Sammlung

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, 1925 - Architecture - 483 pages

Ancient expertise on water and warfare.

Frontinus, Sextus Iulius, ca. AD 35-103, was a capable Roman civil officer and military commander. Praetor of the city in 70 and consul in 73 or 74, 98 and 100, he was, about the year 76, sent to Britain as governor. He quelled the Silures of Wales, and began to build a road through their territory; his place was taken by Agricola in 78. In 97 he was given the highly esteemed office of Manager of Aqueducts at Rome. He is known to have been an augur, being succeeded by his friend Pliny the Younger.

The two sides of Frontinus' public career are reflected in his two surviving works. Stratagems, written after 84, gives examples of military stratagems from Greek and Roman history, for the instruction of Roman officers, in three books; the fourth book is concerned largely with military discipline. The Aqueducts of Rome, written in 97-98, gives some historical details and a description of the aqueducts for the water supply of the city, with laws relating to them. Frontinus aimed at being useful and writes in a rather popular style which is both simple and clear.

 

Other editions - View all

Popular passages

Page xxxi - Parisinus is a parchment dating from the end of the tenth or the beginning of the eleventh century.
Page 446 - In setting3 ajutages also, care must be taken to set them on the level, and not place the one higher and the other lower down. The lower one will take in more ; the higher one will suck in less, because the current of water is drawn in by the lower one.
Page 49 - Crasso circumdatus, caesis captivorum pecorumque corporibus noctu replevit et supergressus est. 21. Idem in Vesuvio obsessus, ea parte, qua mons asperrimus erat ideoque incustoditus, ex vimine silvestri catenas conseruit; quibus demissus non solum evasit, verum etiam ex alio latere Clodium ita terruit, ut aliquot cohortes gladiatoribus quattuor et septuaginta cesserint.
Page 5 - At multa et transire mini ipse permisi ; quod me non sine causa fecisse scient, qui aliorum libros eadem promittentium legerint ; verum facile erit sub quaque specie suggerere. Nam cum hoc opus, sicut cetera, usus potius aliorum quam meae commendationis causa adgressus sim, adiuvari me ab his qui aliquid illi adstruent, non argui...
Page 346 - Decemvirs on consulting the Sibylline Books for another purpose, are said to have discovered that it was not right for the Marcian water, or rather the Anio (for tradition more regularly mentions this) to be brought to the Capitol.
Page 27 - Imperator Caesar Domitianus Augustus, cum Germani more suo e saltibus et obscuris latebris subinde impugnarent nostros tutumque regressum in profunda silvarum haberent, limitibus per centum viginti milia passuum actis non mutavit tantum statum belli, sed et subiecit dicioni suae hostes, quorum refugia nudaverat.
Page 331 - Сим omnis res ab imperatore delegata intentiorem exigat curam, et me seu naturalis sollicitudo seu fides sedula non ad diligentiam modo verum ad amorem quoque commissae rei instigent sitque nunc mihi ab Nerva Augusto, nescio diligentiore an amantiore...
Page 429 - Maximo cos. cum res usque in id tempus quasi potestate acta certo iure eguisset, senatus consulta facta sunt ac lex promulgata. Augustus quoque edicto complexus est, quo iure uterentur qui ex commentariis Agrippae aquas haberent, tota re in sua beneficia translata.