| Elizabeth Caroline Johnstone Gray - 1847 - 540 pages
...senate," and they were Inter reges in turn. An Inter-rex is a person who holds the supreme authority between the death of a king and the election of his successor. Each Interrex ruled for five days, and was attended hy the Lictors hearing the rods and axes. At length... | |
| Wilhelm Pütz - 1849 - 420 pages
...officers, but were always restricted to the consideration of subjects proposed by the senate. During the interval between the death of a king and the election of his successor, the ten chief members of the senate (ie the presidents of the ten decurias of the (457) Ramnes) acted... | |
| George Willis Botsford - 1901 - 472 pages
...days, in the order determined by lot. The ruler for the time being was termed interrex, and the period between the death of a king and the election of his successor was an interregnum. Although the first interrex was not at liberty to nominate a king, probably through... | |
| George Willis Botsford - 1902 - 610 pages
...in the .order determined by lot. The ruler for the time being was termed in'ter-rex, and the period between the death of a king and the election of his successor was an in-ier-retf num. The interrex nominated a king, the assembly elected him, and the senate gave... | |
| George Willis Botsford - 1902 - 610 pages
...in the order determined by lot. The ruler for the time being was termed in'ter-rex, and the period between the death of a king and the election of his successor was an in-ter-reg'num. The interrex nominated a king, the assembly elected him, and the senate gave... | |
| Harriet Louise Keeler, Mary Elizabeth Adams - 1906 - 300 pages
...days, in the order determined by lot. The ruler for the time being was termed interrex, and the period between the death of a king and the election of his successor was an interregnum. —Soman History. A Periodic Sentence. — A periodic sentence is one so constructed... | |
| George Willis Botsford - 1913 - 708 pages
...in the order determined by lot. The ruler for the time being was termed in'ler-rex, and the period between the death of a king and the election of his successor was an in-kr-reg'num. The interrex nominated a king, the assembly elected him, and the senate gave... | |
| Pandias Michael Schizas - 1926 - 274 pages
...institution of the interregnum so as to ensure that the State ihould not be left without a head in the period between the death of a King and the election of his successor (De Rep. II. 12 : Prudenter tili -printipes (Senators) nmam et inauditam ceterii gentilui interregni... | |
| Ernst Hartwig Kantorowicz - 1997 - 622 pages
...but also eliminated, once and for all, the possibility of a “great interregnum” which might occur between the death of a king and the election of his successor. “Time runneth not against the King”_it did not run against the dynasty either, Henceforth, the... | |
| Adolf Berger - 2002 - 480 pages
...Teodosiano e sulla interpretatio Visigótica, 1915 ; Wieacker, Symb Fríb Lenel, 1931, 259; Chiazzese, AnPal 16 (1931) 301; Niccolai, RendLomb 75 (1942) 42; Buckland,...vacancy a senator elected by the senate was appointed interred only for a period of five days. If this period expired without the election of a new king,... | |
| |