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Sallustius and who
Another theory is that it was built for another native, Sallustius Lucullus, a Roman governor of Britain of the late 1st century who may have been the son of the British prince Adminius.
Miles Russell, however, has suggested that, as the main constructional phase of the palace proper at Fishbourne seems to have been in the early AD 90s, during the reign of the emperor Domitian who built the Domus Flavia, a palace of similar design upon the Palatine Hill in Rome, Fishbourne may instead have been built for Sallustius Lucullus, a Roman governor of Britain of the late 1st century.
By some he is identified as Flavius Sallustius ( a native of Spain who was praetorian prefect of Gaul from 361 until 363 and a Consul in 363 ), by others with Saturninius Secundus Salutius ( died after 367 CE, a native of Gaul who was praetorian prefect of the Orient in 361 ).
Miles Russell of Bournemouth University argues that Sallustius Lucullus, Roman governor of Britain in the late 1st century ( and who is also cited from an inscription found in Chichester ), was therefore a son of this prince.
In the first century AD its owner was Gaius Sallustius Crispus Passienus, who married Agrippina the Younger, mother of Nero.

Sallustius and with
The principal works that Holstenius actually published are notes on Cluvier's Italia antiqua ( 1624 ); an edition of portions of Porphyry ( 1630 ), with a dissertation on his life and writings ; notes on Eusebius Against Hierocles ( 1628 ), on the Sayings of the later Pythagoreans ( 1638 ), and the De diis et mundo of the neo-Platonist Sallustius ( 1638 ); an edition of Arrian's treatise on the Chase ( 1644 ), and the Codex regularum monasticarum, a collection of monastic rules ( 1661 ).

Sallustius and also
Translation of Roman authors produced also some works: Baranyai Decsi János translated Sallustius ' Catalina and Jughurta's war in the late 16th century and a decade later appeared the translation of Curtius Rufus ' Aleaxander's life in Debrecen.
He also argues that Fishbourne Roman Palace, near Chichester, was built for Sallustius Lucullus as governor, rather than, as is often argued, for the client king Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus.

Sallustius and .
Gaius Sallustius Crispus Passienus divorced Lucius ' aunt, Domitia Lepida the Elder ( Lucius ' first paternal aunt ) so that Crispus could marry Agrippina.
He divorced and exiled her in 227, after her father, Seius Sallustius, was executed after being accused of attempting to assassinate the emperor.
Sallustius, for example, divides myths into five categories – theological, physical ( or concerning natural laws ), animastic ( or concerning soul ), material and mixed.
* Gaius Sallustius Crispus Passienus and Titus Statilius Taurus become Roman consuls.
* Emperor Alexander Severus marries Sallustia Orbiana, and possibly raises her father Seius Sallustius to the rank of caesar.
* Seius Sallustius is executed for the attempted murder of his son-in-law Emperor Alexander Severus.
Sallustius ' daughter, as well Alexander's wife, Sallustia Orbiana, is exiled in Libya.
Domitia married Gaius Sallustius Crispus Passienus, consul suffect in 27, proconsul of Asia and consul in 44.
Gaius Sallustius Crispus, usually anglicised as Sallust ( 86 BC – c. 35 BC ) was a Roman historian, politician, and novus homo from a well-known plebeian family.
Soon after Agricola was recalled to Rome, and his post passed to Sallustius Lucullus.
* Julius Exsuperantius, a late Roman historian, probably of the 5th or 6th century ; his tract, De Marii, Lepidi, ac Sertorii bellis civilibus may have been abridged from the histories of Sallustius.
Isidore returned to Alexandria accompanied by Sallustius.
* C. Sallustius Crispus, the historian usually known in English as Sallust ( 45 BC, Africa Nova )
It is possible, based on epigraphic evidence, that Sallustius Lucullus, Roman governor of Britain in the late 1st century, was his grandson.
In 33 Domitia married the witty, wealthy, and influential Gaius Sallustius Crispus Passienus.
Sallustius or Sallust () was a 4th-century writer, a friend of the Roman Emperor Julian the Apostate.
Sallustius ' exact identity is a matter of some uncertainty.
Sallustius concerning the gods and the universe.
Sallustius Lucullus ( d. c. 89 ) was a governor of Roman Britain during the late 1st century, holding office after Gnaeus Julius Agricola although it is unclear whether he directly inherited the post or if there was another unknown governor in between.

