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o ^^ROMAN AFRICAyi AN OUTLINE OF THE HISTORY OF THE ROMAN OCCUPATION OF NORTH AFRICA BASED CHIEFLY UPON INSCRIPTIONS AND MONUMENTAL REMAINS IN THAT COUNTRY BY ALEXANDER GRAHAM JF.S.A., F.R..I.B.A* WITH THIRTY REPRODUCTIONS OF ORIGINAL DRAWINGS BY THE AUTHOR, AND TWO MAPS ^LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO, 39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON

Roman Africa - History of the Roman Occupation of North Africa - A. Graham 1902

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minds
from
a
somewhat
analogous
process
which
was
being
evolved
nearly
2000
years
ago
in
Gades.
Xerxes
declined
to
accept
such
excuses,
and
ordered
him
to
be
beheaded.
{VUnivers
Towns
in
the
African
Provinces
career
recognised
supremacy
Phoenician
colony
settled
at
Carthage.
The
river
Tusca,
sepa-ating
Carthage
on
the
west
as
one
of
the
chief
Phoenician
pitched
recently
fought
under
the
banner
of
Syphax.
The
opposing
armies
met
at
Zama,
which
was
then
and the
With
Punic
Carthage
a
century
elapsed
before
Julius
Caesar
landed
on
river,
which
rises
in
the
beautiful
valley
of
Khamisa
in
Algeria,
creature
with
balista
are
in
good
condition,
and
are
occupied
as
century,
is
a
portion
of
a
large
compo-ition
representing
a
hunting
scene,
the
Hadrian,
says
that
the
streets
Algeria,
not
 Eurfrom
the
village
of
Frenda,
is
a
group
of
smaller
tombs
in
the
form
of
low
pyramids
supported
on
square,
of the
same
system
of
supply
as
to
bear
arms
in'
consisted
usually
of
300
men
of
approved
military
experience,
who
went
forth
The
peculiarities
f
this
architectural
composition
are
the
exceptional
width
of
the
frieze,
some
of
his
successors-
hour,
poor
citizens
were
allowed
their
doles
of
wheat
at
half
the
current
prices
Egypt
seemed
immi*
nent
But
It is als
the
may
to
the
proximity
of
the
marble
quarries,
receiving
the
have
divided
thirty
tribes
or
 
of food
and treeless
pedestal
bearing
a
monumental
conveying
the
water
had
to
pass
through
an
adjacent
mountain
by
means
of
a
tunnel.
The
contractor,
it
appears,
commenced
his
borings
at
both
ends,
and,
whether
through
cai:elessness
or
neglect
to
says
that
the
boundary
country
around
is
covered
with
gardens,
and
produces
a
saffron
of
the
greatest
beneath
the
surface
kings
VIII K OCTOBR
over
the
plain,
indicated
more
by
undulations
Leptis Magna
early
pagan
contro-ersialists
used
to
rank
Apuleius
with
ApoUonius
of
Tyana
as
a
thaumaturgist,
citing
honoured
her
memory,
in
accordance
with
the
superstition
of
the
times,
by
ranking
her
among
the
deities,
and
associating
her
name
with
his
own
in
an
inscriptionon
a
temple
still
forming
an
attractive
memorials of
CASTA BONA INVIOLANS
stopped
at
home
and
any
active
part
in
securing
a
victorj'^
After
a
lapse
of
fifteen
years
it
was
reconstituted
by
Valerian
had
prevailed
from
an
early
period.
Polybius,'
the
earliest
and
perhaps
the
only
'
in this
V MACEDONIC
a
con-picuous
position,
and
as
there
times
as
wife,
and
raised
this
Faustina,
And
death of
the
Emperor.
The
stern
rule
of
Severus
and
his
activity
as
a
soldier
had
nothing
in
common
AVG
Alexander
a
memorial
of
an
ill-starred
princess,
whom
destiny
removed
from
the
gaieties
of
Rome
to
gratify
purpose
of
personal
aggrandisement
In
testimony
art
of
revolt,
same men
word,
after
a
short
two
high-minded
senators,
Empire seem
PROCOS
IVLI
PHILIPPI
RES P CVICVLITANOR
The
gentle
rule
of
the
Antonines
out
among
the
native
population.
We
then
find
him
doing
ET
NVMERIANI
DIVI
CARI
GENITORIS
EORVM
TEMPLVM
military
authority
necessitated
the
use
of
a
distinct
title
for
the
repre-entative
V. P.
the
restoration
of
peace
throughout
ad-inistra
affecting
every
distinction
pater
Patrice
is
omitted,
and
dominus
noster
\s
abuse
of
power
exercised
by
Roman
Empresses
in
furtherance
of
ambitious
views
throne
she
beheld
the
lifelong
efforts.
The
features
of
Helena
are
familiar
to
us
through
the
same
city
records
the
dedication
of
a
explanation
is
given,
way.
QVINTO
legions
which
had
preserved
England
from
the
barbarism
of
the
northern
tribes
was
pre-aring
to
cross
the
jewellery
and
specimens
of
the
plastic
art,
Hellenism
exercised
an
irresist-ble
attraction,
testified
in
a
measure
by
Carthaginian
transmitted
to
us
almost
as
cause
of
human
progress.
The
civilising
spoken by
in
La
Plata,*
etc.
8vo.,
9s.
6d.
net.
Froude
(James
A.).
Oceana
: or
England
and
her
Col-nies.
With
9
Illustrations.
Cr.
8vo.,3s.
6d.
The
English
in
the
WORKS.
II
Sport
Century.
Crown
Svo.
Cabinet
Edition,
65.
AND
GENERAL
WORKS.
31
Miseellaneous
and
Days'.
Cr.
8vo.,
55.
Frost.
Salisbury
Cathedral.
Crown
8vo.,
31.
6if.
WORKS.
Misoellaneous