LATINS - ορισμός. Τι είναι το LATINS
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Τι (ποιος) είναι LATINS - ορισμός


Latins (Italic tribe)         
  • The [[Capitoline Wolf]], a bronze statue of the She-Wolf suckling the twins Romulus and Remus. Date is controversial. Traditionally it has been attributed to the Etruscans and dated to the 5th century BC (although the twins were added in the 15th century). More recent scholarship dates the original piece to the medieval era. [[Capitoline Museum]], Rome
  • The Trojan hero [[Aeneas]]' legendary landing on the shores of Latium (note prow of his beached ship, right). Aeneas is holding his son, Ascanius, by the hand. A sow (left) shows him where to found his city ([[Lavinium]]). Roman marble bas-relief, c. AD 140–50. [[British Museum]], London
  • XII Fulminata]]'', who were surrounded by the [[Quadi]] Germans and severely dehydrated, were saved by a thunderstorm, which reportedly materialised out of a clear sky. Note the god's wings. Detail from the [[Column of Marcus Aurelius]], Rome
  • Detail of a 4th-century AD Roman mosaic showing two hunters wearing the dress of officers of the [[Late Roman army]]. Note the [[swastika]] emblem on the left-hand officer's tunic. From [[Piazza Armerina]], Sicily
  • The mainstream scenario for the migration of the Indo-European (IE) peoples in the period 4000–1000 BC: Known as the [[Kurgan hypothesis]], the scenario envisages the IE peoples migrating outwards from an original homeland in the [[steppe]] of southern Russia, north of the [[Caucasus]] Mountains (purple zone). The red zone indicates the possible extent of IE expansion by ''circa'' 2500 BC, the orange zone by around 1000 BC. Note the movement of the Italic branch from the secondary zone (around [[Moravia]]) into the Italian peninsula
  • View of the [[Alban Hills]], a volcanic plateau 20km SE of Rome. The region saw early Latin settlement and was the site of the legendary city of Alba Longa, supposedly the capital of Latium for 400 years before the foundation of Rome
  • The linguistic landscape of Central Italy at the beginning of Roman expansion
  • Alban lake]], filling the caldera of an extinct volcano
  • Jupiter]], the highest Roman god
  • [[Villanovan culture]] cinerary hut-urn, showing the likely shape of Romulus' Hut in Rome: a simple mud-and-straw shelter
HISTORICAL ITALIC TRIBE
Latini; Latin (people); Latin (demonym); Latins (ancient tribe); Latians; Latins (Italic people); Latins (Italic Tribe); Latian
The Latins (Latin: Latini), sometimes known as the Latians, were an Italic tribe which included the early inhabitants of the city of Rome (see Roman people). From about 1000 BC, the Latins inhabited the small region known to the Romans as Old Latium (in Latin Latium vetus), that is, the area between the river Tiber and the promontory of Mount Circeo southeast of Rome.
Latian         
  • The [[Capitoline Wolf]], a bronze statue of the She-Wolf suckling the twins Romulus and Remus. Date is controversial. Traditionally it has been attributed to the Etruscans and dated to the 5th century BC (although the twins were added in the 15th century). More recent scholarship dates the original piece to the medieval era. [[Capitoline Museum]], Rome
  • The Trojan hero [[Aeneas]]' legendary landing on the shores of Latium (note prow of his beached ship, right). Aeneas is holding his son, Ascanius, by the hand. A sow (left) shows him where to found his city ([[Lavinium]]). Roman marble bas-relief, c. AD 140–50. [[British Museum]], London
  • XII Fulminata]]'', who were surrounded by the [[Quadi]] Germans and severely dehydrated, were saved by a thunderstorm, which reportedly materialised out of a clear sky. Note the god's wings. Detail from the [[Column of Marcus Aurelius]], Rome
  • Detail of a 4th-century AD Roman mosaic showing two hunters wearing the dress of officers of the [[Late Roman army]]. Note the [[swastika]] emblem on the left-hand officer's tunic. From [[Piazza Armerina]], Sicily
  • The mainstream scenario for the migration of the Indo-European (IE) peoples in the period 4000–1000 BC: Known as the [[Kurgan hypothesis]], the scenario envisages the IE peoples migrating outwards from an original homeland in the [[steppe]] of southern Russia, north of the [[Caucasus]] Mountains (purple zone). The red zone indicates the possible extent of IE expansion by ''circa'' 2500 BC, the orange zone by around 1000 BC. Note the movement of the Italic branch from the secondary zone (around [[Moravia]]) into the Italian peninsula
  • View of the [[Alban Hills]], a volcanic plateau 20km SE of Rome. The region saw early Latin settlement and was the site of the legendary city of Alba Longa, supposedly the capital of Latium for 400 years before the foundation of Rome
  • The linguistic landscape of Central Italy at the beginning of Roman expansion
  • Alban lake]], filling the caldera of an extinct volcano
  • Jupiter]], the highest Roman god
  • [[Villanovan culture]] cinerary hut-urn, showing the likely shape of Romulus' Hut in Rome: a simple mud-and-straw shelter
HISTORICAL ITALIC TRIBE
Latini; Latin (people); Latin (demonym); Latins (ancient tribe); Latians; Latins (Italic people); Latins (Italic Tribe); Latian
·adj Belonging, or relating, to Latium, a country of ancient Italy. ·see Latin.
Latins (Middle Ages)         
MEDIEVAL DEMONYM AMONG THE FOLLOWERS OF THE LATIN CHURCH OF WESTERN CHRISTIANITY
Latin (Middle Ages)
The name Latin was in the Middle Ages a common demonym among the followers of the Latin Church of Western Christianity. It derived from the Ecclesiastical Latin that was developed by the Latin Church fathers in the Western Church.
Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για LATINS
1. After the 1'73 oil shock, the Latins should have adjusted to the new reality.
2. They spoke the language, had a reputation for being hard working and reliable compared with unpredictable Latins, and supposedly all grew up watching English clubs every week on TV, which encouraged them to fall in love with our combative game.
3. In global terms, this is a distinction between the haves and the have–nots, but when seen in an exclusively European context, it comes down to a difference in attitudes: the Latins‘ love of melodrama and streak of hedonism sits uneasily with the northerners‘ modulated ways and self–denial.