Roman Histories: The Roman Kingdom


Roman Histories:
The Roman Kingdom

From sunrise unto sunset
All earth shall hear thy fame:
A glorious city thou shalt build,
And name it by thy name:
And there, unquenched through ages,
Like Vesta's sacred fire,
Shall live the spirit of thy nurse,

The spirit of thy sire.
Before the empire or the Republic, there was Rome, a city on the banks of the Tiber ruled by the descendants of Mars himself. The myth of the founding of Rome is the core of Roman society, religion, warfare, and culture, and the tales of their ancient city are taught to every man, woman, and child. The tales of the founding of Rome are shrouded in mystery and legend, history so old that it was myth even in ancient times. This the story of the Founding of Rome, and the Seven Kings which followed after.

The tale of Rome, according to the Romans, begins in the hoary days of myth, when the Greeks of yore warred with the city of Troy, called Illum in ancient times. As is told in the Illiad, Troy fell at long last before the heroes of Hellas, and it's people were scattered to the wind. Greatest of these exiles, the Romans hold, was Aeneas, a prince of Troy and a son of the goddess Aphrodite, Venus to the Romans. He fled to Italy to escape the wrath of the vengeful Greeks, and there his descendants, the Aeneids, came to found a mighty city called Alba Longa in the heartlands of Italy.

However true this mythological connection to the ancient foes of the Greeks may be, it is true that in ancient times there stood a city called Alba Longa that in it's time was the mightiest of the cities of the Latin League, which controlled all the interior of Italy. The myths of Rome say that it came to pass that there ruled in Alba Longa on the throne of Aventine a king of the Sylvian dynasty named Numitor. Numitor, though fair and just, had a brother called Amulius, who desired his throne. Gathering those loyal to him, Amulius overthrew Numitor in vile treachery, and slew Numitor's son that his line might never rise again. His daughter, Rhea Silvia, he forced into servitude as one of the Vestal Virgins -- she would be sworn forever to the goddess, and bear no children to threaten his rule.

And yet, scarcely a year into Amulius' rule, news came to him that his niece was with child. The weeping Virgin claimed that she had been visited by Mars himself, the red-handed god of war, and he had lain with her. The children in her womb were of no mortal seed, but the heirs of a god. Legend holds that the cruel king ordered Rhea slain, and her children, twin boys, flung into the raging river Tiber. If they were truly the sons of a god, he snarled, their father would protect them.

And protect them he did, for the gods of the river Tiber calmed their mighty waves and instead washed the wailing twins ashore at the foot of a great hill. There, the oldest myths of the City claim, a great wolf found them, and, having no cubs of her own, gave them suckle from her own breasts, sheltering them in the cave known now as the Lupercal. Born of a god and nursed on the milk of wolves, the boys grew tall and hale and strong, and over the years gathered to them a mighty following of men. These boys were called Romulus and Remus, and on their blood hung the destiny of the world.

In time, the boys, men now, learned of their heritage and their true destinies. Together with their followers, they marched to Alba Longa and slew the tyrant king Amulius and his followers, ending his dynasty and reinstalling their grandfather on the throne of Alba Longa. They then gathered all men of strength and worth who would follow them, and left to found a mighty city. The greatest gens of Rome, among them the Quintici and the Julii, trace their beginning to this ancient exodus with Romulus and Remus.

Now slain is King Amulius,
Of the great Sylvian line,
Who reigned in Alba Longa,
On the throne of Aventine.
Slain is the Ponfiff Camers,
Who spake the words of doom:
"The children to the Tiber,

The mother to the tomb."

What happened after is unclear in the myths. The twins came with their followers to the hills where they had been reared as children, and found there signs and portents signifying that they should found a city here, and name it by their name. A struggle erupted then between the twins -- some say over the city's walls, or over it's precise location, or even it's name -- but when it was over, Remus, the more thoughtful and clever of the two, most like their mother, lay dead. Romulus, who took in image and spirit after his warlike father, lived, and founded on those seven hills a city that would come to master all cities: Rome. Romulus, it's founder, was unanimously acclaimed by his people as the first King of Rome.

Many of Rome's oldest and greatest institutions descend from it's first king, or so it is claimed. Romulus divided the city into three tribes, and selected a hundred wise men of prominent families from each of the tribes. These men were called the patres, or the Fathers, and their descendants were called the patricians. The patricians formed a great body which would advise Romulus in peace and in war, guiding his hand and relating to him the will of the people -- the Senate of Rome.