work and owes
" Therefore, although the thesis of the " Mysterium Cosmographicum " was in error, modern astronomy owes much to this work " since it represents the first step in cleansing the Copernican system of the remnants of the Ptolemaic theory still clinging to it.
Clinical pharmacology owes much of its foundation to the work of William Withering.
This influence shows in Flaubert's work L ' education sentimentale, which owes a debt to Balzac's Illusions Perdues.
His early work owes a debt to Stuart C. Dodd and George A. Lundberg, sociologists and psychologists.
Hymes considers literary critic Kenneth Burke his biggest influence on this latter work, saying, “ My sense of what I do probably owes more to KB than to anyone else ”.
The work, says Dean, owes something to Gounod, and contains passages that recall Weber and Mendelssohn.
These include Viscount Gilbert de Varèze ( Ruggles ), who owes Maurice a large amount of money for tailoring work ; Gilbert's uncle Duke d ' Artelines ( C. Aubrey Smith ), the family patriarch ; d ' Artelines ' man-hungry niece Valentine ( Loy ); and his other 22-year-old niece, Princess Jeanette ( MacDonald ), who has been a widow for three years.
This owes its origins to the World War II refugees from Poland finding both cheap accommodation and work in the Acton area, which back then had a lot a light engineering companies busy with government war contracts.
The work owes nothing to the traditional Christian liturgy, eschewing notions of an afterlife and celebrating instead a pantheistic renewal of Nature.
" To the enlightened views of the ministries of François Guizot and Adolphe Thiers under the citizen-king, and to the zeal and ability of Cousin in the work of organization, France owes what is best in her system of primary education ,-- a national interest which had been neglected under the French Revolution, the Empire and the Restoration ( see Expose, p. 17 ).
His principal work, Théorie de la morale, owes much to Immanuel Kant.
John Lennon's work " Imagine " owes much of its popular appeal to its evocation of conscience against the atrocities created by war, religious fundamentalism and politics.
Singer Tom Hingley said Gallagher owes his own career to the band, since " his business sense, work ethic, message and humour are Inspiral down to the core.
Doherty has responded that his work owes very little to Wells.
By this time, her father's drinking has got the family into debt, and she is sent to work as governess / housekeeper for the family of an almost illiterate neighbour to whom her father owes money.
From 1843 to 1845 he issued the dramas Saul und David ( 1843 ), Herodes der Große (" Herodes the Great ") ( 1844 ), Kaiser Heinrich IV ( 1845 ) and Christofero Colombo ( 1845 ), all of which are greatly inferior to the work to which he owes his place in German literature.
Written " in imitation of the manner of Cervantes, the author of Don Quixote " ( see title page on right ), the work owes much of its humour to the techniques developed by Cervantes, and its subject-matter to the seemingly loose arrangement of events, digressions and lower-class characters to the genre of writing known as picaresque.
Space: 1999 owes much of the visual design to pre-production work for the never-made second series of UFO, which would have been set primarily on the Moon and featured a more extensive Moonbase.
Our modern understanding of instinctual behavior in animals owes much to their work.
Very much remains to be done to make our Archive truly representative of all the people, but the country owes a debt of gratitude to these two men for the excellent foundation laid for future work in this field ....
The work owes its preservation to having been incorporated in the third part of the Chronicle of Zuqnin, and may probably have had a place in the second part of the Ecclesiastical History of John of Ephesus, from whom ( as François Nau has shown ) Pseudo-Dionysius copied all or most of the matter contained in his third part.
Like so many RAF stations, the airfield itself owes its existence to the stimulus of war, and work began on levelling the existing site on Reres Farm in 1916.
Although his work bears resemblance to these poets and owes them occasional debts of form and stylistic device, his literary personality is unique in terms of the synthesis he made of iconoclasms and lyricism, of ideology and poetic diction.
The progress of women at Cambridge University owes much to the pioneering work undertaken by the philosopher Henry Sidgwick, fellow of Trinity.
The school of behavior-based robots owes much to work undertaken in the 1980s at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by Professor Rodney Brooks, who with students and colleagues built a series of wheeled and legged robots utilising the subsumption architecture.

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