ἱστορίαι Historiai
Liv. 27.11 The History of Rome, Livy; served verbatim
It was further decided that before the consul left the City certain portents should be expiated. Various places had been struck by liLrhtninz:the statue of Tuniter on the Alban mount ana a tree near nis temple. a grove at ustia. the city wall and temple of Fortune at Capua and the wall and one of the gates at Sinuessa. Some people asserted that the water at Alba had run blood and that in the sanctuary of the temple of Fors Fortuna in Rome a statuette in the diadem of the goddess had fallen of itself on to her hand. It was confidently believed that.at Privernum an ox had spoken and that a vulture had flown down on to a booth in the crowded forum. At Sinuessa it was reported that a child was born of doubtful sex, these are commonly called androgyni-a word like many others borrowed from the Greek, a language which readily.admits compound words--also that it had rained milk and that a boy had been born with an elephant's head. These portents were expiated by sacrifices of full-grown victims, and a day was appointed for special intercessions at all the shrines二It was further decreed that the praetor C. Hostilius should vow and celebrate the Games of Apollo in strict accordance with the practice of recent years. During this interval the consul Q. Fulvius convened the Assembly for the election of censors. Two men were elected, neither of whom had attained the dignity of consul-M. Cornelius Cethegus and P.Sempronius Tuditanus. A measure was adopted by the plebs, with the sanction ,senate, authori sing考hese censors to let the territory of Cap ua to individual occupiers. The revision of the senatorial roll was delayed through a difference between them as to who ought to be chosen as leader of the senate. The selection had fallen to Sempronius;Cornelius, however, insisted that they ought to tollow the traclitional usage in accordance with which the man who had been the first of all his surviving contemporaries to be appointed censor was always chosen as leader of the senate, and in this case it was T. Manlius Torquatus. Sempronius replied that the Lrods who had given him by lot the right of choosing had also given him the right to make a free choice;he should therefore act on his own discretion and choose Q. Fabius Maxi mu_the man whom he claimed as foremost of all the Romans, a claim he make good before Hannibal himself. ·a lengthy argument his colleague gave way and Sem nius selected Q. Fabius Maximus as leader of the senate. revision of the roll was then proceeded with. eizht names being _,rr_月,,。言.,,,。沙。,。. SLMCK Oil, amongst tnem that of M. uaecilius Metellus, the author of the infamous proposal to abandon Italy after Cannae. For the same reason some were struck 。kout of the equestrian order, but there were very few on whom the taint of that disgrace rested.汕those who had belonged to the cavalry of the legions of Cannae, which were 1 Italy at the time--and iv 749 D there was a considerable number of them-were deprived of their regulation horses. This punishment was made still heavier by an extension of their compulsory service. The years they had served’with the horses furnished by the State were not to count, they were to serve their ten years from that date with their own horses. A large number of men were discovered who ought to have served, and all those who had reached the age of seventeen at the commencement of the war and had not done any military service were degraded to the aerarii. The censors next signed contracts for the rebuilding of the places round the Forum which had been destroyed by fire .8 These comprised seven shops, the fish market and the Hall of Vesta.

The Greek stands ready in the workroom; the English is served. Both faces will read together.

← Liv. 27.10 contents Liv. 27.12 →

Filed here — the addresses this episode attests; counted by the house’s first pass
battle of Cannae — a deed fall of Alba — a candidate entry fall of Capua — a candidate entry siege of Capua — a candidate entry Hannibal — a life Maximus — a candidate entry Sempronius — a candidate entry Torquatus — a candidate entry Tuditanus — a candidate entry

The History of Rome, Livy — translated by Rev. Canon Roberts, 1912
Apparatus shelf + pinned Wikisource — Livy, The History of Rome (Rev. Canon Roberts translation, Everyman's Library) · Rev. Canon Roberts, Everyman's Library (J. M. Dent & Sons / E. P. Dutton), first issue 1912; six volumes
license: public-domain (the Roberts translation's Everyman first issue is 1912, pre-1930; Wikisource dates the translation 1905 — either way decades inside the US public domain; digital-door text carries no additional rights)