One should keep in mind that Tantan is anything but a tribune of popular democracy. |
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As tribune in 49 he defended Caesar's interest in the Senate as civil war loomed. |
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Being a military tribune, or chiliarch, he was illustrious in battle and highly honoured for his courage. |
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Observers in the press tribune commented on the ease in which China appeared to do the most difficult elements. |
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Decius the tribune was a Campanian by race and a man of unusual greed and daring. |
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The body has disappeared and the Roman tribune in Jerusalem wants to know what is going on. |
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This is not to deny that socialists can use parliament as a tribune from which radical ideas can be put across to help build workers' confidence. |
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Continuing to boom radicalism from the tribune of the Assembly, he had offered the king and queen his secret services as an adviser. |
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The fear was that a charismatic leader could use the office of tribune, with its base of power in the common citizen, to become a demagogue. |
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In life the king and his family could watch the liturgy from the tribune above, and in death their tombs occupied the Pantheon itself. |
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The great tribune of the people lost the confidence of his constituency party. |
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Mishaps too numerous and familiar to mention have blotted the Dear Leader's credentials as a tribune of the People. |
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James Madison is known as the tribune of open government and the philosophical father of the Freedom of Information Act. |
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When Caesar was a praetor, he supported a tribune who wanted Pompey recalled to restore order in Rome. |
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As tribune, Gaius reaffirmed Tiberius' Land Act and saw to it that it was finally implemented. |
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Elected tribune in 123, Gaius wanted to transform Rome into a democracy along Hellenic lines. |
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John 18 implies that a Roman tribune ordered part of his cohort to accompany the chief priests and the Pharisees in arresting Jesus on Thursday. |
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He was a tribune in the Roman army during the reign of the Emperor Diocletian. |
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As I watched, it wasn't a grudging respect for the perfectly tailored and coiffed tribune of the masses that filled me, but a wave of nausea. |
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During the American Revolution the words of pamphleteers such as Thomas Paine established the press as the people's tribune. |
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And Abraham Lincoln would still be viewed as a tribune of the people regardless of whether he helped the Jeffersons perform. |
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Edwards, on the other hand, is pitching himself as the tribune for the forgotten Middle Americans who will protect their tax cuts. |
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His great wealth came from Jamaican estates and he was frequently reminded, when tribune of the people, that he was a slave-owner. |
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A patrician could serve as tribune, though this was not common. |
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The charge would have been violation of the immunity of the tribune Octavius. |
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A Roman tribune gathered twenty maniples from the rear lines of the Roman right wing and led them in an attack on the flank of the Macedonian right. |
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The tribune of adolescent sensitivity and longing has suddenly transformed into a macho bully. |
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The moneyed class placed a huge, one-sided bet on their tribune, Mitt Romney, and on the Republicans. |
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Until recently the two clear frontrunners in the race to replace Mr Miliband were Andy Burnham, the maudlin tribune of the party's soft left, and Yvette Cooper, a machine politician and the most experienced of the crowd. |
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The tribune was surrounded by a squadron of hussars of the National Guard. |
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Other upgraded facilities at the stadium included offices, upgraded changing room facilities, enlarged press tribune, rooftop camera positions and a new well-furnished VVIP section. |
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Seated in the tribune of his basilica, the great man would meet his dependent clientes early every morning. |
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Sulla was so angry at Marius' tribune that he passed a law intended to permanently weaken the tribunate. |
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Tiberius submitted this law to the Plebeian Council, but the law was vetoed by a tribune named Marcus Octavius. |
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Play Note: It is important to distinguish between to which troops a tribune or praefect can issue Orders, and to which troops it can give a Line Command. |
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He sent a tribune, Gaius Volusenus, to scout the coast in a single warship. |
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If any magistrate tried to use the powers of the state against a citizen, that citizen could appeal the decision of the magistrate to a tribune. |
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Agricola was a military tribune under Suetonius Paulinus, which almost certainly gave Tacitus an eyewitness source for Boudica's revolt. |
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On his day, the tribune effectively commanded the camp and was even respected as such by the Legate. |
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One consequence was that it was considered a capital offense to harm a tribune, to disregard his veto, or to interfere with a tribune. |
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Constantine was sent east, where he rose through the ranks to become a military tribune under the emperors Diocletian and Galerius. |
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After he had first marched on Rome in 49 BC, he forcibly opened the treasury, although a tribune had the seal placed on it. |
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The Senate chose Sulla, but Marius induced tribune Publius Sulpicius Rufus to call an assembly that subsequently appointed Marius. |
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Each tribune conspicuously took personal charge of one legion, and the quaestor took the 6th. |
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By his late twenties, George was promoted to the rank of military tribune and stationed as an imperial guard of the Emperor at Nicomedia. |
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Like his tribune authority, the consular powers were another instance of gaining power from offices that he did not actually hold. |
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Antony had occupied the high offices of questor and tribune, the first calling for literary ability, the second for skill as an orator. |
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Diocletian was upset, not wanting to lose his best tribune and the son of his best official, Gerontius. |
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Never mind that the tribune props him up like a Ming vase now. |
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On his return to Rome, he was elected military tribune, a first step in a political career. |
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There is only a rather depressed tribune gallery, and the building retains a passage at clerestory level an Anglo-Norman feature that remained standard in English architecture well into the 13th century. |
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Their sacrosanctity was enforced by a pledge, taken by the plebeians, to kill any person who harmed or interfered with a tribune during his term of office. |
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He wrote that Sabinus was Vespasian's lieutenant, but as Sabinus was the older brother and preceded Vespasian into public life, he could hardly have been a military tribune. |
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Following the end of this term, Septimius Severus travelled back to Rome, taking up office as tribune of the plebs, with the distinction of being candidatus of the emperor. |
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The Legate was ultimately responsible for them as he was for the entire camp, but he delegated the duty to a tribune chosen as officer of the day. |
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Accordingly, the UN was essentially converted into an inactive forum for exchanging polemical rhetoric, and the Soviets regarded it almost exclusively as a propaganda tribune. |
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He was tribune of the plebs in 66 and praetor on June 68, during which time he was ordered by the Governor of Spain Galba to take an inventory of the temple treasures. |
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By law, Augustus held a collection of powers granted to him for life by the Senate, including supreme military command, and those of tribune and censor. |
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The new magazine's goal is to give a tribune to unmarried mothers. |
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In 120 BC, Marius was returned as plebeian tribune for the following year. |
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All of the powers of the tribune derived from their sacrosanctity. |
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