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・ Cohors I Delmatarum milliaria equitata
・ Cohors I Flavia Commagenorum equitata
・ Cohors I Hispanorum
・ Cohors I Hispanorum pia fidelis
・ Cohors I Raetorum
・ Cohors I Raetorum equitata
・ Cohors I Ulpia Dacorum
・ Cohors II Alpinorum equitata
・ Cohors II Aquitanorum equitata c.R.
・ Cohors II Delmatarum
・ Cohors II Gallorum Dacica equitata
・ Cohors II Gallorum veterana equitata
・ Cohors II Hispanorum peditata
・ Cohors II Italica Civium Romanorum
・ Cohors III Alpinorum equitata
Cohors III Aquitanorum equitata c.R.
・ Cohors III Delmatarum equitata c.R. pf
・ Cohors IV Aquitanorum equitata c.R.
・ Cohors IV Baetica
・ Cohors IV Delmatarum
・ Cohors IV Gallorum equitata
・ Cohors V Delmatarum
・ Cohors V Delmatarum c.R.
・ Cohors VI Delmatarum equitata
・ Cohors VI Nerviorum
・ Cohors VI Thracum quingenaria equitata
・ Cohors VII Delmatarum equitata
・ Cohors XX Palmyrenorum
・ Cohort
・ Cohort (educational group)


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Cohors III Aquitanorum equitata c.R. : ウィキペディア英語版
Cohors III Aquitanorum equitata c.R.


Cohors tertia Aquitanorum equitata civium Romanorum ("3rd part-mounted Cohort of Aquitani Roman citizens") was a Roman auxiliary mixed infantry and cavalry regiment. It may have been originally raised in Gallia Aquitania in the reign of founder-emperor Augustus after the revolt of the Aquitani was suppressed in 26 BC.〔Holder (1980) 111〕 Alternatively, it may have been raised by emperor Claudius (r. 41-54) to replace regiments stationed in the newly annexed province of Britannia.〔Spaul (2000) 147-8〕 Unlike most Gauls, the Aquitani were not Celtic-speaking but spoke Aquitanian, a now extinct non Indo-European language closely related to Basque.
The regiment first appears in the datable epigraphic record in Germania Superior (Pfalz-Alsace) in 74 AD. It remained based in Germania Superior for all its recorded existence. Its last datable attestation is an altar dedicated in 244-9. The regiment's inscriptions have been found at the following Roman forts: Echzell; Neckarburken; Obenburg; Oehringen (198); Osterburken (150, 223-35, 244-9); Stockstadt am Main; Wimpfen.〔Spaul (2000) 147〕
The name and origin of one ''praefectus'' (regimental commander) survives, P. Allius Proculus from the city of Rome. The names of one ''centurio'' (infantry officer) (c150) and 3 ''decuriones'' (cavalry officer, commander of a ''turma'') survive, as do that of a ''custos armorum'' (weapons officer) and one ''medicus'' (chief medical officer) (198). One ''caligatus'' (common soldier) is attested. No origins survive for any of these men.
The honorific title ''civium Romanorum'' (''c.R.'' for short) was normally awarded by the emperor for valour to an auxiliary regiment as a whole. The award would include the grant of Roman citizenship to all the regiment's men, but not to subsequent recruits to the regiment. The regiment, however, would retain the prestigious title in perpetuity.〔Goldsworthy (2005) 97〕 Until 212, only a minority of the empire's inhabitants (inc. all Italians) held full Roman citizenship. The rest were denoted ''peregrini'', a second-class status. Since the legions admitted only citizens, ''peregrini'' could only enlist in the auxilia. Citizenship carried a number of tax and other privileges and was highly sought-after. It could also be earned by serving the minimum 25-year term in the auxilia.
== Citations ==


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