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Examples

  • Beginning of the amalgamation of northern and central Italy with the imperial administration on Sicilian lines: a system of general vicariates under imperial vicars, each city with an imperial podestà (generally Apulians, and often relatives of Frederick).

    1226 2001

  • But the Apulians are not barbarians, and what you describe is pure barbarism.

    Fortune's Favorites McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1993

  • One of the objections to providing troops raised in the current spate of letters from the magistrates of the Samnites, the Apulians, the Marsi, and others "— he took a sheaf of small rolls from one of his clerks and showed it to the House —" concerns the legality of our asking the Italian Allies to provide troops for campaigns outside the borders of Italy and Italian Gaul.

    The First Man in Rome McCullough, Colleen, 1937- 1990

  • The lands of the Apulians and of Samnium were utterly laid waste; but in neither quarter were the enemy to be found.

    The History of Rome, Books 01 to 08 Titus Livius

  • The Lucanians and Apulians, nations who, until that time, had no kind of intercourse with the Roman people, proposed an alliance with them, promising a supply of men and arms for the war: a treaty of friendship was accordingly concluded.

    The History of Rome, Books 01 to 08 Titus Livius

  • All Roman virtues are attributed to the Apulians, as in _Od. _ i.

    The Student's Companion to Latin Authors Thomas Ross Mills

  • And before this the Calabrians and Apulians, since no Goths were present in their land, had willingly submitted themselves to Belisarius, both those on the coast and those who held the interior.

    Procopius History of the Wars, Books V. and VI. Procopius

  • But the circumstances of the Samnites, who could with difficulty, at that period, support a war in which themselves were engaged, render it more probable that they did not make war on the Apulians, but that both nations were in arms against the Romans at the same time.

    The History of Rome, Books 01 to 08 Titus Livius

  • And on the right of this are the Calabrians, Apulians, and Samnites, and next to them dwell the Piceni, whose territory extends as far as the city of

    Procopius History of the Wars, Books V. and VI. Procopius

  • Some tribes in the South of Italy, however, among which were the Lucanians, the Apulians, and the Bruttians, went over to the Carthaginians.

    General History for Colleges and High Schools Philip Van Ness Myers

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