It is said Rome's legacy of infamy began young. Romulus' new city had many men and soldiers, but few women. The cities around them feared the warlike Romans, and would not enter into marriage pacts with them. To fix this, Romulus called a great autumn festival and invited all the neighboring cities. The people who came in greatest numbers were the Sabines, a neighboring people from the hills of Italia. At a pre-arranged point during the festival, the Roman men drew arms, abducted as many of the Sabine women as they could, and fled back to Rome. This event, immortalized in history as the Rape of the Sabine Women, was the inciting event for Rome's first war, the Sabine War. It was a bloody and protracted affair that only ended, the stories say, when the Sabine women threw themselves between their new husbands and their fathers and pleaded for an end to the strife. The Sabines and the Romans made peace -- the Sabines settled on the Capitoline Hill of Rome, and their King Titius became co-king with Romulus.

Legend says that after nearly forty years of long, prosperous rule over his new people, the King Romulus vanished in a storm while giving a speech to his troops on the Campus Martius. No corpse was ever found, and the priests hold that the gods themselves had taken him and made him a god -- Quirinus, the god of Rome herself and the eternal protector of the eternal city. The people and the Senate elected from among them a new king, a Sabine named Numa. Numa, called also Pompilius, was a fair and just king, given to worship of the gods and fervent faith. He established a great peace between Rome and all her natural foes, and built many mighty temples in Rome. It was Numa who created the office of the Pontifex Maximus, and the colleges of the priests which ruled faith in Rome even into Atellus' time.

Numa reigned forty-three years, and after his death came Tullus Hostilius, the opposite of his predecessor in every way. His ancestors had followed Romulus from Alba Longa, and he was a warlike and brutal man. He waged war upon many of Rome's foes, including the city of Alba Longa. He defeated the mother-city of Rome and razed it to the ground, forcing it's people into servitude. This murderous act against his own forebears, coupled with his lack of love for the gods and disrespect for the traditions of Rome, angered Jupiter himself. It is said that prophecy and plague hounded his last days, that nothing grew in Roman fields, and fathers slew sons -- and yet Tullus did not repent. Finally, a bolt of lightning from the heavens struck Tullus' palace, slaying the king and all his sons. The King of Rome, slain by the king of the gods.

Numa's grandson, Ancus Marcius, followed him as king, and was the last of the Sabine kings of Rome. Ancus was a godly king like his forefather, and mended the ties that Tullus had broken. New temples were raised, the Tiber was bridged, and the King founded many great public works, such as Rome's first baths, her first saltworks, and her first aqueduct. Seeing well the prosperity and might of Rome under her king, many of the city-states that had so violently resisted Tullus' expansionism came over to Rome willingly. Once these city-states, collectively known as the Latins, had surrendered themselves to Rome and become Roman citizens, Ancus settled them at the foot of the Aventine Hill. Their descendants would become the plebians, while the descendants of the initial diaspora from Alba Longa would become the patricians, the fathers of the city.

Ancus had a son-in-law, an Etruscan called Lucius Tarquinius Priscus who hailed from the north of Italy. The Romans called him Tarquin, and after Ancus' death in his sleep, they elected him king. He took the throne in place of Ancus' natural sons, who had been hunting when their father died, and could not submit themselves for the crown. In his time, Tarquin made war with the last of the free Latins and with the Sabine tribes, cousins of those who had come over to Rome all those years ago. Both the Latins and the Sabines were defeated in their turn, and their bested peoples were settled upon the Aventine Hill. Tarquin's greatest war, however, was against his native people, the Etruscans, from whom he took wealth and women in great measure. The women, he settled on the Caelian Hill, and the wealth he used to celebrate Rome's first triumph. Tarquin was a warrior and a conqueror, the best since Romulus, and much of Rome's military traditions spring from him, including the tradition of the triumph and the military regalia worn by generals.

Tarquin was murdered after some thirty-eight years of rule by the sons of Ancus Marcius, the very same from whom he had stolen the crown. Yet the conspirators would never taste of their victory -- Tarquin's son-in-law, Servius Tullius, seized the Roman throne in the aftermath of his death and declared himself King without the acclamation of the Senate, but instead the support of the people.

