Index: binaries/data/mods/public/gui/text/quotes.txt =================================================================== --- binaries/data/mods/public/gui/text/quotes.txt +++ binaries/data/mods/public/gui/text/quotes.txt @@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ “After fighting from noon almost to sunset, with victory doubtful, the Germans, on one side charged the enemy in a compact body, and drove them back; and, when they were put to flight, the archers were surrounded and cut to pieces.” \n— Caesar about the Battle of Alesia (“De Bello Gallico”, VII. 80) “All the centurions of the fourth cohort were slain, and the standard-bearer killed, the standard itself lost, almost all the centurions of the other cohorts either wounded or slain, and among them the chief centurion of the legion, Publius Sextius Baculus, a very valiant man, who was so exhausted by many and severe wounds, that he was already unable to support himself.” \n— Caesar about the Battle of the Sabis (“De Bello Gallico”, II. 25) “But the enemy \[…] displayed such great courage, that when the front rank had fallen the men behind them stood on them and continue the fight from on top of the corpses; when these were killed the pile of bodies grew higher, while the survivors used the heap as a vantage point for throwing missiles at our men, or catching our spears and throwing them back.” \n— Caesar about the Battle of the Sabis (“De Bello Gallico”, II. 27) -“The die is cast.” \n— Caesar, when crossing the Rubicon river with his legion into Italy, a capital offense that led to his civil war against Pompey (Suetonius, “The Lives of the Twelve Caesars”, 32) +“The die is cast.” \n— Caesar, when crossing the Rubicon River with his legion into Italy, a capital offense that led to his civil war against Pompey (Suetonius, “The Lives of the Twelve Caesars”, 32) “I'd rather be the first man here than the second man in Rome.” \n— Caesar, when passing through a barbarian village in the Alps (Plutarch, “Parallel Lives”, “Caesar”, sec. 11) “Stop quoting laws, we carry weapons!” \n— Pompey (Plutarch, “Parallel Lives”, “Pompey”, sec. 10) “If a man put out the eye of another man, his eye shall be put out.” \n— Hammurabi (Hammurabi's Code, sec. 196) Index: binaries/data/mods/public/maps/random/latium.json =================================================================== --- binaries/data/mods/public/maps/random/latium.json +++ binaries/data/mods/public/maps/random/latium.json @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ "settings" : { "Name" : "Latium", "Script" : "latium.js", - "Description" : "The Italian peninsula \n\n Latium is the region of central western Italy in which the city of Rome was founded and grew to be the capital city of the Roman Empire. Latium was originally a small triangle of fertile, volcanic soil on which resided the tribe of the Latins. It was located on the left bank (east and south) of the Tiber river, extending northward to the Anio river (a left-bank tributary of the Tiber) and southeastward to the Pomptina Palus (Pontine Marshes, now the Pontine Fields) as far south as the Circeian promontory. The right bank of the Tiber was occupied by the Etruscan city of Veii, and the other borders were occupied by Italic tribes. Subsequently Rome defeated Veii and then its Italic neighbors, expanding Latium to the Apennine Mountains in the northeast and to the opposite end of the marsh in the southeast. The modern descendant, the Italian Regione of Lazio, also called Latium in Latin, and occasionally in modern English, is somewhat larger still, but not as much as double the original Latium.", + "Description" : "The Italian Peninsula \n\n Latium is the region of central western Italy in which the city of Rome was founded and grew to be the capital city of the Roman Empire. Latium was originally a small triangle of fertile, volcanic soil on which resided the tribe of the Latins. It was located on the left bank (east and south) of the Tiber river, extending northward to the Anio river (a left-bank tributary of the Tiber) and southeastward to the Pomptina Palus (Pontine Marshes, now the Pontine Fields) as far south as the Circeian promontory. The right bank of the Tiber was occupied by the Etruscan city of Veii, and the other borders were occupied by Italic tribes. Subsequently Rome defeated Veii and then its Italic neighbors, expanding Latium to the Apennine Mountains in the northeast and to the opposite end of the marsh in the southeast. The modern descendant, the Italian Regione of Lazio, also called Latium in Latin, and occasionally in modern English, is somewhat larger still, but not as much as double the original Latium.", "Preview" : "latium.png", "CircularMap" : false } Index: binaries/data/mods/public/maps/scenarios/serengeti.xml =================================================================== --- binaries/data/mods/public/maps/scenarios/serengeti.xml +++ binaries/data/mods/public/maps/scenarios/serengeti.xml @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@