Romana Crucifixa Est 14 Better ((hot))

History records few such sentences. The Romans crucified thousands—rebels, slaves, traitors—but rarely its own citizens, and almost never its women. So this is already an anomaly, a wound in the legal parchment. Who was she? A vestal accused of unchastity? A noble mother who conspired against an emperor? The name is gone. Only the grammar of suffering remains: feminine, passive, past-perfect.

The phrase "Romana crucifixa est" translates from Latin as "The Roman (woman) has been crucified" "The Roman (woman) was crucified." romana crucifixa est 14 better

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Mark Harwood
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