His
gladiatorial games, iv. 399, 456. Ponti-
fex Maximus, iv. 460, 491. Conspires
with Catilina, iv. 466, 467, 482, 486, 487,
488. An opponent of Pompeius, iv. 493.
Praetor, iv. 497, 498. Governor in
Spain, iv. 503; v. 6, 7. Allied with
Pompeius and Crassus, iv. 504. /C Con-
sul, iv. 508. Governor of the two Gauls,
iv. 51a f. ; v. 2oo f. Conflicts with the
Gauls, v. 38-94. Crosses the Rhine, v.
°7 /,, 73- Invades Britain, v. 63-66.
Makes Gaul a Roman province, v. 94-
98. At Luca, v. 124 f. Asks for the
hand of Pompeius' daughter, v. 166.
Differences between him and Pompeius,
▼. 175/, -7B. A -80/ Recalled, v. 184.
His ultimatum, v. 186. /C Marches into
Italy, v. 190-192. His army, v. 195-199.
Herodotus, tales of, inserted in the early
history of Rome, iii. 187 n.
Hero-worship un-Roman, 214
Hesiod, his knowledge of Italy, 167.
Graeci mentioned in his Eoai, 169 n. Hexameter introduced by Ennius, ii1. 175 Hiarbas, pretender of Numidia, iv. 92, 93 Hide of land, size of the Roman, 121f. ,
239, 240 n.
Hiempsal I. , son of King Micipsa, iii.
388 ». , 389
Hiempsal II. , king of Numidia, iii. 388«. ,
origin of the Roman view of it, ii . . *(- 107. Of the Greek view, 107-110. Mixture of the two, ii 1oqf. iii. 187. /C In the sixth and seventh centuries, iv. 242-250; v. 492-500. Chronicles, iv. 248^ Metrical, v. 47a
Histri, histrioneS, 300
Holidays kept sacred, 225, 241. /. Holopl1,rrnes, brother of Ariarathes V, of
541
Hiero of Syracuse, 415,/.
iii. 44
Honorary surnames, iii 44
461.
Hiero II. of Syracuse, war against the Hones et Virtue^ ii 30a
Mamertines, ii. 38, 163 f. War with Honour, questions of, how settled, iii
ii. 170. /C Peace and alliance 9*
Cappadocia, iii. 280
Homer, his knowledge of Italy,
169. Data for determining when he lived,
169 ». , 280 ».
Homicide, involuntary, 203
Honorary monuments become conunoa,
I.
i
i. i.
i.
i.
i. ii.
ii.
ii
i. i ; ;
i i
; ii.
;
in
;
i.
; i. ii.
;
i. i.
ii i. i
In Rome, 223/ Forbidden, In Gaul, v. 28
38/ Language, 1%/. Culture: pastoral life, house-building, boats with oars, chariots, clothing, cooking and salting,
iv. 210.
Hydrus,
Hyele.
Hyrcanus, King of the Jews, iv. 425, 430,
176
See Velia
working in metals, political, religious, and scientific fundamental ideas, 18- 22. Measuring and numbering, 263^
Inheritance, law of; all equally entitled received equal shares, the widow taking a child's part, 198. Compare Wills
Inheritance, tax on, iii. 90. Abolished,
iv. 156
Iniuria, damage to body or property,
193
Insubres, 423, 434; ii 221, 226, 227,
259, 263, 268, 357, 369, 370, 372 Insula, 318 M.
Interamna on the Litis, Latin colony,
476, 490
Interamna on the Nar, city-chronicle of
ii. 103
Intercalary system, 270
Intercatia, ii. 386; iii. 219
Interest, originally 1o per cent for a year
448
Iapycians, language of, and affinity with the Greeks, 11 The oldest immi grants into Italy, 13. Maintained their ground in Apulia against the Samnites, 146. Defeat the Tarentines, i. 416
lassus, 413. Pillaged by the pirates,
iv. 308
Iberians in Georgia, iv. 20, 412-414 Iberians Spain, ii. 385
bye us, 172
L. Icilius Ruga [tribune of the people, 298,
=991. -- 306
Idus, 207, 271
Iguvium, v. 207. Tablets of, 145 Ilerda, iv. 283, 300 v. 221-226
Ilians, the senate intercedes for them as
INDEX
SS1
Horatii, clan-village, i. 45. Horatii and Sulla, Iv. 54. Exempt from taxation,
Curiatii, ii. 105
Horatius Cocles, ii. 105 n.
