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| “元老院与罗马人民”(拉丁语:Senātus Populusque Rōmānus 或其缩写形式)被紋飾在罗马軍團的鹰旗上以及古罗马很多公共建筑之上。时至今日,当今罗马市的城徽、市政设施上,以及公用建筑物上都可以找到"SPQR"这个缩写词。(zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPQR) 
 The SPQR symbol was first used by the Roman Senate when the nation
 changed into a republic sometime around 80 BCE., after the people
 defeated the last Roman emperor Tarquin. In ancient Rome, this symbol
 indicated the difference between the common man and the governing
 authority of the senate, and was used as propaganda to promote the
 senate. Both the people as well as the government had considerable
 influence on different aspects of nation's progress. While common folk
 had formed committees and had the power to influence local issues, the
 senate had immense authority over the movements of armed forces and
 diplomats. The sign reminded the people of the fact that they were a
 part of a fledgling republic, and to be proud that, they were not
 ruled by a monarch any more.
 
 The emperor was considered as a representative of the people, even
 though it was the emperor who decided all the decrees made by the
 senate.
 
 During Benito Mussolini's reign, the fascist dictator had several
 public buildings, monuments, and manhole lids, inscribed with SPQR to
 promote his dictatorship as the rise of a new Roman Empire.
 (historyplex.com/what-does-roman-spqr-mean)
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