Like his father-in-law, the second of the Tarquins was a warrior and a conqueror, laying waste to many Etruscan armies and taking their cities and their people for the glory of Rome. In his day, Rome swelled with the wealth of Italia, and the city grew sprawling and wide, so Servius had a mighty wall built to mark the borders of the city proper. This wall became the pomerium, the point at which no soldier could enter Rome armed. Tullius extended the voting rights to the descendants of the Latins and the Sabines who lived in the slums at the foot of the hills, called the commoners or the plebs. His Servian reforms were immensely popular, and were credited with establishing Rome's first system of coinage.

Servius Tullius, though well-loved by the common folk, was murdered by the son of Tarquin, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, called Tarquin the Proud. Loved by neither the people or the Senate, he seized the throne on claim of blood alone, claiming to have slain Servius for disgracing Roman tradition and extending the vote to the poor and the un-Roman. Tarquin and his wife brutalized the corpse of the slain king in the streets of Rome and instituted a tyranny, a rule-by-one.

Those senators who had supported Servius were taken and killed, and during Tarquin's reign, the power of the Senate was greatly reduced. The king was the first and only vote on all matters of importance. Tarquin was the first to press the remaining cities of the Latins into vassalage -- they would not be Roman or vote as Romans did, but they would give coin and men to Rome in exchange for her protection. City after city fell before the proud king of Rome, and he celebrated many triumphs. To please the gods for his murder of Servius, he built the mighty temple of Jupiter Maximus atop the Capitoline Hill, above the graves of the past kings of Rome. His bones would not lie with theirs, for he was to be the last of the Tarquins -- and the last of the kings.

The fall of the kings of Rome begins not with proud Tarquin, but with his son, Tarquinius Sextus, a cruel and violent man. Sextus, it is said, desired his cousin Colliatinus' wife, Lucretia. He came to her in the night and lay with her by force, threatening her life should she repeat the tale. In horror and fear, she revealed the tale to her husband, who, together with his father-in-law Lucretius and his friend Lucius Junius Brutus, swore an oath on all the gods to drive the murderous king and his sons from Rome.

Brutus, head of the king's own guard, gathered an assembly of the people and related to them the crimes of the Tarquin dynasty: rape, usurpation, murder, vanity, impiety, and tyranny. Better to have no kings in Rome, than to have kings such as these. His violent words swayed the people and the Senate, who turned against the King and his family. The Tarquins were expelled from Rome, and Brutus, the first consul, rallied an army to defend against the overthrown king, who himself rallied an army of Etruscans and Latins to take back his throne. At the head of this army was Lars Porsena, the king of the powerful Etruscan city of Clusium and the mightiest man in Italy.

The legendary defense of Rome which followed is immortalized in history, and gave rise to the bravest names of the Republican era, including Brutus, who fell in battle against his cousin Arruns Tarquinius and was lionized in death. Greatest of these was Gaius Mucius Scaevola, one of three hundred men of Rome sent to assassinate Lars Porsena and save the city. He was captured in his attempt, and when brought before the Etruscan king and questioned on why he would risk his life so, thrust his left hand into a burning brazier and held it there, to show that his body and life were nothing before his love for Rome. Scaevola became a hero of Rome, and his descendants were forever honored to bear the name Scaevola, 'left-handed'.

The armies of Lars Porsena were turned back, and though Tarquin and his sons would try twice more to claim the city on the banks of the Tiber, the age of the kings in Rome was done. Now was come the time of the Senate and the People of Rome, the time of a city ruled by no one man, but by all the people working in concert for greater good. So was born the res publica -- the "public thing". In time, the days of the seven kings on the seven hills would pass into history and then into legend and further on into myth. In this distant mythical era were born all the oldest institutions of Rome, her divisions, her classes, her magistracies, and her founding principles.

There were kings in Rome once.

May there never be again.
 
Last edited:
There were kings in Rome once.

May there never be again.
Hail the Imperators, Hail the Caesars, King of Kings.
The good Senator Mortiferis Snarkius's words ring true. A King is fallible and and short-sighted, focused only on their own glory and desires. An Emperor is a man proven by business, by governance, and by war. A man who at last reaches the heights of great Romulus, sit among the gods as a peer, and makes the kings of the earth bow. He is not given station by his blood alone.

Patrician or pleb can seize a seat in heaven, if only they try.
 
