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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CossutiaCossutia - Wikipedia

    Cossutia was a Roman woman who became engaged to Julius Caesar prior to his reaching adulthood. There has been debate among historians on whether the marriage actually occurred.

  2. Learn about the three official wives of Julius Caesar: Cornelia, Pompeia, and Calpurnia. Find out why some sources mention a fourth wife, Cossutia, who may have been his fiancée before Cornelia.

  3. substantivo feminino Condição de quem se encontra sob a proteção de outra pessoa ou instituição; tutela: ele tem a custódia da filha mais nova. Ação ou efeito de proteger, de livrar algo ou alguém do perigo; guarda. [Religião] Recipiente circular, normalmente feito em ouro ou prata, em que a hóstia fica depositada para depois ser ...

  4. Died. 84 BC. Pisa. Known for. Possibly being the first wife of Julius Caesar. Spouse. Julius Caesar (disputed) Cossutia was a Roman woman who became engaged to Julius Caesar prior to his reaching adulthood. There has been debate among historians on whether the marriage actually occurred.

  5. A questão que nos coloca parece dizer respeito à diferença entre 1) as formas da primeira e terceira pessoas do singular do pretérito imperfeito do conjuntivo (ou subjuntivo, no Brasil) de verbos de tema em -a- (ex.: lavar - Se eu lavasse o casaco com água, ele estragava-se) e em -e- (ex.: comer-Esperava que ele comesse a sopa toda; Não queria que ele vendesse a casa) e 2) as formas da ...

  6. chapter: JULIUS CAESAR, the divine, 1 lost his father 2 when he was in the sixteenth year of his age; 3 and the year following, being nominated to the office of high-priest of Jupiter , 4 he repudiated Cossutia, who was very wealthy, although her family belonged only to the equestrian order, and to whom he had been contracted when he was a mere ...

  7. Among Roman families of the late Republic and early Principate few are so intriguing to the cultural historian as those who had interests in the Eastern Mediterranean, and contributed in one way or another to the gradual Hellenization of Rome, and even, to some extent, the Romanization of the East; while it must be of interest to those concerned with social and economic history to see what can ...