- the islands. The name '
cursus' was
suggested in 1723 by
William Stukeley, the antiquarian, who
compared the
Stonehenge cursus to a
Roman chariot-racing...
-
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to
Cursus honorum.
Diagram of the
cursus honorum Archived 2008-12-25 at the
Wayback Machine Livius.org:
Cursus honorum...
-
Cursus (Latin: way):
Cursus — a type of
neolithic monuments on
British islands Cursus or
Cursus publicus —
governmental transportation system in Ancient...
-
extent of the
cursus publicus is
shown in the
Tabula Peutingeriana, a map of the
Roman road
network dating from
around AD 400. The
cursus publicus was...
- The
Latin word '
cursus' can be
generally translated into
English as 'course'. The word
derives from currere, to run. It may be applied, for example, to...
- The
Stonehenge Cursus (sometimes
known as the
Greater Cursus) is a
large Neolithic cursus monument on
Salisbury plain, near to
Stonehenge in Wiltshire...
- The
Dorset Cursus is a
Neolithic cursus monument that
spans across 10 km (6¼ miles) of the
chalk downland of
Cranborne Chase in east Dorset,
United Kingdom...
-
Cursus Barrows is the name
given to a
Neolithic and
Bronze Age
round barrow cemetery lying mostly south of the
western end of the
Stonehenge Cursus,...
- in Latin, 81
tomes in 85
volumes Scripturae sacrae cursus completus, 25
volumes Theologia cursus completus, 25
volumes Démonstration évangeliques des...
- and exits. The
terminal point of a
cursus is an area that is
either square or
rounded in shape. The
Newgrange cursus can be
found approximately 100m east...