[X] Plan Firm Foundations
-[X] Make Terms
-[X] Promote Centurions
-[X] See To Repairs
-[X] Brothers in Arms
-[X] Correspondence
--[X] Scaevola
-[X] Brotherhood
-[X] Para Bellum
-[X] Res Publica
-[X] The Crone of Bithynia
-[X] The Prince
-[X] Study

Here is the Plan I am championing. Unlike most of the other plans, rather than trying to connect with Cassianus I'm of the mind that our best bet right now is to try to make terms with him. As I have said before, trying to connect with Cassianus and become his friend and is not something that is guaranteed to succeed. As was noted in that vote option, we come from two wildly different backgrounds and that may color some of his perceptions of us. Would becoming friends help us in running the Legion? Of course. The thing is, if this path fails we will leave the Legion with its leadership still in question. By making terms now we can make clear the delineations in responsibility between the two of us. We would be implicitly acknowledging to him that we see him as a leader and that he should see us as a leader of the Legion as well. While Cassianus no doubt has a power base to support him in these negotiations I believe we are currently in the stronger position due to our support from the rank and file legionaries as well as most of the Officers, who all know us better. By making things clear between the two of us right now we can ensure that the Legion has solid leadership once we begin marching off under Marius rather than potentially leaving it in question if the Connect option fails, which is a good possibility to consider.

In terms of what we should do in our capacity as Commander of the Cohorts I think everyone is mostly in agreement over some of the options. As was said before, Promoting the Centurions is something that uniquely benefits us as we likely have known these soldiers and would gain their loyalty and support by ensuring their promotion, solidifying the loyalty of much of the Officer Corps. Similarly, Brothers in Arms is a situation we've dealt with before. Through our past connections and respect that we've earned we can more easily mediate a growing rift between the cavalry and the infantry than Cassianus can, and thus make it so that we're not dealing with any infighting when the time for actual campaigning comes. The final option I chose had me choosing between training or seeing to the repairs. In the end I chose to see to the repairs. While training would no doubt help us in the campaign soon enough, I felt that seeing to the repairs and ensuring that no one froze over the Winter before we set off was a better choice. Not only would we show the Legion that we care about their well-being, thus further cementing their support of us, we would also probably gain some further experience from this. Training wouldn't really help us if we lose some men due to the biting cold.

In terms of correspondence I chose Scaevola as I figured his insight could help us later down the line.

For the personal options, my reasoning is rather simple. Brotherhood would cement the loyalty of the rank and file in us as they would see us as one of them, and love us for our willingness to embrace them. Para Bellum and Res Publica were chosen because of the likely bonuses they would give us in terms of fighting Mithridates and the traitor Legion we will be facing on campaign. Seeing how the previous action to study with Theo conferred a lasting 11 turn bonus, with the vote stating that our free time will dwindle once we march to war with Marius I think now is the best time we will have for preparations as otherwise once campaigning begins we may not have the chance to study the tactics needed to fight our foes later on, and any bonus is a useful one is this situation. I chose to see the Crone as her insight here could prove valuable, whether it be against Mithridates or against Sulla. We are in a pivotal position at the moment to affect the outcome of the war, any foresight is something useful to us. The Prince was chosen as it is a connection we can forge that will provide long term dividends for us if successful as we all know how important Ptolemy and his family will be. It would be a shame to waste such an opportunity. Finally, the study option was chosen as it is a good option for gaining XP while also potentially helping us kiss ass later with Marius.
 
[X] Plan Love of the Legion and various Studies

[X] Plan Carpe Legium et Potestatem
-[] Connect
-[] Promote Centurion
-[] Brothers in Arms
-[] Training
-[] Correspondence
--[] Scaevola
-[] Brotherhood
-[] Si Vis Pacem
-[] Para Bellum
-[] The Crone of Bithynia
-[] The Prince
-[] Res Publica

[X] Plan Firm Foundations

[X] Plan Firm Foundations
-[X] Make Terms
-[X] Promote Centurions
-[X] See To Repairs
-[X] Brothers in Arms
-[X] Correspondence
--[X] Scaevola
-[X] Brotherhood
-[X] Para Bellum
-[X] Res Publica
-[X] The Crone of Bithynia
-[X] The Prince
-[X] Study

