duodecimvirate
English
Alternative forms
- (misspelling): duodecemvirate
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: dyo͞o'ōdĕsĭmʹvĭrət, IPA(key): /ˌdjuːəʊdɛˈsɪmvɪɹət/
Noun
duodecimvirate
- (uncommon) A group of twelve people, especially (politics) a council of twelve men sharing office or rule, particularly such groups of magistrates in ancient Rome.
- 1789, William Williams, Primitive History, from the Creation to Cadmus, page 482
- Strabo ſeems to ſay, there were fronting theſe halls, (which Diodorus likewiſe ſeems to diſtinguiſh from the labyrinth, ſtyling it the work of the Duodecimvirate) 27 other halls.
- 1948, The Contemporary Review CLXXIV, page 184
- It is essential to [Stalin] and to his duodecimvirate that open war shall be avoided or postponed for as long as possible.
- 1984, Diane Duane, My Enemy, My Ally, page 22
- The Tricameron…comprised…a “Senate”…and a “Praetorate,” a sort of quadruple troika or duodecimvirate: twelve men and women who implemented the Senate’s decrees, declared war or peace, and…spent most of the time squabbling amongst themselves for power.
- 1996, Michael Peachin, Iudex vice Caesaris, page 135
- It would appear that the duodecimvirate was held after the praetorship, but before the consulate.
- 2008, Michael Somers, Galactic Exodus, page 73
- The logs of each member of the covert duodecimvirate displayed identical readouts.
- 1789, William Williams, Primitive History, from the Creation to Cadmus, page 482
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
Related terms
- duodecimvir
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