The History of Rome

 Table of Contents

 Preface.

 The History of Rome. Preface.

 Book i. The arrival of Æneas in Italy, and his achievements there, the reign of Ascanius in Alba, and of the other Sylvian kings, his successors. Birt

 Book ii. Brutus binds the people, by an oath, never to restore the kingly government obliges Tarquinius Collatinus, on account of his relationship to

 Book iii. Dissensions about the agrarian laws. The Capitol seized by exiles and slaves. Quintius Cincinnatus called from the cultivation of his farm,

 Book iv. A law, permitting the intermarriage of plebeians with patricians, carried, after a violent struggle and strong opposition on the part of the

 Book v. On occasion of the siege of Veii, winter huts erected for the troops on account of which, being a new plan, the tribunes of the people endeav

 Book vi. Successful operations against the Æquans, and Volscians, and Prænestines. Four new tribes added. Marcus Manlius, who defended the Capitol, be

 Book vii. The offices of prætor and curule ædile instituted. A pestilential disorder rages in the city of which dies the celebrated Furius Camillus.

 Book viii. The Latines, in conjunction with the Campanians, revolt send ambassadors to Rome, to propose, as the condition of peace, that one of the c

 Book ix. Titus Veturius and Spurius Postumius, with their army, surrounded by the Samnites at the Caudine forks enter into a treaty, give six hundred

 Book x. Submission of the Marcians accepted. The college of Augurs augmented from four to nine. The law of appeal to the people carried by Valerius th

 Lost Books.

 HERE ten books of the original are lost, making a chasm of seventy-five years. The Translator's object being to publish the work of Livy only, he has

 Book xi.

 Book xii.

 Book xiii.

 Book xiv.

 Book xv.

 Book xvi.

 Book xvii.

 Book xviii.

 Book xix.

 Book xx.

 Book xxi. Rise of the second Punic war. Hannibal, contrary to treaty, passes the Iberus: besieges, and, after eight months, takes Saguntum. The Romans

 Book xxii. Hannibal, after a laborious march of four days and three nights, without repose, through the marshes, in which he lost an eye, arrives in E

 Book xxiii. The Campanians revolt to Hannibal. Hanno moves in the senate of Carthage to propose terms of peace to the Romans his proposition strenuou

 Book xxiv. Hieronymus, king of Syracuse, takes part with the Carthaginians is put to death by his subjects, on account of his tyranny and cruelty. Ti

 Book xxv. Publius Cornelius Scipio, afterwards called Africanus, elected ædile before he had attained the age required by the law. The citadel of Tare

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 Book xxvi. Hannibal encamps upon the banks of the Anio, within three miles of Rome. Attended by two thousand horsemen, he advances close to the Collin

 Book xxvii. Cneius Fulvius, proconsul, defeated by Hannibal, and slain: the consul Claudius Marcellus, engages him, with better success. Hannibal, rai

Book xviii.

Y.R. 496. 256. - Attilius Regulus, consul, having overcome the Carthaginians in a sea-fight, passes over into Africa: kills a serpent of prodigious magnitude, with great loss of his own men. Y.R. 497. 255:- The senate, on account of his successful conduct of the war, not appointing him a successor, he writes to them, complaining; and, among other reasons for desiring to be recalled, alleges, that his little farm, being all his subsistence, was going to ruin, owing to the mismanagement of hired stewards. Y.R. 498. 254. - A memorable instance of the instability of fortune exhibited in the person of Regulus, who is overcome in battle, and taken prisoner, by Xanthippus, a Lacedæmonian general. Y.R. 499. 253. - The Roman fleet shipwrecked; which disaster entirely reverses the good fortune which had hitherto attended their affairs. Y.R. 500. 252. - Titus Coruncanius, the first high priest chosen from among the commons. Y.R. 501. 251. - P. Sempronius Sophus, and M. Valerius Maximus, censors, examine into the state of the senate, and expel thirteen of the members of that body. They hold a lustrum, and find the number of citizens to be two hundred and ninety-seven thousand seven hundred and ninety-seven. Y.R. 502. 250. - Regulus, being sent by the Carthaginians to Rome to treat for peace, and an exchange of prisoners, binds himself by oath to return, if these objects be not attained; dissuades the senate from agreeing to the propositions; and then, in observance of his oath, returning to Carthage, is put to death by torture.