Here is the Plan I am championing. Unlike most of the other plans, rather than trying to connect with Cassianus I'm of the mind that our best bet right now is to try to make terms with him. As I have said before, trying to connect with Cassianus and become his friend and is not something that is guaranteed to succeed. As was noted in that vote option, we come from two wildly different backgrounds and that may color some of his perceptions of us. Would becoming friends help us in running the Legion? Of course. The thing is, if this path fails we will leave the Legion with its leadership still in question. By making terms now we can make clear the delineations in responsibility between the two of us. We would be implicitly acknowledging to him that we see him as a leader and that he should see us as a leader of the Legion as well. While Cassianus no doubt has a power base to support him in these negotiations I believe we are currently in the stronger position due to our support from the rank and file legionaries as well as most of the Officers, who all know us better. By making things clear between the two of us right now we can ensure that the Legion has solid leadership once we begin marching off under Marius rather than potentially leaving it in question if the Connect option fails, which is a good possibility to consider.

In terms of what we should do in our capacity as Commander of the Cohorts I think everyone is mostly in agreement over some of the options. As was said before, Promoting the Centurions is something that uniquely benefits us as we likely have known these soldiers and would gain their loyalty and support by ensuring their promotion, solidifying the loyalty of much of the Officer Corps. Similarly, Brothers in Arms is a situation we've dealt with before. Through our past connections and respect that we've earned we can more easily mediate a growing rift between the cavalry and the infantry than Cassianus can, and thus make it so that we're not dealing with any infighting when the time for actual campaigning comes. The final option I chose had me choosing between training or seeing to the repairs. In the end I chose to see to the repairs. While training would no doubt help us in the campaign soon enough, I felt that seeing to the repairs and ensuring that no one froze over the Winter before we set off was a better choice. Not only would we show the Legion that we care about their well-being, thus further cementing their support of us, we would also probably gain some further experience from this. Training wouldn't really help us if we lose some men due to the biting cold.

In terms of correspondence I chose Scaevola as I figured his insight could help us later down the line.

For the personal options, my reasoning is rather simple. Brotherhood would cement the loyalty of the rank and file in us as they would see us as one of them, and love us for our willingness to embrace them. Para Bellum and Res Publica were chosen because of the likely bonuses they would give us in terms of fighting Mithridates and the traitor Legion we will be facing on campaign. Seeing how the previous action to study with Theo conferred a lasting 11 turn bonus, with the vote stating that our free time will dwindle once we march to war with Marius I think now is the best time we will have for preparations as otherwise once campaigning begins we may not have the chance to study the tactics needed to fight our foes later on, and any bonus is a useful one is this situation. I chose to see the Crone as her insight here could prove valuable, whether it be against Mithridates or against Sulla. We are in a pivotal position at the moment to affect the outcome of the war, any foresight is something useful to us. The Prince was chosen as it is a connection we can forge that will provide long term dividends for us if successful as we all know how important Ptolemy and his family will be. It would be a shame to waste such an opportunity. Finally, the study option was chosen as it is a good option for gaining XP while also potentially helping us kiss ass later with Marius.
I agree with almost everything there except See to Repairs. Our stats for that are abysmal, we're better off with Cassi succeeding there than us failing.
 
Last edited:
I agree with almost everything there except See to Repairs. Our stats for that are abysmal, we're better off with Cassi succeeding there than us failing.

Our stats wouldn't matter in See to Repairs:

You would delegate it. Atellus isn't stupid — you can safely assume in all situations where his subordinates or followers might be better at something, he'll delegate, unless it is a situation where he clearly cannot or it would cause harm to his reputation.

We likely know that we're horrible at Engineering, so we'll likely just task the Legion Engineers with fixing the problem instead of looking to do it ourselves.
 
My main reason for not voting for Scaevola is paranoia about the Marians becoming suspicious about us betraying them (which, y'know, we probably will).
I'm not really worried about paranoia. In Rome that would be much greater concern, but here in the legion (a mix of patrician equites and plebian soldiers) there's a fair split between Marian partisans and Sullan partisans (and people who just want the civil wars to be over darn it) that it's normal to work alongside people with different views -- at least among the lower ranks. At the higher ranks... I really don't think anyone would look askance at us if we wrote to Scaevola, because he's our patron and of course we are writing to our patron.

I really sympathize with those who prefer to vote for Scaevola. Since approval voting is permitted, I could pretty easily write out a separate plan that changes the correspondence action and nothing else (see below).

