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MANLIUS , the name of a See also: Roman gens, chiefly patrician, but containing plebeian families also
.
I
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See also: MARCUS MANLIUS CAPITOLINUS, a patrician, C0nsul392 B.C
.
According to tradition, when in 390 B.C. the besieging Gauls were attempting to See also: scale the Capitol, he was roused by the cackling of the sacred geese, rushed to the spot and threw down the foremost assailants (See also: Livy v
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47; Plutarch, See also: Camillus, 27)
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Several years after, seeing a See also: centurion led to prison for See also: debt, he freed him with his own See also: money, and even sold his estate to relieve other poor debtors, while he accused the senate of embezzling public money
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He was charged with aspiring to kingly power, and condemned by the See also: comitia, but not until the See also: assembly had adjourned to a place without the walls, where they could no longer see the Capitol which he had saved
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His See also: house on the Capitol (the origin of his surname) was razed, and the Manlii resolved that henceforth no patrician Manlius should bear the name of Marcus, According to See also: Mommsen, the See also: story of the saving of the Capitol was a later invention to explain his surname, and his attempt to relieve the debtors a fiction of the times of See also: Cinna
.
Livy vi
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14-20; Plutarch, Camillus, 36; See also: Cicero, De domo, 38
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2
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TITUS MANLIUS IMPERIOSUS TORQUATUS, twice dictator (353, 349 B.C.) and three times See also: consul (347, 344, 340)
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When his See also: father, L
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Manlius Imperiosus (dictator 363), was brought to trial by the tribune M
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See also: Pomponius for abusing his office of dictator, he forced Pomponius to drop the accusation by threatening his See also: life (Livy vii
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3-5)
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In 36o, during a war with the Gauls, he slew one of the enemy, a See also: man of gigantic stature, in single combat, and took from him a torques (neck-See also: ornament), whence his surname
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When the Latins demanded an equal share in the See also: government of the confederacy, Manlius vowed to kill with his own See also: hand the first Latin he saw in the senate-house
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The Latins and Campanians revolted, and Manlius, consul for the third See also: time, marched into See also: Campania and gained. two See also: great victories, near Vesuvius, where P
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Decius See also: Mus (q.v.), his colleague, " devoted " himself in See also: order to gain the See also: day, and at Trifanum
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In this See also: campaign Manlius executed his own son, who had killed an enemy in single combat, and thus disobeyed the express command of the consuls
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Livy vii
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4, 10, 27, viii
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3; Cicero, De off. iii
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31 . 3 . TITUS MANLIUS TORQUATUS, consul 235 B.C. and 224, censor 231, dictator 208 . In his first consulship he subjugatedSee also: Sardinia, recently acquired from the Carthaginians, when the See also: temple of See also: Janus was shut for the second time in Roman See also: history (Livy i
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19)
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In 216 he opposed the ransoming of the See also: Romans taken prisoners at See also: Cannae; and in 215 he was sent to Sardinia and defeated a Carthaginian attempt to regain possession of the See also: island
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Livy See also: xxiii
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34; See also: Polybius ii
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31
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4
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GNAEUS MANLIUS VULSO, praetor 195, consul 189
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He was sent to See also: Asia to conclude See also: peace with See also: Antiochus III., See also: king of
See also: Syria
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He marched into See also: Pamphylia, defeated the Celts of See also: Galatia on Mt See also: Olympus and drove them back across the Halys
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In the winter, assisted by ten delegates sent from See also: Rome, he settled the terms of peace with Antiochus, and in 187 received the honour of a See also: triumph
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Polybius xxii
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16-25; Livy xxxviii
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12-28, 37-50; xxxix
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6
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