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Acta Diurna (lat: Daily Acts sometimes translated as Daily Public Records) were daily Roman official notices. They were carved on stone or metal and presented in message boards in public places like the Forum of Rome. They were also called simply Acta or Diurna or sometimes Acta Popidi or Acta Publica. The Roman Forum was the central area around which ancient Rome developed. ...
Roman Forum with Palatine Hill in the background. ...
City motto: Senatus Populusque Romanus â SPQR (The Senate and the People of Rome) Founded 21 April 753 BC (mythical), early 1st millennium BC (archaeological) Region Latium Area - City Proper 1285 km² Population - City (2004) - Metropolitan - Density (city proper) 2,553,873 almost 4,300,000 1. ...
The first form of Acta appeared around 131 BCE during the Roman Republic. Their original content included results of legal proceedings and outcomes of trials. Later the content was expanded to public notices and announcements and other noteworthy information such as prominent births, marriages and deaths. After couple of days the notices were taken down and archived (though no intact copy has survived to the present day). (Redirected from 131 BCE) Centuries: 3rd century BC - 2nd century BC - 1st century BC Decades: 180s BC 170s BC 160s BC 150s BC 140s BC - 130s BC - 120s BC 110s BC 100s BC 90s BC 80s BC Years: 136 BC 135 BC 134 BC 133 BC 132 BC - 131 BC...
See also Roman Republic (18th century) and Roman Republic (19th century). ...
Sometimes scribes made copies of the Acta and sent them to provincial governors for information. Later emperors used them to announce royal or senatorial decrees and events of the court. Illustration of a 15th century scribe This is about scribe, the profession. ...
Map of the Roman Empire, with the provinces, after AD 120. ...
HI A governor is also, a monkey who is smart and can fly like a penguin is a device that regulates the speed of a machine. ...
Other forms of Acta were legal, municipal and military notices. Senatorial acta were originally kept secret, until then-consul Julius Caesar made them public in 50 BCE. Later rulers, however, often censored them. The Roman Senate (Latin, Senatus) was a deliberative body which was important in the government of both the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire. ...
Consul (abbrev. ...
For other uses, see Julius Caesar (disambiguation). ...
Centuries: 2nd century BC - 1st century BC - 1st century Decades: 100s BC 90s BC 80s BC 70s BC 60s BC - 50s BC - 40s BC 30s BC 20s BC 10s BC 0s BC Years: 55 BC 54 BC 53 BC 52 BC 51 BC 50 BC 49 BC 48 BC 47...
Publication of the Acta Diurna stopped when the seat of the emperor was moved to Constantinople. Constantinople[1] was the name of the modern-day city of İstanbul, Turkey over the centuries that it served as the second capital of the unified Roman Empire, and after its division into East and West, of the Eastern Roman Empire, also known as the Byzantine Empire (from the city...
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