However, I still strongly believe we should write to Cicero, and not just because he's our designated waifu (though of course he is, Cicero is awesome). Cicero gives Intelligence XP, which is the best stat in the quest. Cicero writes long letters, giving us information on a wide range of subjects from all over the Mediterranean world, which means he's an informal spynet all of his own. Cicero gives us an excuse to write long letters in reply, allowing us to process our thoughts like a journal, but also giving Telamon an opportunity to give an in-character evaluation of events around us. Finally, Cicero is and will be legendary for the next two millennia for his letter-writing, so our correspondence with him establishes our legacy for all future generations.

BUT, for those who reasonably believe that Scaevola is a higher short-term priority, I give you this:

[X] Plan Publicola
(just to ensure my original vote isn't lost)


[X] Plan Publicola Plus
New! Improved! Now with more Scaevola!
(Specifically, every other option remains the same, but changes the correspondence action to Scaevola instead)

The Consul's Heir (pick one)
[] Connect


Master of the Cohorts
[] Promote Centurions
[] A Law Beyond The Sword
[] Brothers in Arms


Correspondence: (response will arrive in 2-3 turns)
--[] Scaevola

Personal: (pick six)
[] The Scipians:
[] Si Vis Pacem:

[] Para Bellum:
[] The Crone of Bithynia:
[] The City of the Kings of Asia:
[] Study:
 
[X]Plan Publicola Plus
[X]Plan Publicola(Proserpina Edition)
[X]Plan Publicola

The power of indecision is strong within me.
 
Obvious leads are obvious :p

Inserted tally
Adhoc vote count started by PyrrosWarrior on Jul 27, 2019 at 11:20 PM, finished with 290 posts and 33 votes.

  • [X] Plan Publicola
    [X] Plan Love of the Legion and various Studies
    -[X] Make Terms
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] A Law Beyond The Sword
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] The Cult
    -[X] Res Publica
    -[X] Study
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    [X] Plan Firm Foundations
    -[X] Make Terms
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] See To Repairs
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] Res Publica
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    -[x] The Prince
    -[X] Study
    [X] Plan Off with the gloves
    -[X] Overshadow
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] A Law Beyond The Sword
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] The Cult
    -[X] The City of the Kings of Asia
    -[X] Study
    [X] Plan Make Connections and Study v2
    [X] Plan Scope Out The Territory​
    -[X] The Catilinarians (-4 Talents)​
    -[X] Theo

    -[X] Gather Support
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Atticus​
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[X] The Consul
    -[X] Fortune's Favor​
    [X] Plan The Power Of Friendship
    -[x] Connect:
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[x] Training
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[x] The Scipians
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] Study
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    [x] Plan Destiny
    -[x] Connect:
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[x] See to the Repair
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[x] Cicero
    -[x] The Marians:
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] Study
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    -[x] The Prince
    [X] Plan Off with the gloves
    -[X] Overshadow
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] A Law Beyond The Sword
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] The Cult
    -[X] The City of the Kings of Asia
    -[X] Study
    [X] Plan Love of the Legion and various Studies
    -[X] Make Terms
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] A Law Beyond The Sword
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] The Cult
    -[X] Res Publica
    -[X] Study
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    [X] Conquer the Sea
    [X] Plan Love of the Legion and various Studies
    -[X] Make Terms
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] A Law Beyond The Sword
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] The Cult
    -[X] Res Publica
    -[X] Study
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    [X] Plan Love of the Legion and various Studies
    -[X] Make Terms
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] A Law Beyond The Sword
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] The Cult
    -[X] Res Publica
    -[X] Study
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    [X] Plan Carpe Legium et Potestatem
    -[x] Connect:
    -[X] Promote Centurion
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[x] Training
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[X] Si Vis Pacem​
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    -[x] The Prince
    -[X] Res Publica
    [X] Plan Firm Foundations
    -[X] Make Terms
    -[X] Promote Centurions
    -[X] See To Repairs
    -[X] Brothers in Arms
    -[X] Correspondence​
    --[X] Scaevola
    -[X] Brotherhood
    -[x] Para Bellum:
    -[X] Res Publica
    -[X] The Crone of Bithynia
    -[x] The Prince
    -[X] Study
    [X] Plan Publicola
    [X] Plan Publicola Plus
    [X] Plan Publicola Plus
    [X] Plan Publicola Plus
    [X]Plan Publicola(Proserpina Edition)
    [X] Plan Publicola
 
Back
Top