M. Horatius [consul, 30s], i. 398
L. Hortensius [admiral, 584], ii. 501
L. Hortensius, iii. 332
L. Hortensius, lieutenant of Sulla in
Greece, iv. 37
Q. Hortensius, the orator, iv. 78, 207, 269;
▼. 454/i 481,503
Q. Hortensius, son of the orator of that
name, v. 234/
A. Hostilius Mancinus [consul, 584], u.
501
C Hostilius Mancinus [consul, 617], iii.
22S. /C, 319. Statue of, iii. 296
L. Hostilius Mancinus [consul, 609], Iii.
252
C Hostilius Tubulus [praetor, 547], ii. 347 L. Hostilius Tubulus [praetor, 6 12], iii. 348 Tullus Hostilius, ii. 105
Hostius, epic poet, iv. 837 House-architecture, Graeco- Italian, i. 27.
Oldest Italian, i. 27, 301/ Revolution
in, iii. 207
House-father among the Romans, i. 72-77.
Power of, i. 73-76
Household tribunals, i. 73/, 76; iii. 121/ Household government over freedmen and
clients, iii, 39
House-searching lance et lie fa, i. 201/ Human sacrifices in Latium, no proof of,
i. 222.
▼. 3°4i 382 ». Illiturgi, ii. 308
Illyrians, piratical expeditions of the rulers of Scodra, ii. 216/ Subdued by the Romans, ii. 218, 286, 499, 508. In the Hannibalicwar take part with Rome against Macedonia, ii. 317. Against the Aetolians, ii. 476. Dalmatians subdued, iii. 264, 290/, 4=1jC, 426/; iv. 307. Wars in Caesar's time, v. 103, 284/ Roman speculators in Illyria, iii. 307. Taxation by Rome, iii. 509 v. 364. Compare Genthius
of ten months, 196 «. , 364. Laws of kindred lineage, ii. 111. Become regulating, iii. 389, 530, 541 iv. 129,
free, ii. 473. Favours bestowed by 176 v. 40S. /C
va,
Images of the gods foreign to the earliest
Roman worship, 225, 306/ Varro places their introduction after 176 u. c,,
307 n. Imbros, ii. 437
Imperator, meaning of word, iii. 505 tf.
330-335
ImperiuHt, 82. Only divisible territori
ally, not functionally, and thus essenti ally always at once military and juris dictional, 371 n.
143
Imports, Italian, iv. 174 Incendiarism, 19s
India, iii. 284
Indigetes, iv. 293
I,tdigitare,
Indo-Germans, original seats of,
213
;
/. i.
i.
1.
I
i. In
i.
ii.
i.
i.
; i. 1.
;
i.
i.
i.
L i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
i.
/. ;;
i.
ii.
i.
i.
i.
II
55*
HISTORY OF ROME
Interrex, i. 99. After abolition of the the north, 13, 39. Indo-Germani monarchy, i.
319 stock, 14 Language of, 14 Intibili, ii. 308 Their near affinity with the Greeks,
Ionian gulf, older name of the Adriatic IS. Contrast to the Greeks in family, sea, i. 165 state, religion, and art, 28-36. Artistic
Ionian islands, Roman, 218 f. , 477. endowments of, 283^ Jo1ned to province of Macedonia, iii. Italus, laws of, 26, 31
26a
Ionian sea, origin of the name, 165 Ipsus, battle of, ii.
Iron mines at Noreia, iii. 424
Iron, workers in, not known at Rome till
late, 249. Taken over from the
Greeks, 304
lsara, battle on the, iii. 448
Isaurians, subdued, iv. 313. / Revolt, iv. his, 189. f1ts and iudicium separated,
322 ii. 68
lu1 gentium, 200 v. 43a
lus imaginum, hereditary distinction
325
Isidorus, Pontic admiral, iv. 329
Isis, worship of, iv. 21o v. 446
Issa, 417 ii. 217, 218 n. , 493 iii. 422. connected with the obtaining of a
Ityraeans, iv. 430
C Iudacilius from Asculum, commander
in the Social war, iii. 513, 520 ludices-consutes, 318
Indices decemviri,
Indicium Ugitimum and quod imperii
continetur, 335 n. Iugerum, 265 «.
