Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Pages in category "Shaikh clans" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
Tribes (Latin: tribus) were groupings of citizens in ancient Rome, originally based on location. Voters were eventually organized by tribes, with each Roman tribe having an equal vote in the Tribal Assembly .
This is a list of Roman nomina. The nomen identified all free Roman citizens as members of individual gentes, originally families sharing a single nomen and claiming descent from a common ancestor. Over centuries, a gens could expand from a single family to a large clan, potentially including hundreds or even thousands of members.
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... This an alphabetical list of ancient Romans, including citizens of ancient Rome remembered in history. This list is incomplete ...
Location: lands in south-East England In 54 BC, Julius Caesar set up Mandubracius of the Trinovantes as a client king and established the Catuvellauni as a tributary state of Rome. [ 5 ] The centralization of the client kingdoms in southern Britain led to some resemblance of one British society ruled by the Catuvellauni. [ 5 ]
Examples of some ancient families that hold the title of "sui iuris" sheikh is the Al-Chemor family, ruling since 1211 CE in Koura and Zgharta until 1747 CE [5] [6] and the Boudib family (descendants of the Hashemite family) who were Ehdenian rulers of Jebbeh since 1471 CE until 1759 CE.
The early-4th-century Verona List, the late-4th-century work of Sextus Rufus, and the early-5th-century List of Offices and work of Polemius Silvius all list four provinces by some variation of the names Britannia I, Britannia II, Maxima Caesariensis, and Flavia Caesariensis; all of these seem to have initially been directed by a governor of ...
Brigantes (an important tribe in most of Northern England and in the south-east corner of Ireland) Cantiaci (in present-day Kent which preserves the ancient tribal name) Carvetii ; Cassi (mentioned by Caesar; possibly south-east England) (they may have been later conquered by the possibly Belgian Catuvellauni)