INDEX. ABERRIGINES, i. 395. Aborigines, their appearance in Italy, i. 272; they expel the Siceli from Acca Larentia, i. 385. Accius, his poem of 'Annales,' i. 55. Acesta, i. 318. Acestes, i. 318. Acheron, a river in Italy, ii. 437. Acron, king of Cænina, i. 421, ii. 277. Actium, temple at, founded by Æneas, i. 312. T. Æbutius, a Roman master of the horse, ii. 30. Ediles, two plebeian conceded, ii. 72; election of, transferred from the Ægesta, its foundation, i. 317. Ægestus, son of Numitor, i. 366. L. Æmilius defeats the Etruscans, ii. 145. Mamercus Æmilius, a Roman dictator, defeats the Veientes, ii. 275; Q. Æmilius, a consul, ii. 477. Enaria, named from Æneas, i. 325. Enea, in Macedonia, derived from Æneas, i. 308. Æneas, legend of, treated by Bochart, i. 5; time of his landing in Latium, ib.; the island of Prochyta, ib.; he lands at Laurentum, in Latium, Eneas Silvius, king of Alba, i. 362. Eneas, the tactician, his work 'On the Defence of Towns,' ii. 310. Æolic migration, the, ii. 550. Equians, the, their hostilities with the Romans, ii. 108, 127, 140, 145, 157, Equimelium, ii. 272. Erarium, place of deposit for senatus-consulta, i. 142; on the Capitol, Eschylus, his Persæ,' ii. 503. Esculapius. his statue brought to Rome, ii. 486. Æsymneteia, a Greek office, ii. 26, 229. Africa, visited by Greek and Trojan heroes i. 316. Agathocles, on the foundation of Rome, i. 398, 399. Agrarian laws, Roman, the first proposed, ii. 129; discussions, &c. relating Agriculture encouraged at Rome, i. 418. Menenius Agrippa, his apologue of the Belly and Limbs, i. 257; ii. 66, Agrippa, king of Alba, i. 365. Ahala, origin of the name, ii. 271. Ahenobarbus, origin of the name, ii. 32, n. 105. Aius Locutius, temple built to, ii. 339. Alba Longa, the metropolis of Rome, i. 267, 373; founded by Ascanius, i. 459. Alban kingdom, its duration, i. 367; the accounts of it unhistorical, i. 369. Alban lake, portentous swelling of, ii. 300, 301; the story examined, L. Albinius conveys the Vestal Virgins, &c. to Care, on the taking of Albula, primitive name of the Tiber, i. 364. Album, a whitened board, i. 155, n. 80. Alcæus, ii. 552, 553. Alcenor, an Argive champion, ii. 514. Alcimus, on the foundation of Rome, i. 400. Alemæonidæ, ii. 513, 532. Alexander of Epirus, his expedition to Italy, i. 58; ii. 435-439. Alexander the Great, the supposed embassy of the Romans to him, i. 60; Alexander Polyhistor, on the Alban kings, i. 372. Alfius, his history of the Punic war, i. 39, n., 99. Alienus, L., a plebeian ædile, ii. 191. Allia, battle of, ii. 324; its topography, ii. 342. Allifæ, capture of, ii. 460. Amasis, king of Egypt, ii. 513, 518. Ambracia, its memorials of Æneas, i. 312. Amulius, king of Alba, i. 366; he usurps his mother's throne, i. 377. Anarchy at Rome for five years, consequent on proposition of the Licinian Anaxandrides, king of Sparta, ii. 513. Anchiasmos visited by Æneas, i. 313. Anchises, his tombs, i. 340. Anchisia, Mount, in the territory of Mantinea, i. 311. Anius, king of Delos, i. 309. Anna, sister of Dido, i. 317. Annales, meaning of the term, i. 90, 91. Annales pontificum, i. 90, 155; also called Annales Maximi, i. 155; origin Annalis lex, i. 90. Annalistic style, contrasted with legendary, ii. 360. Annalists, Roman, i. 90; meaning of the term in Niebuhr, i. 92. Annius, L., his demands on behalf of the Latins, ii. 422. Annonæ præfectus, ii. 269. Antenor, his treachery, i. 305. Antias, Q. Valerius, his history of Rome, i. 25; his knowledge of the early period, i. 88. Antiates, the, defeated by Cominius, ii. 84. Antigonus, his