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  2. Fasces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasces

    The fasces is an Italian symbol that had its origin in the Etruscan civilization and was passed on to ancient Rome, where it symbolized a Roman king's power to punish his subjects, [1] and later, a magistrate's power and jurisdiction. The axe has its own separate and older origin.

  3. Lictor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lictor

    Bronze statuette of a Roman lictor carrying a fasces, 20 BC to 20 AD. A lictor (possibly from Latin ligare, meaning 'to bind') was a Roman civil servant who was an attendant and bodyguard to a magistrate who held imperium. Roman records describe lictors as having existed since the Roman Kingdom, and may have originated with the Etruscans. [1]

  4. Fascist symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascist_symbolism

    This is an ancient Imperial Roman symbol of power carried by lictors in front of magistrates; a bundle of sticks featuring an axe, indicating the power over life and death. Before the Italian Fascists adopted the fasces, the symbol had been used by Italian political organizations of various political ideologies, called Fasci ("leagues") as a ...

  5. Roman consul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_consul

    The fasces symbolized the military power, or imperium. [33] When inside the pomerium, the lictors removed the axes from the fasces to show that a citizen could not be executed without a trial. Upon entering the comitia centuriata, the lictors would lower the fasces to show that the powers of the consuls derive from the people.

  6. Executive magistrates of the Roman Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Magistrates_of...

    The executive magistrates of the Roman Republic were officials of the ancient Roman Republic (c. 510 BC – 44 BC), elected by the People of Rome.Ordinary magistrates (magistratus) were divided into several ranks according to their role and the power they wielded: censors, consuls (who functioned as the regular head of state), praetors, curule aediles, and finally quaestor.

  7. Roman salute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_salute

    A large number of films made after World War II made the Roman salute a visual stereotype of a proto-fascist ancient Roman society. [117] In the 1951 film Quo Vadis, Nero's repeated use of the salute at mass rallies explicitly presents the Roman Empire as a fascist military state. [118]

  8. List of ancient peoples of Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient_peoples_of...

    The extent to which an archeological culture is representative of a particular cohesive ancient group of people is open for debate; many of these cultures may be the product of a single ancient Italian tribe or civilization (e.g. Latial culture), while others may have been spread among different groups of ancient Italian peoples and even ...

  9. Propaganda in Fascist Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_in_Fascist_Italy

    Besides its symbolic aspects, the fasces had been carried by the lictors of ancient Rome as a representation of authority. [51] [69] April 21, the anniversary of the founding of Rome, was proclaimed a Fascist holiday that was intended to replace the socialist Labour Day as a celebration of the Roman virtues of "work" and "discipline". [70]