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This super rare figure, which recently sold for $26,000 at auction, is an original Jawa from the first batch of 12 Star Wars figures made in 1978, complete with its vinyl cape. The cool part?
A legate (Latin: legatus, Classical Latin: [ɫeːˈɡaːtʊs]) was a high-ranking Roman military officer in the Roman army, equivalent to a high-ranking general officer of modern times. Initially used to delegate power, the term became formalised under Augustus as the officer in command of a Roman legion .
Then Maximus was commissioned legatus legionis or commander of Legio III Gallica, which was stationed in Syria. Alföldy dates his tenure as commander from around the year 150 to 153. [7] After returning to Rome, he was appointed prefectus aerarum Saturninus, which Alföldy dates between the years 153 and 156. [8] His consulate followed.
legatus legionis: c. 80 CIL III, 2864: Titus Julius Maximus Manlianus: legatus legionis: c. 105 Moesia Superior CIL XII, 3167 [...] Serenus [2] legatus legionis: c. 160 Moesia Superior AE 1965, 243: Gaius Julius Avitius Alexianus [3] legatus legionis: c. 195 Moesia Superior AE 1921, 64: Gaius Petillius Firmus: military tribune c. 70 AE 1967, 355
Thus the stone is dedicated to the healing gods Aesculapius and Hygieia.. The donor of the stone, Quintus Venidius Rufus Marius Maximus Lucius Calvinianus had served as legatus in the Legio I Minervia and was at the time of the donation legatus pro praetore or governor of Cilicia.
In 2025, the works unbound from copyright cap off the 1920s with literature, characters and more from 1929 entering the public domain.
This page turner works on any capacitive screen (i.e. screens that operate using the body's electrical currents), and includes a clip that goes onto the screen and remote you use can across a ...
Dux (/ d ʌ k s, d ʊ k s /, pl.: ducēs) is Latin for "leader" (from the noun dux, ducis, "leader, general") and later for duke and its variant forms (doge, duce, etc.).During the Roman Republic and for the first centuries of the Roman Empire, dux could refer to anyone who commanded troops, both Roman generals and foreign leaders, but was not a formal military rank.