352
Standing commandant there, ii. 218 «. Isthmian games, admission of Romans to, ii. 219. Entrusted to Sicyon, iii. 273 Isthmian temple receives gifts from
Mummius, iii. 271
Isthmus, iii. 269
Istrians, ii. 229, 372, 425 iii. 43, 421 Istropolis, iv. 307
Italia (Corfinium), ii1. 504, 522
Italica, iii. 214, 271 n. iv. 295
Italy, its physical conformation and
curule office, 373 iii. 4, 105
Jan1culum, 59, 134, 137 hr. 169 Jannaeu*, iv. 423, 425, 426
Janus, 209, 212. Effigy of, ii. 123 J? pydes, iii. 425, 427
Jazyges, 1v. 14
Jews under the Maccabees, iii. afis. /C hr.
5,316,423-426. Treasures in Cos carried off by Mithradates, iv. 33. Send envoys to Lucullus, iv. 341. Subdued by Pompeius, 1v. 430 /, Placed under high priests, iv. 439. Revolts under Aristobulus, and breaking up of the land, iv. 448 Taxation, iv. 158 «. , 16a n. Their position in Caesar's state, v. 417-419. Jews in Alexandria, v. 281, 418. In Rome, iv. 21o; v. 371 f. , 418
character, 5-7. Primitive races,
gj. Union under the leading of Rome,
ii. 46-58. Original restricted import of
the name, 169. Transference of the
name to the territory from the Sicilian
Straits to the Amus and Aesis, ii. 59.
Denoted after the acquisition of Sicily
the continental territory administered Juba, king of Numidia, v. 203, 230, 231, by the consuls, from the Sicilian Straits 264, 269, 288, 300
to the Alps, it 213 f. , 215 «. , 219 n. Judges, Carthaginian, ii. 147fl
How tar th1s geographical distinction Jugurtha at Numantia, iii. 230, 389. becomes a political one, ii. 213 Jugurthine war, iii. 388-408. Put to Northern Italy separated and first con death in Rome, iii. 409
stituted by Sulla a special province, Julia, Caesar's daughter, iv. 514. Death Pallia Cisalpina, ii. 215 «. Iv. 121 a
The possessions on the east coast of the
Adriatic included, ii. 218 n. Italian
communities beyond Italy Ariminum,
iiV205, 220. Messana, ii. 203. Ravenna, C. Julius Caesar, candidate for the consul ii. an. Sena Gallica, it 12, 220.
Practically bounded by the Po, iii. 518. Legal boundary of, changed by SuTa to the Rubico; and all Italians mac;! ' Roman citizens, iv. 122 ,/C, 132. Norti1 Italy united with Italy, v. qz1f. See Celts, Transpadane
Italians m1grated into the peninsula from
ship in 667, iii. 53a iv. 66, 67
C Julius Caesar, his character, iv. 278/; ▼• 305-314. Year of his birth, iv. 27S n.
His conduct after Sulla's death and during Lepidus' revolt, iv. 208. Sup ports the Plotian law, iv. 303. Serves in Mithradatic war, iv. 325. Brings Sullan partisans to trial, iv. 373. Sup-
of, v. t66
Julia, wife of Marius, iii. 453
Julii from Alba, 128. Family shrine at
Bovillae, 128
i. ;
y.
i. i. ;; i. Li.
:
;
ii. i.
i.
i.
f. i.
i.
i.
;
;
;
;
i. L /.
i. ;
i.
1. ;
i. I.
;
i. i.
f. i. i. f.
;
i.
\.
6
i.
INDEX
ports the Lex Gabinia, It. 393- His
gladiatorial games, iv. 399, 456. Ponti-
fex Maximus, iv. 460, 491. Conspires
with Catilina, iv. 466, 467, 482, 486, 487,
488. An opponent of Pompeius, iv. 493.
Praetor, iv. 497, 498. Governor in
Spain, iv. 503; v. 6, 7. Allied with
Pompeius and Crassus, iv. 504. /C Con-
sul, iv. 508. Governor of the two Gauls,
iv. 51a f. ; v. 2oo f. Conflicts with the
Gauls, v. 38-94. Crosses the Rhine, v.
°7 /,, 73- Invades Britain, v. 63-66.
Makes Gaul a Roman province, v. 94-
98. At Luca, v. 124 f. Asks for the
hand of Pompeius' daughter, v. 166.
Differences between him and Pompeius,
▼. 175/, -7B. A -80/ Recalled, v. 184.
His ultimatum, v. 186. /C Marches into
Italy, v. 190-192. His army, v. 195-199.
