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Examples
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Titus Livius 59 BC - 17 AD wrote a monumental history of Rome, from its mythical founding up to the death of Augustus Caesar.
Dr. Philip Neches: Lessons From Machiavelli Dr. Philip Neches 2011
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The house is crowded; the vast multitude looks, listens, loves; all consciences, deeply moved, throw out their internal fire; all eyes glisten; the huge, thousand-headed beast is there, the Mob of Burke, the Plebs of Titus Livius, the Fex Urbis of Cicero.
Later Articles and Reviews W.B. Yeats 2000
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The great Roman historian Titus Livius, or Livy 59 B.C.A.D. 17 also wrote about Spartacus, but that section of his work survives only in a sketchy summary probably written centuries later.
The Spartacus War Barry Strauss 2009
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The great Roman historian Titus Livius, or Livy 59 B.C.A.D. 17 also wrote about Spartacus, but that section of his work survives only in a sketchy summary probably written centuries later.
The Spartacus War Barry Strauss 2009
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The great Roman historian Titus Livius, or Livy 59 B.C.A.D. 17 also wrote about Spartacus, but that section of his work survives only in a sketchy summary probably written centuries later.
The Spartacus War Barry Strauss 2009
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The great Roman historian Titus Livius, or Livy 59 B.C.A.D. 17 also wrote about Spartacus, but that section of his work survives only in a sketchy summary probably written centuries later.
The Spartacus War Barry Strauss 2009
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I grew up with Titus Livius, Polybius and then Tacitus, Suetonius, while from modern literature I, Claudius and various other Rome classic novels - though translated, my Latin is rudimentary, took some classes in school but not that much, however Romanian is very close in many ways
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Titus Livius as well as all other historians affirm that nothing is more uncertain and inconstant than the multitude; for it appears from what he relates of the actions of men, that in many instances the multitude, after having condemned a man to death, bitterly lamented it, and most earnestly wished him back.
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We make not these observations to detect errors in Dubos; there is no merit in having seen this antique monument which he had not seen; and besides, a very solid and just mind might be deceived by a passage of Titus Livius.
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Titus Livius, who never fails to instruct us in the manners and customs of the Romans, and who, in that respect is more useful than the ingenious and satirical
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