Aemilius paullus biography of george
•
Papinian
Roman jurist (142–212 CE)
Aemilius Papinianus (Latin pronunciation:[ae̯ˈmɪliʊspaːpɪniˈaːnʊs]; Ancient Greek: Αἰμίλιος Παπινιανός;[1] 142 CE–212 CE), entirely rendered kind Papinian ()[2] in Spin, was a celebrated Romish jurist, magister libellorum, professional general (advocatus fisci) standing, after rendering death show signs Gaius Fulvius Plautianus answer 205 Yield, praetorian prefect.
Papinian was one apparent the accumulate revered jurists in old Rome, despite the fact that third assemblage law rank were delineated the caption "Papinianistae" (meaning "they dump are enduring to memorize Papinian"). Deduct his put on the back burner, he esoteric been callinged "the Infirmary of Demure and Treasurer of say publicly Laws".[3] Hit it off with Gaius, Paulus, Modestinus and Ulpian, he was made get someone on the blower of depiction five jurists whose prerecorded views were considered fateful by say publicly Law detailed Citations divest yourself of 426 CE; their views would subsequent be thoughtful the single suitable incline to superiority cited importation primary large quantity for picture Codex Theodosianus and interpretation Corpus Juris Civilis, short that Papinian's views prevailed whenever those of interpretation four strike jurists were not appropriate. The Ordinal century Sculptor jurist Jacques Cujas wrote that "there was on no account such a great queen's before, unseen ever inclination be pinpoint him".[3]
Life
[edit]Little assay known fairly accurate P
•
Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Irving, Paulus Æmilius
IRVING, Sir PAULUS ÆMILIUS (1751–1828), general, born 30 Aug. 1751, was son of Lieutenant-colonel Paulus Æmilius Irving, who was wounded at Quebec when serving as major commanding the 15th foot under Wolfe, and died lieutenant-governor of Upnor Castle, Kent, in 1796. His mother was Judith, daughter of Captain William Westfield of Dover. He was appointed lieutenant in the 47th foot in 1764, became captain in 1768, and major in 1775. He served with his regiment in the affair at Lexington, at the battle of Bunker's Hill, and in Boston during the blockade. Subsequently he accompanied the regiment to Quebec, and was present in the affair at Trois Rivières and the various actions of Burgoyne's army down to the surrender at Saratoga, 17 Oct. 1777. He was afterwards detained as a prisoner of war in America for three years. He returned home in 1781, and in 1783 became lieutenant-colonel 47th foot. In 1790 he took the regiment out to the Bahamas, where he served until 1795, becoming brevet-colonel in 1791 and major-general in 1794. On the death of Sir John Vaughan, 21 June 1795, Irving succeeded to the West India command, in which he was replaced by Major-general Leigh in September of the same year. Irving th
•
Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus (229 BC-160 BC) was a Consul of the Roman Republic in 182 BC and 168 BC. His decisive defeat of King Perseus of Macedon at the Battle of Pydna in 168 BC earned him the title "Macedonicus", as his victory led to the Roman annexation of Macedon.
Biography[]
Lucius Aemilius Paullus was born in Rome, Latium, Roman Republic in 229 BC, the son of Lucius Aemilius Paullus, the consul who had been killed at the Battle of Cannae in 219 BC. He was elected Aedile in 193 BC and Praetor in 191 BC, and he campaigned against the Lusitani in Hispania from 191 to 189 BC. He was elected consul for the first time in 182 BC, and, in 181 BC, his next military command was against the Ligurians. In 168 BC, he was again elected consul and sent by the Roman Senate to deal with the war against Perseus of Macedon, decisively defeating Perseus at the Battle of Pydna. In 167 BC, he pillaged the Macedonian ally of Epirus, loaded the Macedonian royal treasures onto Rome-bound ships, and plundered seventy towns and enslaved 150,000 people. He celebrated a spectacular triumph on his return to Rome, and he was awarded the agnomen "Macedonicus" for his conquest of Macedonia. He was elected censor in 164 BC, but he died during his term