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divided into centuries

  • 1 centuriātus

        centuriātus adj.    [P. of 1 centurio], divided into centuries: comitia centuriata, the assembled centuries of the people (held in the Campus Martius to choose the higher magistrates, to decree war or peace, etc.): quod ad populum centuriatis comitiis tulit: comitiis centuriatis alqm consulem renuntiare: lex, sanctioned by the Comitia Centuriata.
    * * *
    I
    centuriata, centuriatum ADJ
    voting in centuriae; divided into centuriae
    II
    office of centurion; division into centuriae (land/voting)

    Latin-English dictionary > centuriātus

  • 2 centuriātus

        centuriātus ūs, m    [1 centurio], a division into centuries: ad centuriatum convenire, L.
    * * *
    I
    centuriata, centuriatum ADJ
    voting in centuriae; divided into centuriae
    II
    office of centurion; division into centuriae (land/voting)

    Latin-English dictionary > centuriātus

  • 3 centuria

        centuria ae, f    [centum], a division of a hundred, century, company: centuriae tres equitum, L.: milites eiusdem centuriae, Cs.: pecus exercitui per centurias distribuere, S.—A division of the people, century (the constitution, ascribed to Servius Tullius, divided the people according to wealth into 193 centuries), L. They voted by centuries in the comitia centuriata: praetor centuriis cunctis renuntiatus: praerogativa. — A division of land, tract.
    * * *
    century, company of 60-100 men in legion; voting unit; land unit (200 jugera)

    Latin-English dictionary > centuria

  • 4 centuria

    centŭrĭa, ae, f. [centum], orig., an assemblage or a division consisting of a hundred things of a kind; hence in gen., any division, even if it consists not of a hundred.
    I.
    In agricult., a number of acres of ground, Varr. L. L. 5, 4, 10, § 35; cf. id. R. R. 1, 10 fin.; 18, 5; Col. 5, 1, 7; Hyg. Lim. p. 154 Goes.—
    II.
    In milit. lang., a division of troops, a century, company:

    centuriae, quae sub uno centurione sunt, quorum centenarius justus numerus,

    Varr. L. L. 5. 16, 26, §

    88, p. 26 Bip.: centuriae tres equitum, Ramnenses, Titienses, Luceres,

    Liv. 1, 13, 8: in legione sunt centuriae sexaginta, manipuli triginta, cohortes decem, Cincius ap. Gell. 16, 4, 6; cf. Veg. Mil. 2, 13 sq.; Caes. B. C. 1, 64; 3, 91; Sall. J. 91, 1.—
    III.
    Of the Roman people, one of the one hundred and ninety-three orders into which Servius Tullius divided the Roman people according to their property, a century, Cic. Rep. 2, 22, 39 sq. Moser; Liv. 1, 43, 1 sq.; cf. Dion. Halic. 4, 16 sq.; Nieb. Röm. Gesch. 1, p. 477 sq.—Hence the assemblies in which they voted acc. to centuries were called comitia centuriata;

    v. 1. centurio. The century designated by lot as voting first was called centuria praerogativa,

    Cic. Planc. 20, 49; v. praerogativus; cf. Dict. of Antiq.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > centuria

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