In the modern world it is sometimes necessary to remind people of their citizenship, but the Roman never forgot the greatness of his inheritance. When St. Paul, bound with thongs and condemned to be scourged, declared, 'I am Roman born,' the Captain of the Guard, who had only gained his citizenship by paying a large sum of money, was afraid of the prisoner on whom he had laid hands without a trial.
Cambridge Medieval History: Germany and the Western Empire
J.B Bury
bookThe Coming of the Terror in the French Revolution
Timothy Tackett
audiobookHistory of Egypt, Chaldea, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Vol. 1
G. Maspero
bookThe French Revolution
Thomas Carlyle
bookThe Shortest History of Europe
John Hirst
audiobookbookA New World Begins: The History of the French Revolution
Jeremy D. Popkin
audiobookThe Symbolism of Churches and Church Ornaments : A Translation of the First Book of the Rationale Divinorum Officiorum
Guillaume Durand
bookGod's Jury
Cullen Murphy
audiobook10 Ways to Stay Broke...Forever : Why Be Rich When You Can Have This Much Fun?
Laura J. McDonald, Susan L. Misner
audiobookThe Roman Empire
Christopher Kelly
audiobookUnmasking the Klansman
Dan T. Carter
audiobookThe China Crisis : How China's Economic Collapse Will Lead to a Global Depression
James R. Gorrie
audiobook