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Latin War : ウィキペディア英語版
Latin War

The (Second) Latin War (340–338 BC)〔The Romans customarily dated events by noting which consuls held office that year, The Latin War broke out in the year in which Titus Manlius Imperiosus Torquatus and Publius Decius Mus were consuls, and ended when Lucius Furius Camillus and Gaius Maenius were consuls. When converted to the western calendar using the traditional Varronian chronology, these years become 340 and 338 BC. However modern historians have shown that the Varronian chronology dates the Latin War four years too early due to inclusion of unhistorical "dictator years". Despite this known inaccuracy, the Varronian chronology remains in use by convention also in academic literature and is therefore also the chronology used in this article. Forsythe(2005), pp. 369-370〕 was a conflict between the Roman Republic and its neighbors the Latin peoples of ancient Italy. It ended in the dissolution of the Latin League, and incorporation of its territory into the Roman sphere of influence, with the Latins gaining partial rights and varying levels of citizenship.
==The sources==
The most comprehensive source on the Latin War is the Roman historian Livy (59 BC – AD 17), who narrates the war in the eighth book of his history of Rome, ''Ab Urbe Condita''. Two other substantial narratives have also survived, a fragment from the ''Roman Antiquities'' of Dionysius of Halicarnassus (c. 60 BC–after 7 BC), a Greek contemporary of Livy, and a summary by the 12th century Byzantine chronicler John Zonaras based on the ''Roman history'' of Cassius Dio (AD 150 – 235).〔Oakley (1998), pp. 425-426〕 Modern historians consider the ancient accounts of the Latin War to be a mixture of fact and fiction. All the surviving authors lived long after the Latin War and relied on the works of earlier writers. Several of the historians used by Livy experienced the Social War (91–88 BC) between Rome and her Italian allies and seem to have interpreted the Latin War in the terms of that war; this has introduced anachronistic elements into the historical record.〔Oakley (1998), p. 410〕

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