probable time, i. 94; he treated the early Roman history, Antiochus, his statement respecting the Ausones and Opici, i. 129, 275, 276. Antium, stipulated for by Rome in a treaty with Carthage, ii. 3; repaired Antonius, one of the decemviri, ii. 209. Anxur, capture of, ii. 289; recovered by the Volscians, and recaptured, ii. 299. Apollo, his oracle at Delphi consulted by the Romans, ii. 300, 301; colossal Apollodorus, on the foundation of Rome, i. 398. Appian, his treatment of early Roman history, i. 74; on the Alban kings, Appian aqueduct, ii. 481; Appian road, ib. Apulians, the, an alliance with them formed for the first time by the Aquillius, consul, defeats the Hernicans, ii. 128. Ara Maxima, its origin, i. 289. Arcadians, their colony to Latium, i. 283. Archias communicates to Herodotus information respecting the siege of Archidamus III., his expedition to Tarentum, i. 58; ii. 434. Archilochus, a Greek poet, mentions Gyges, king of Lydia, ii. 552. Archo, the wife of Poris, i. 220. Archons of Athens, ii. 548. Ardea, besieged by Tarquinius Superbus, i. 516; refers a dispute with Aremulus, king of Alba, i. 365; his death, ib.; his subaqueous palace, Argives and Lacedæmonians, combat between 300 champions on each Argo, its course by the western coast of Italy, i. 331. Argolis, invasion of, by Cleomenes, ii. 517. Argus, the hero, burning of his grove, ii. 517. Aricia, its foundation, i. 363; refers a dispute with Ardea to the arbitra- Arion and the Dolphin, ii. 537. Aristodemus Malacus, history of, i. 198; he shelters Tarquinius Superbus, Aristogiton, see Harmodius. Ariston, king of Sparta, ii. 513. Aristotle, his account of the capture of Rome by the Gauls, i. 59; the Aristus mentions a Roman embassy to Alexander the Great, i. 60, 61. Arrian, his account of the embassies from the western nations to Alexander Arsia, battle of, ii. 11, and n. 37. Aruns, of Clusium, ii. 322. Arval Brothers, i. 386. Ascanius, the son of Æneas, i. 307, 352; his reign, i. 353. Asclepiades, mentions a Roman embassy to Alexander the Great, i. 60, 61. Asellio, P. Sempronius, his history of his own time, i. 27; his views upon Asylum of Romulus, i. 267, n. 3, i. 419. Aternian law, ii. 193, 194. Athenian history, notices of, ii. 508, &c., 548, &c. Atinius, his dream, ii. 104. Atossa, daughter of Cyrus, ii. 504. Atrium Cacî, i. 240. Atrium Regium at Rome, i. 1II. T. Pomponius Atticus, his chronological work, i. 174; his account of the great Roman families, i. 191. Atys, an Alban king, i. 364. Aufidius, Cn., his Roman history, in the Greek language, i. 26. Augurs, their records, i. 169. Augury at the foundation of Rome, i. 390. Q. Aulius, master of the horse, killed in the second Samnite war, ii. 459. Aventine hill, fortified by Ancus Marcius, i. 466; its addition to the city, Aventinus, king of Alba, i. 366. Bachofen, see Gerlach. Baiæ, its name connected with Eneas, i. 325. Bail, first instance at Rome of a person accused of a public crime being Banier, Abbé, on the interpretation of mythology, i. 345. Beaufort, Louis de, his Dissertation on the uncertainty of the early Roman Becker, his work on Roman Antiquities, i. 12; thinks that the laws Bellovesus and Sigovesus, their migration in the time of Tarquinius Bias of Priene, his advice to the Ionians, ii. 525. Bochart, on the legend of Æneas, i. 5. Bolæ, capture of, ii. 294. Bosporus, Thracian, bridge made across it by order of Darius, ii. 505. Brazen statue, the earliest made at Rome, ii. 135. Brennus, king of the Gauls, at the capture of Rome, his reported excla- mation of Væ victis! ii. 333, 346. 002 |