Servius Tullius (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Servius Tullius" in English language version.

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books.google.com

  • Eleanor Huzar, in Temporini/Haase (eds), Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt, (ANRW), Sprache und Literatur (Literatur der julisch-claudischen und der flavischen Zeit), 1984, p. 623.[7] No evidence remains to attest the quality of Claudius' Etruscan scholarship or his grasp of the Etruscan language, despite his production of a multi-volume work, now lost, on Etruscan history.

escholarship.org

  • Feldherr, Andrew. Spectacle and Society in Livy's History. Berkeley: University of California Press, c1998 (online) [6]

persee.fr

  • Servius is credited as inventor of minted bronze coinage by Pliny the Elder, on the authority of Timaeus (circa 360 BC): Varro credits Servius with the first issues of minted silver coinage. See discussion in Crawford, Michael H., "The Early Roman Economy, 753–280 BC", Publications de l'École française de Rome, 1976, Volume 27 Numéro 1 pp. 197–207:[4]

tufts.edu

perseus.tufts.edu

  • Livy; Foster, Benjamin O. (tr.). The History of Rome. Retrieved Nov 9, 2019.
  • Livy; Foster, Benjamin O. (tr.). The History of Rome. Retrieved Nov 9, 2019.

uchicago.edu

penelope.uchicago.edu

  • Plutarch, Moralia, On the fortune of the Romans, 10, 64: available online (Loeb) at Thayer's website [1]
  • Plutarch, Moralia, On the fortune of the Romans, 10, 64: available online (Loeb) at Thayer's website [2]. Plutarch cites Valerius Antias, Fragment 12; in Peter, Frag. Hist. Rom. p. 154.
  • Plutarch, Moralia, On the fortune of the Romans, 10, 64: available online (Loeb) at Thayer's website [3]: see also Ovid, Fasti, 6.627 ff; Livy, 1#39|I.39; Pliny, Natural History, 36 & 70.27.204.
  • Cornell, pp. 146–148. cf. images of a "goddess at the window" and forms of ruler-marriage to a tutelary deity. Plutarch credits Servius with the appreciative foundation of a temple Fortuna Primigenia, and one to Fortuna Obsequens – and "the greater part" of her titles and honours: due gratitude from one who "through good fortune, had been promoted from the family of a captive enemy to the kingship"–see Plutarch, Moralia, On the fortune of the Romans, 10.58–63. English version (Loeb) at Thayer's website [5]. For possible locations of the Porta Fenestella and the associated Nova Via, see also T. P. Wiseman, "Where Was the Nova Via?", Papers of the British School at Rome, 72, 2004, pp. 167–183.
  • Plutarch, Moralia, On the fortune of the Romans, 10.58–63. English version (Loeb) at Thayer's website [8]

wikisource.org

en.wikisource.org

  • Livy, ab urbe condita libri, I
  • Livy gives her husband's name as Servius Tullius, chief man of Corniculum ("[…] qui princeps in illa urbe fuerat […]"); the son is named after the father. See Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.39. Dionysius offers a near identical version as "the most likely".
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.39.
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.39: see also Dionysius, 4.
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.40
  • Livy, 1.41.
  • Plutarch, Moralia, On the fortune of the Romans, 10, 64: available online (Loeb) at Thayer's website [3]: see also Ovid, Fasti, 6.627 ff; Livy, 1#39|I.39; Pliny, Natural History, 36 & 70.27.204.
  • Livy, 1.42
  • See Cornell, p. 179, who is citing Livy, 1.43, and Dionysius of Halicarnassus IV, 16–18. Descriptions of the armour and arms to be supplied by members of each class are almost certainly learned, speculative introjections by Livy and Dionysius.
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.44. The named regions, in this sequence (I–IV), are in Varro, Lingua Latina, 5. 45.
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.42, 1.46, 1.47.
  • Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.49