In general, see Price, 48; Fishwick, Vol 1, 1, 6–20; for details, Taylor, Chapter 2 and 3, passim. Attested statuary of Roman magistrates in Rome may well have been largely commissioned by Greek allies, unaware of the potential for controversy aroused by public display of "Hellenised" images of the Roman military aristocracy. See Christopher Hallett, The Roman Nude, Oxford University Press, 2005. (limited preview available) Books.Google.co.uk, citing descriptions in Plutarch, Lives, Flamininus, & Cicero, Rabiurus Postumus, 10.26
Books.Google.co.uk, Le Bohec, 249: limited preview available via Google Books
Books.Google.co.uk, Dixon, 78: limited preview available from Google Books
Jerome's interpretations of Imperial ceremonial are heavily reliant on Eusebius' polemical ecclesiastical-Imperial history. Price, 203 : limited preview available at Google Books Books.Google.co.uk
stoics.com
Gradel, 51, citing Cicero, De officiis, 3.80: Stoics.com (accessed 2 August 2009).
thelatinlibrary.com
Gradel, 265, citing the unreliable Historia Augusta, Antoninus Geta Aeli Spartiani, II, 8: (Latin version online at thelatinlibrary – TheLatinLibrary.com (accessed 18 August 2009). At the very least, the attribution confirms the later devaluation of divus as a divine category.
(Gaztelaniaz)Andreu Pintado, Javier; Pérex Agorreta, María J.. «Qvi tenditis? qvi genvs? vnde domo? Vascones en el Occidente Latino a través de la documentación epigráfica» VIII Congreso General de Historia de Navarra. I261 (76. urtea, 2015): 307-322. ISSN0032-8472..