Cornelius Cossus, M. Manlius Capitolinus (Vulso?) Q. Sulpicius Camerinus 428a, 82, A. Cornelius Cossus, T. Quinctius Poenus Cincinnatus II. 428b, 82, L.

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Aulus (vel Marcus) Cornelius Cossus (quando natus, quando mortuus sit, nescimus) vir publicus Romanus saeculi quinti a.C.n. fuit. . Cursus honorum. Cornelius anno 413 a.C.n. una cum Lucio Furio L.f. Medullino consul Romanus electus est. Qui eo anno milites in Volscos duxit et Ferentinum oppidum expugnavit.

Aulus Cornelius Cossus (Militärtribun) Erat tum inter equites tribunus militum A. Cornelius Cossus. (Livy 4.19.1) “Aulus Cornelius Cossus was military tribune then among the cavalry.” Omnibus locis re bene gesta, dictator senatus consulto iussuque populi triumphans in urbem rediit. Longe maximum triumphi spectaculum fuit Cossus, spolia opima regis interfecti gerens; in eum milites carmina incondita aequantes eum Romulo canere. Servius Cornelius Cossus was a consular tribune of the Roman republic in 434 BC. Cornelius belonged to the patrician Cornelia gens.

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tribunus militum consulari potestate electus est. Collegae eius Gaius Iulius Sp.f. Iullus atque Gaius Servilius P.f. Ahala etiam patricii fuerunt. Aulus (vel Marcus) Cornelius Cossus (quando natus, quando mortuus sit, nescimus) vir publicus Romanus saeculi quinti a.C.n. fuit. .

Cossus Cornelius Lentulus, moneyer.

If Cornelius Cossus was military tribune when the single combat took place, as recorded in Livy, then the earlier date is true. If Cossus was consul, the view preferred by Augustus, then the later date is true (when Augustus viewed the spoils they were inscribed as having been deposited by A. Cornelius Cossus, Consul, but it is possible that Cossus himself added the last word after he became

Gaius Calvisius Sabinus . Lucius Passienus Rufus . 3 . Lucius Cornelius Lentulus .

9. posset — circa cornelius consol U l (litera m. ante Corn. erosa), circa quo m. cornelius consol GU 2 . 11. testes (om. XXXI. 1. poenus. 2. ex his cossus om.

A. cornelius cossus

iv , 20 ; och tredje gången af M. Claudius  Kr. Publius Cornelius Maluginensis, romersk politiker, konsul 393 f.Kr.

5th-4th centuries BC) was a politician and general in the early Roman Republic who was appointed dictator in 385 BC to quell the alleged revolution of Marcus Manlius Capitolinus. Aulus Cornelius Cossus Arvina was descended from the Cossi branch of the Cornelia gens, which were descended from Aulus Cornelius Cossus, a famous Roman of the 5th century BC who had won renown by personally slaying Lars Tolumnius the King of Veii, becoming one of only three Romans in recorded history to acquire the honor of the Spolia opima.
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A. cornelius cossus

Livy records two more Roman victories against the Samnites in 343, a victory by the other consul, Cornelius Cossus, at the Battle of Saticula, and a second victory by Valerius Corvus at the Battle of Suessula. At the end of the campaign season both consuls were rewarded at Rome with a triumph.

fuit. . Cursus honorum. Publius anno 408 a.C.n.
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Korneliar leinua Antzinako Erromako familia garrantzitsuenetakoa izan zen. Eszipion, Dolabela, Sila eta Zina leinuko adar nagusiak izan ziren.. Korneliar leinuko pertsonai garrantzitsuak. Servius Cornelius Maluginensis (Cossus), K.a. 485ean kontsula Lucius Cornelius Maluginensis edo Lucius Cornelius Ser.f. Maluginensis Uritus (Cossus), K.a. 459an kontsula

Consuls were the chief civil and military magistrates, elected through the assemblies by popular vote. Two annually elected consuls convened the senate and the … Secondly, and more specifically, the phrase invites comparison between Germanicus and Aulus Cornelius Cossus, Tolumnius’ opponent in the Livy passage and a figure who would have been well known to Tacitus’ readership via the literary tradition celebrating his fight with To- lumnius and the winning of the spolia opima. These spoils consisted of the arms of a leading enemy combatant, slain There was then among the cavalry, Aulus Cornelius Cossus, a tribune of the soldiers, distinguished for the beauty of his person, and equally so for courage and great strength of body, and mindful of his rank, which, having received in a state of the highest lustre, he left to … by A. Cornelius Cossus (in 437/6) - unearthed some four hundred years later in the dilapidated temple of Jupiter Feretrius - proved that only a consul 2 On the spolia opima / archaic triad relationship, see Versnel 1970.306-13, Dumézil 1970.141-273 et seq. 3 Picard 1957.124ff.


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period, A. Cornelius Cossus in either 437 or 426 and M. Claudius Marcellus in 222 B.C.' The dedication-place of these special spoils was the temple of Jupiter Feretrius on the Capitol, traditionally founded by Romulus for the purpose, and considered the oldest temple in Rome (Livy 1.10.7): the god was said to draw his name either from

(Livio ).

Publius Cornelius A.f. Cossus (quando natus, quando mortuus sit, nescimus) vir publicus Romanus origine patricia saeculi quinti a.C.n. fuit. . Cursus honorum. Publius anno 408 a.C.n. tribunus militum consulari potestate electus est. Collegae eius Gaius Iulius Sp.f. Iullus atque Gaius Servilius P.f. Ahala etiam patricii fuerunt.

Iullus atque Gaius Servilius P.f. Ahala etiam patricii fuerunt. Aulus (vel Marcus) Cornelius Cossus (quando natus, quando mortuus sit, nescimus) vir publicus Romanus saeculi quinti a.C.n. fuit. . Cursus honorum. Cornelius anno 413 a.C.n.

Two annually elected consuls convened the senate and the … Secondly, and more specifically, the phrase invites comparison between Germanicus and Aulus Cornelius Cossus, Tolumnius’ opponent in the Livy passage and a figure who would have been well known to Tacitus’ readership via the literary tradition celebrating his fight with To- lumnius and the winning of the spolia opima. These spoils consisted of the arms of a leading enemy combatant, slain There was then among the cavalry, Aulus Cornelius Cossus, a tribune of the soldiers, distinguished for the beauty of his person, and equally so for courage and great strength of body, and mindful of his rank, which, having received in a state of the highest lustre, he left to … by A. Cornelius Cossus (in 437/6) - unearthed some four hundred years later in the dilapidated temple of Jupiter Feretrius - proved that only a consul 2 On the spolia opima / archaic triad relationship, see Versnel 1970.306-13, Dumézil 1970.141-273 et seq.