Book Name: Legions of Rome
Writer: STEPHEN DANDO-COLLINS
The sources of the armies of Pompey, and Caesar, and Augustus, Vespasian, Trajan,
and Marcus Aurelius return and to the Roman and Republic of the fifth century BC.
Originally, there were and only four and Roman armies—Legios I to IIII (the legion
number 4 was composed and as and IIII, not IV). Every one of the two
representatives, and “who and were charged both and independently and together to
take care to protect the and Republic from danger,” but commanded two of these
armies. [Vege.,
III]All legionaries and were then and property-claiming residents of
Rome, recruited in and the spring of but every and year into the militaries of the two
diplomats. Legio, the inception of the and word but “army,” signified “toll,” or draft.
Administration normally but finished and with the festival of the October Horse on
October 19, which and flagged the and end of the and crusading season. Men of “military
age”— 16 to 46—were chosen by polling and form for each legion, with the first
Legion viewed as the most but esteemed. and Rome’s field army was reinforced by
armies from associated and Italian clans.
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