Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 3.54 | Liv. 3.55 (Latin) | >>Liv. 3.56 |
ch. 553.55 [Note] The election of consuls took place under the presidency of an interrex. Those elected were L. Valerius and. M. Horatius, and they at once assumed office. Their consulship was a popular one, and inflicted no injustice upon the patricians, though they regarded it with suspicion, for whatever was done to safeguard the liberties of the plebs they looked upon as an infringement of their own powers.
First of all, as it was a doubtful legal point whether the patricians were bound by the ordinances of the plebs, they carried a law in the Assembly of Centuries that what the plebs had passed in their Tribes should be binding on the whole people. [Note] By this law a very effective weapon was placed in the hands of the tribunes. Then another consular law, confirming the right of appeal, as the one defence of liberty, which had been annulled by the decemvirs, was not only restored but strengthened for the future by a fresh enactment. This forbade the appointment of any magistrate from whom there was no right of appeal, and provided that any one who did so appoint might be rightly and lawfully put to death, nor should the man who put him to death be held guilty of murder.
When they had sufficiently strengthened the plebs by
the right of appeal on the one hand and the protection
afforded by the tribunes on the other, they proceeded
to secure the personal inviolability of the tribunes
themselves. The memory of this had almost perished,
so they renewed it with certain sacred rites revived
from a distant past, and in addition to securing their
inviolability by the sanctions of religion, they
enacted a law that whoever offered violence to the
magistrates of the plebs, whether tribunes, aediles,
or decemviral judges, his person should be devoted to
These were the laws enacted by the consuls. They
ordered that the decrees of the senate, which used
formerly to be suppressed and tampered with at the
pleasure of the consuls should henceforth be taken to
the aediles at the temple of
Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 3.54 | Liv. 3.55 (Latin) | >>Liv. 3.56 |