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Examples

  • T. Otacilius, the propraetor, announced that Hiero's kingdom was being devastated by a Carthaginian fleet, and when he was preparing to render him the assistance he asked for, he received news that another fully equipped fleet was riding at anchor off the Aegates, and when they heard that he was occupied with the defence of the Syracusan shore they would at once attack Lilybaeum and the rest of the Roman province.

    The History of Rome, Vol. III 1905

  • But in their year of office we were utterly defeated off the Aegates.

    The History of Rome, Vol. III 1905

  • Their main anxiety was to secure Lilybaeum, and the prisoners were of opinion that the storm which had separated them from the rest had also driven that fleet up to the Aegates.

    The History of Rome, Vol. III 1905

  • Remember the Aegates and Eryx, and all you had to go through for four-and-twenty years.

    The History of Rome, Vol. III 1905

  • One might, of course, compare the naval defeat of the Carthaginians at the Aegates, which broke their power to such an extent that they gave up Sicily and Sardinia and submitted to the payment of tribute and a war indemnity; or, again, the battle which they lost in Africa, in which Hannibal himself was crushed.

    The History of Rome, Vol. III 1905

  • He drew an omen and declared that the gods had vouchsafed the same auspices to them as those under which their fathers fought at the Aegates.

    The History of Rome, Vol. IV 1905

  • Carthage seized control of the city in 260 BC, subsequently making it an important naval base, but ceded it to Rome in 241 BC following the Battle of the Aegates in the First Punic War.

    WN.com - Articles related to Madonna turns photographer 2010

  • Carthage seized control of the city in 260 BC, subsequently making it an important naval base, but ceded it to Rome in 241 BC following the Battle of the Aegates in the First Punic War.

    WN.com - Articles related to Madonna turns photographer 2010

  • I shall be glad to learn whether the earth has suddenly within the last twenty years produced a different breed of Carthaginans, or whether they are the same as those who fought at the Aegates, and whom you allowed to depart from Eryx on payment of eighteen denarii a head, and whether this Hannibal is, as he gives out, the rival of Hercules in his journeys, or whether he has been left by his father to pay tax and tribute and to be the slave of the Roman people.

    The History of Rome, Vol. III 1905

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