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- Patrician (ancient Rome) - Wikipedia
The patricians (from Latin: patricius) were originally a group of ruling class families in ancient Rome The distinction was highly significant in the Roman Kingdom and the early Republic, but its relevance waned after the Conflict of the Orders (494 BC to 287 BC)
- Patrician | Elite Social Class, Wealth Power | Britannica
patrician, any member of a group of citizen families who, in contrast with the plebeian (q v ) class, formed a privileged class in early Rome
- PATRICIAN Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
A patrician was originally a descendant of one of the original citizen families of ancient Rome Until about 350 B C , only patricians could hold the office of senator, consul, or pontifex (priest)
- The Roman Empire: in the First Century. The Roman Empire. Social . . . - PBS
Ranked just below the emperor and his relatives, the patrician families dominated Rome and its empire The word “patrician” comes from the Latin “patres”, meaning “fathers”, and these families
- Patrician - World History Encyclopedia
Regrettably for Rome, when the Etruscan king was finally ousted in 509 BCE, the aristocratic families of the city - the patricians - seized control of the government and created a republic, but a republic in name only
- PATRICIAN | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
Patrician families needed to place their surplus female offspring in the convent, as this was cheaper than marriage
- Patrician - definition of patrician by The Free Dictionary
1 aristocrat, peer, noble, nobleman, aristo (informal) He was a patrician, born to wealth
- PATRICIAN definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If you describe someone as patrician, you mean that they behave in a sophisticated way, and look as though they are from a high social rank He was a lean, patrician gent in his early sixties her crisp, patrician voice
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