- The
auxilia (Latin: [au̯kˈs̠ɪlia]; lit. 'auxiliaries') were
introduced as non-citizen
troops attached to the
citizen legions by
Augustus after his reorganisation...
-
Auxilia palatina (sg.:
auxilium palatinum) were
infantry units of the Late
Roman army,
first raised by
Constantine I as part of the new
field army he...
- legionaries, the
auxilia provided virtually all the army's
cavalry (heavy and light),
light infantry,
archers and
other specialists. The
auxilia were organised...
- Sefularo,
Masechaba (25
November 2017). "Meet Zimbabwe's new
first lady
Auxilia Mnangagwa". EWN
Eyewitness News.
Retrieved 28
November 2017. Mahr, Krista...
- This
article lists auxilia, non-legionary
auxiliary regiments of the
imperial Roman army,
attested in the
epigraphic record, by
Roman province of deployment...
-
Exercitus Britannicus[citation needed],
consisted mostly of
cohorts of
auxilia. The
strategic reserve comprised three legions based in Ebura**** (York)...
-
Roman imperial period, with the
garrison later reduced to two,
alongside auxilia formations of the
Roman army. The
major town of each nome (administrative...
-
eventually be
taken up by
contingents of
allied auxiliary troops,
called auxilia.
Auxilia contained immunes (specialist units),
engineers and pioneers, artillerymen...
-
staff (including
military units) ****igned to them. The
names of
several auxilia palatina resemble that of the
Attacotti who were
mentioned by Ammi****...
- The
Regii or
Reges was a
Germanic auxilia palatina (light infantry) unit of the Late
Roman army,
active between the 4th and the 5th century.
There was...