- In
Ancient Rome, a
decury (Latin decuria, plural:
decuriae) was a
group of ten people,
ranged under one chief, or commander,
called a decurio. In Roman...
- Many
tribal names are
known from
Roman civitates and the
number of
their decuriae,
formed of the dis****d
tribes in Illyria. The
Albani (Latinized form...
- of one
hundred members, was
divided into ten
decuriae (groups of ten); and from each of
these decuriae one
senator was
nominated as decurio. Each of...
-
partly fortnightly and
partly w****ly.
Psalms 1 to 108 are
divided into ten
decuriæ, one of which, in its
numerical order,
divided into
three Nocturns, is...
- the
invasion of
Macedonia by the
invading Aetolians. The
Ardiaei had 20
decuriae. The
ancient geographer Strabo listed the
Ardiaei as one of the
three strongest...
- six
according to Niebuhr, one day for each of the six
Latin and
Alban decuriae.
According to
different records 47 or 53
boroughs took part in the festival...
-
subdivided into 5
civitates and 927
decuriae. The
conventus Naroniti**** was
subdivided into 13
civitates and 540
decuriae. The
conventus Scardonit**** was...
-
apparitores ****isted the magistrates.
There were four
occupational grades (
decuriae)
among them. The highest-ranked were the scribae, the
clerks or public...
- had been led by
their chief Bato, and
their relatively low
total of 103
decuriae likely reflects... Wilkes, J. J. The Illyrians, 1992, p. 207, ISBN 0-631-19807-5...
- had been led by
their chief Bato, and
their relatively low
total of 103
decuriae likely reflects..." Wilkes, J. J. The Illyrians, 1992, p. 207, ISBN 0-631-19807-5...