Difference between revisions of "IRT330 (Q391)"

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(‎Created claim: Translation EN (P11): a. To Tiberius Caesar Augustus, son of the deified Augustus, grandson of deified Julius, chief priest, consul [for the fifth time], acclaimed victor for the eighth, holding tribunician power for the t...)
(‎Set a reference)
Property / Translation EN: a. To Tiberius Caesar Augustus, son of the deified Augustus, grandson of deified Julius, chief priest, consul [for the fifth time], acclaimed victor for the eighth, holding tribunician power for the thirty-seventh; Caius Rubellius Blandus, quaestor of deified Augustus, tribune of the people, praetor, consul, proconsul, priest, patron, using the income from land which he restored to the people of Lepcis, [saw to it] that all the streets of the city of Lepcis were paved with silex. Marcus Etrilius Lupercus, his legate (senatorial assistant) and civic patron [let the contracts for the work]. / reference
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Year: 2009
Publication title: IRT2009
Author: J. M. Reynolds
Place: London
Publisher: King's College London

Revision as of 08:08, 19 October 2013

Building dedication to Tiberius for road paving
Language Label Description Also known as
English
IRT330
Building dedication to Tiberius for road paving

    Statements

    IRT330
    0 references
    HD019659
    0 references
    Creative Commons licence Attribution UK 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/). All reuse or distribution of this work must contain somewhere a link back to the URL http://irt.kcl.ac.uk/
    0 references
    a. To Tiberius Caesar Augustus, son of the deified Augustus, grandson of deified Julius, chief priest, consul [for the fifth time], acclaimed victor for the eighth, holding tribunician power for the thirty-seventh; Caius Rubellius Blandus, quaestor of deified Augustus, tribune of the people, praetor, consul, proconsul, priest, patron, using the income from land which he restored to the people of Lepcis, [saw to it] that all the streets of the city of Lepcis were paved with silex. Marcus Etrilius Lupercus, his legate (senatorial assistant) and civic patron [let the contracts for the work].
    1 reference
    2009
    J. M. Reynolds
    London
    King's College London