Difference between revisions of "IRT022 (Q77)"

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(‎Created claim: Translation EN (P11): To Emperor Caesar, son of deified Antoninus, brother of deified Verus, the greatest victor in Parthia , grandson of deified Hadrian, great-grandson of deified Trajan the victor in Parthia, great-great...)
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Property / Translation EN: To Emperor Caesar, son of deified Antoninus, brother of deified Verus, the greatest victor in Parthia , grandson of deified Hadrian, great-grandson of deified Trajan the victor in Parthia, great-great-grandson of deified Nerva, Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus, chief priest, holding tribunician power for the 24th time, acclaimed victor five times, consul three times, father of the country; the two statues whose erection Anicia Pudentilla ordered in her will at the expenditure of 30,000 sesterces, Manlia Macrina, her mother and heiress, had made at the additional cost of eight thousand sesterces, with Caius Manilius Manilianus, her son-in-law, in charge [of 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 14:37, 18 October 2013

Dedication of statues to Marcus Aurelius
Language Label Description Also known as
English
IRT022
Dedication of statues to Marcus Aurelius

    Statements

    IRT022
    0 references
    HD025840
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    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
    To Emperor Caesar, son of deified Antoninus, brother of deified Verus, the greatest victor in Parthia , grandson of deified Hadrian, great-grandson of deified Trajan the victor in Parthia, great-great-grandson of deified Nerva, Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus, chief priest, holding tribunician power for the 24th time, acclaimed victor five times, consul three times, father of the country; the two statues whose erection Anicia Pudentilla ordered in her will at the expenditure of 30,000 sesterces, Manlia Macrina, her mother and heiress, had made at the additional cost of eight thousand sesterces, with Caius Manilius Manilianus, her son-in-law, in charge [of the work]
    1 reference
    2009
    J. M. Reynolds
    London
    King's College London