- The
socii (English: /ˈsoʊʃiaɪ/ SOH-shee-eye) or
foederati (English: /ˌfɛdəˈreɪtaɪ/ FED-ə-RAY-ty) were
confederates of Rome and
formed one of the three...
-
Socii navales or "naval allies", were a
class of the
socii or
foederati (allies) of Rome, that
provided naval support. A
large number of them were Gr****...
-
state that was
allied to Rome via
treaty were ****igned the
status of
socii.
Socii (also
known as foederati)
could obtain certain legal rights of under...
- east of Iași. It is
composed of four villages: Călugăr, Frumușica,
Socii Noi and
Socii Vechi.
Dimitru Marchitan Ion
Dumeniuc Results of Po****tion and Housing...
- as foedus, with Rome.
During the
Roman Republic, the term
identified the
socii, but
during the
Roman Empire, it was used to
describe foreign states, client...
- word "social"
derives from the
Latin word
socii ("allies"). It is
particularly derived from the
Italian Socii states,
historical allies of the
Roman Republic...
- of
roughly equal size, the ala,
recruited from Rome's
Italian allies, or
socii. The
latter were
about 150
autonomous states which were
bound by a treaty...
- of the
Italian peninsula meant that half of its army was
provided by the
Socii.
According to Polybius, Rome
could draw on 770,000 men at the beginning...
- (338–88 BC) to
denote a
military formation composed of
conscripts from the
socii, Rome's
Italian military allies. A
normal consular army
during the period...
-
second half of the 2nd
century BC the
Italics without Roman citizenship (
socii)
began to ask for citizenship,
which they
obtained after a hard and bloody...