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CELERES

Volume 5 · 197 words · 1815 Edition

in Roman antiquity, a regiment of body-guards belonging to the Roman kings, established by Romulus, and composed of 300 young men, chosen out of the most illustrious Roman families, and approved by the suffrages of the curiae of the people, each of which furnished ten. The name comes from celer, "quick, ready," and was given them because of their promptness to obey the king.

The celeres always attended near the king's person, to guard him, to be ready to carry his orders, and to execute execute them. In war they made the van-guard in the engagement, which they always began first; in retreats they made the rear-guard.

Though the cel-ros were a body of horse, yet they usually dismounted, and fought on foot; their commander was called tribune, or prefect of the celeros. They were divided into three troops of 100 each, commanded by a captain called centurio: their tribune was the second person in the kingdom.

Plutarch says, Numa broke the celeros. If this be true, they were soon re-established; for we find them under most of the succeeding kings: witness the great Brutus, who expelled the Tarquins, and who was the tribune of the celeros.