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  2. Augury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augury

    The use of the word is usually associated with Latins as well as the earliest Roman citizens. Though some modern historians link the act of observing Auspices to the Etruscans, Cicero accounts in his text De Divinatione several differences between the auspicial of the Romans and the Etruscan system of interpreting the will of the gods.

  3. Augur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augur

    The Roman historian Livy stressed the importance of the augurs: "Who does not know that this city was founded only after taking the auspices, that everything in war and in peace, at home and abroad, was done only after taking the auspices?" [5]

  4. Maxima auspicia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxima_auspicia

    In ancient Roman religion and law, the auspicia maxima (also maxima auspicia) were the "greatest auspices," conferred on senior magistrates who held imperium: "auspicium and imperium were the twin pillars of the magistrate's power" ().

  5. College of Pontiffs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_of_Pontiffs

    Nevertheless, even in the late Republic it was still believed that the auspices ultimately resided with patrician magistrates, and certain ancient priesthoods: the Dialis, Martialis and Quirinalis flamines, and the college of the Salii were never opened to the plebeians. [5] The number of members in the College of Pontiffs grew over time.

  6. Auguraculum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auguraculum

    Within the auguraculum, the elected monarch, during the Roman Kingdom, was seated by the augurs with his face to the south. [4] A magistrate who was serving as a military commander also took daily auspices, and thus a part of camp-building while on campaign was the creation of a tabernaculum augurale. This augural tent was the center of ...

  7. Ursulines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ursulines

    The entire group of Ursulines were the first Roman Catholic nuns in what is now the United States. Both properties were part of the French colony of Louisiana (New France). They came to the country under the auspices of Pope Pius III and Louis XV of France.

  8. Haruspex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haruspex

    The Roman concept is directly derived from Etruscan religion, as one of the three branches of the disciplina Etrusca. The Latin terms haruspex and haruspicina are from an archaic word, hīra = "entrails, intestines" (cognate with hernia = "protruding viscera" and hira = "empty gut"; PIE *ǵʰer- ) and from the root spec- = "to watch, observe".

  9. Gromatici - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gromatici

    Equipment used by an ancient Roman land surveyor (gromaticus), found at the site of Aquincum, modern Budapest, Hungary. Gromatici (from Latin groma or gruma, a surveyor's pole) or agrimensores was the name for land surveyors amongst the ancient Romans. [1]