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For this action, he received a civic crown from the local municipality.
The shield is topped with a civic crown in the shape of a three-towered castle.
For her bravery, she was awarded a civic crown by the victorious fédérés.
Corona Civica The civic crown, made of ordinary oak leaves.
As a military man, Dentatus had fought in 120 battles, received 45 honorable wounds and several civic crowns.
You have won the Civic Crown.
"He's also obliged by law to wear his Civic Crown on all public occasions, and it holds his hair in place."
Caesar left Rome and joined the army, where he won the Civic Crown for his part in an important siege.
He served with distinction, winning the Civic Crown for his part in the siege of Mytilene.
"I won a Civic Crown at Mitylene.
The likeliest intent of the Roman soldiers was a cruel parody of the civic crown worn by the emperor.
He's already got you marked as a born troublemaker and he'll see this in the same light, even if he did award you a Civic Crown.
Sulla's law stipulated that whenever he appeared on public business, he must wear the Civic Crown of oak leaves upon his head.
To these the emperor added the civic crown, complaining, but without anger, that Apronius had not used his right as proconsul to bestow this further distinction.
Pliny wrote about the Civic Crown at some length in Naturalis Historia:
Civic Crown - (Latin: corona civica), was a chaplet of common oak leaves woven to form a crown.
And a man who has been awarded the Grass Crown or the Civic Crown will be promoted to the Senate automatically."
After Sulla's constitutional reforms, any recipient of the Civic Crown was entitled entry into the Roman Senate.
Because Catulus would sanction no kind of command for this winner of the Civic Crown, Caesar did duty as a man in the ranks.
I plump for consul, also the Grass or Civic Crown, a major flaminate, and Pontifex Maximus.
Augustus was granted the right to hang the corona civica, the "civic crown" made from oak, above his door and have laurels drape his doorposts.
If any man should win a Grass Crown or a Civic Crown, no matter who or what his antecedents, he will automatically enter the Senate.
"While you're about it, Crassus, why don't you vote our dear Marcus Tullius Cicero a Civic Crown?"
"Am I mistaken in thinking that you are the Roman senator Gaius Julius Caesar, winner of the Civic Crown?"
"Everyone always refers to Rome's constitution as Sulla's constitution," said Pompey, deliberately ignoring unwelcome information like a Civic Crown.