124:
Valerio-Horatian Laws. Mommsen and
Cornell are among the historians who defend the historicity of at least the core of the story. The Valerio-Horatian Laws have also been questioned. Regarding the law on the right of appeal, there were two other such laws by consuls from the Valeria family (dated 509 BC and 300 BC) and the argument is that only the last one is historical. Regarding the law of the resolution of the Plebeian Council, there were two other laws with the same provision, the
111:
were binding on whole people, including the patricians. The second law restored the right of appeal to the people which had been suspended during the two decemvirates and added the provision that no official exempt from the right of appeal was to be appointed and in the case of such an appointment
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Both the story of the first and the second decemvirates have been questioned by some modern historians who think that the second decemvirate was a fiction. This would put into question the historicity of the second plebeian secession, the consulship of Lucius
Valerius and his colleague and the
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they were chosen as negotiators because their previous actions had put them in a favourable light in the eyes of the plebeians, who felt that they were trustworthy. When the demands of the plebeians were met and the secession was called off, both men were elected as consuls. They passed the
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The two men were patricians who stood up when a plebeian was being abused by the despotic second decemvirate, spoke critically of the decemviri and showed sympathy towards the plebeians. When the plebeians rebelled in the
116:) of the plebeian tribunes (the representatives of the plebeians) into the statutes. Previously, this principle was only enshrined in the religious sanction of the
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of 287 BC. Again, it is argued that only the last law is historical. Other historians have defended the historicity of these laws.
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in 449 BC when that body showed despotic tendencies. In honor of their efforts, the pair were elected
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anyone could lawfully kill him. The third law put the principle of the inviolability (
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Three years after his consulship, in 446 BC, Valerius was elected
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Valerius
Poplicola Potitus, Lucius and Horatius Barbatus, Marcus
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254:
Romische
Geschichte bis zum Beginn der punischen Kriege
387:Santalucia, B., in Momigliano and Schiavone (eds),
352:Ogilvie, R.M., A Commentary on Livy, (1965) p. 252
474:
156:, the first elected quaestors of the Republic.
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343:Staveley, E. S, Historia (1955), p. 412-14
176:, vol. 8A, part 1, col. 188 (Valerius 304)
16:5th-century BC Roman senator and consul
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13:
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60:Lucius Valerius Poplicola Potitus
23:Lucius Valerius Poplicola Potitus
280:A Critical History of Early Rome
85:for the remainder of that year.
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89:Potitus and the Decemvirate
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488:Ancient Roman triumphators
152:. They were, according to
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365:, VII.2 1989, p. 223, 312
363:Cambridge Ancient History
269:, VII.2 1989, pp. 113-142
267:Cambridge Ancient History
96:second plebeian secession
47:
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28:
21:
453:Marcus Horatius Barbatus
75:Marcus Horatius Barbatus
105:Leges Veleriae-Horatiae
52:Lucius Valerius Potitus
376:The Beginnings of Rome
334:, II (1960), pp. 49-50
306:The Beginnings of Rome
295:, I (1864), pp.285-318
319:Storia crtica di Roma
101:Valerio-Horatian Laws
293:Romische Forschungen
321:, II (1913), p. 465
73:who, together with
429:Political offices
130:of 339 BC and the
79:second decemvirate
69:450–446 BC) was a
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391:(1988), p. 437
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118:lex sacrata
29:Nationality
477:Categories
243:Livy, 3.55
160:References
437:Decemviri
417:Broughton
317:Pais, E.
291:Mommsen,
225:, 3.49-50
71:patrician
407:, xi. 22
252:Beloch,
172:Münzer,
146:Quaestor
48:Children
43:(449 BC)
493:Valerii
401:Tacitus
154:Tacitus
83:consuls
448:449 BC
405:Annals
41:Consul
37:Office
451:with
32:Roman
217:Livy
203:, "
187:MRR
64:fl.
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174:RE
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67:c.
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103:(
62:(
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