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・ Free Church of Antioch
・ Free Church of England
・ Free Church of Scotland
・ Free Church of Scotland (1843–1900)
・ Free Church of Scotland (Continuing)
・ Free Church of Scotland (since 1900)
・ Free Church of the Good Shepherd
・ Free Church of Tonga
・ Free Church Parsonage
・ Free Church Training College
・ Free Church, Hampstead Garden Suburb
・ Free Cinema
・ Free Citizens
・ Free city
・ Free City (album)
Free city (antiquity)
・ Free City of Besançon
・ Free City of Danzig
・ Free City of Danzig (Napoleonic)
・ Free City of Danzig Constituent Assembly election, 1920
・ Free City of Danzig MP reduction referendum, 1928
・ Free City of Danzig parliamentary election, 1923
・ Free City of Danzig parliamentary election, 1927
・ Free City of Danzig parliamentary election, 1930
・ Free City of Danzig parliamentary election, 1933
・ Free City of Danzig parliamentary election, 1935
・ Free City of Frankfurt
・ Free City of Greyhawk
・ Free City of Kraków
・ Free City of Lübeck


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Free city (antiquity) : ウィキペディア英語版
Free city (antiquity)
Free city ((ラテン語:civitas libera, urbs liberae condicionis); )〔(IG II² 3301 ) - Pale city (of Paleans) (modern Paliki) on Kefalonia honours Trajan.〕 was a self-governed city during the Hellenistic and Roman Imperial eras. The status was given by the king or emperor, who nevertheless supervised the city's affairs through his ''epistates'' or ''curator'' (Greek: ''epimeletes'') respectively. Several autonomous cities had also the right to issue civic coinage bearing the name of the city.
Examples of free cities: Amphipolis after 357 BC remained permanently a free and autonomous city inside the Macedonian kingdom;〔Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond, Guy Thompson Griffith, and Frank William Walbank. A History of Macedonia: Volume II: 550-336 B.C. Clarendon Press, 1979, Page 351, ISBN 0-19-814814-3〕 probably also Cassandreia and Philippi. Under Seleucid rule, numerous cities enjoyed autonomy and issued coins; some of them, like Seleucia and Tarsus continued to be free cities, even after the conquest by Pompey. Nicopolis was also constituted a free city by Augustus, its founder.〔The Greek city from Alexander to Justinian By Arnold Hugh Martin Jones Page 129 (1940)〕 Thessalonica after the battle of Philippi, was made a free city in 42 BC, when it had fortunately sided with the victors〔The Epistles of Paul the Apostle to the Thessalonians By George Gillanders Findlay Page 10 ISBN 1-4372-9209-7 (2008)〕
Athens, a free city with its own laws, appealed to Hadrian to devise new laws which he modelled on those given by Draco and Solon.〔Municipal Administration in the Roman Empire By Frank Frost Abbott (Page 412 ) ISBN 1-4067-3900-6 (2007)〕
Autonomi or rather Autonomoi was the name given by the Greeks to those states which were governed by their own laws, and were not subject to any foreign power.〔(Thuc. v. 18, 27 ; Xen. Hell. v. 1. § 31.)〕 This name was also given to those cities subject to the Romans, which were permitted to enjoy their own laws, and elect their own magistrates.〔(Omnes suis legibus et judiciis usae autonomian adeptae, revixerunt, Cicero. Ad Atticum . vi. 2)〕 This permission was regarded as a great privilege, and mark of honour; and we accordingly find it recorded on coins and medals (e.g. Metropolis of Antiochians autonomous).〔Ezechiel Spanheim. Dissertationes de praestantia et usu numismatum . p. 789. Amst. 1671.)〕
==References==

*Hadrian and the Cities of the Roman Empire By Mary T Boatwright ISBN 0-691-09493-4

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