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  1. List of moneyers. 211-188 BC: First Denarii to the Peace of Apamea. 188-146 BC: Peace of Apamea - Sack of Carthage and Corinth. 145-106 BC: To Marius' first consulate. 106-92 BC: Marius' consulates to the Social War. 92-79 BC: Social war through Sulla's dictatorship. 78-59 BC: Pompey, Lepidus to Caesar's first consulship.

  2. Commune of Rome, an attempt to re-establish a republican form of government in Rome during the 12th century. The regime established by Cola di Rienzo (May-December 1347) Roman Republic (1798–1799), a state that existed in Italy from 1798–1800 as a client republic under the French Directory. Roman Republic (1849–1850), a short-lived ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RepublicRepublic - Wikipedia

    A republic, based on the Latin phrase res publica ('public affair'), is a state in which political power rests with the public through their representatives —in contrast to a monarchy. [1] [2] Representation in a republic may or may not be freely elected by the general citizenry. In many historical republics, representation has been based on ...

  4. In 393 BC, Marcus Cornelius P.f. P. n. Maluginensis was elected suffect censor to replace the deceased censor Gaius Iulius Iullus. In 351 BC, Gaius Marcius Rutilus was elected as the first plebeian censor. According to the Lex Publilia, since 339 BC at least one of the censors had to be plebeian. In 312 BC, Appius Claudius Caecus was elected ...

  5. The continued use of the term 'German Empire', Deutsches Reich, by the Weimar Republic ... conjured up an image among educated Germans that resonated far beyond the institutional structures Bismarck created: the successor to the Roman Empire; the vision of God's Empire here on earth; the universality of its claim to suzerainty; and a more prosaic but no less powerful sense, the concept of a ...

  6. A Roman dictator was an extraordinary magistrate in the Roman Republic endowed with full authority to resolve some specific problem to which he had been assigned. He received the full powers of the state, subordinating the other magistrates, consuls included, for the specific purpose of resolving that issue, and that issue only, and then dispensing with those powers immediately.

  7. According to Roman tradition, the Republic began in 509 BCE when a group of noblemen overthrew the last king of Rome. The Romans replaced the king with two consuls—rulers who had many of the same powers as the king but were elected to serve one-year terms.