The department of the twentieth quaestor cannot be ascertained.

29. The Italian confederacy was much older (II. VII. Italy And The Italians); but it was a league of states, not, like the Sullan Italy, a state-domain marked off as an unit within the Roman empire.

30. II. III. Complete Opening Up Of Magistracies And Priesthoods

31. II. III. Combination Of The Plebian Aristocracy And The Farmers Against The Nobility

32. III. XIII. Religious Economy

33. IV. X. Punishments Inflicted On Particular Communities

34. e. g. IV. IV. Dissatisfaction In The Capital, IV. V. Warfare Of Prosecutions

35. IV. II. Vote By Ballot

36. IV. III. Modifications Of The Penal Law

37. II. II. Intercession

38. IV. III. Modifications Of The Penal Law

39. IV. VII. Rejection Of The Proposals For An Accomodation

40. II. VII. Subject Communities

41. IV. X. Cisapline Gaul Erected Into A Province

42. IV. VII. Preparations For General Revolt Against Rome

43. III. XI. Roman Franchise More Difficult Of Acquisition

44. IV. IX. Government Of Cinna

45. IV. VII. Decay Of Military Discipline

46. IV. VII. Economic Crisis

47. IV. VII. Strabo

48. IV. VIII. Flaccus Arrives In Asia

49. IV. IX. Death Of Cinna

50. IV. IX. Nola

51. IV. IX. Fresh Difficulties With Mithradates

52. Euripides, Medea, 807:-- --Meideis me phaulein kasthenei nomizeto Meid eisuchaian, alla thateron tropou Bareian echthrois kai philoisin eumenei--.

53. IV. IX. Fresh Difficulties With Mithradates

54. IV. IX. Fresh Difficulties With Mithradates, IV. X. Re-establishment Of Constitutional Order

55. Not -pthiriasis-, as another account states; for the simple reason that such a disease is entirely imaginary.

Chapter XI

1. IV. V. Transalpine Relations Of Rome, IV. V. The Romans Cross The Eastern Alps

2. IV. I. The Callaeci Conquered

3. IV. V. And Reach The Danube

4. -Exterae nationes in arbitratu dicione potestate amicitiave populi Romani- (lex repet. v. i), the official designation of the non-Italian subjects and clients as contrasted with the Italian "allies and kinsmen" (-socii nominisve Latini-).

5. III. XI. As To The Management Of The Finances

6. III. XII. Mercantile Spirit

7. IV. III. Jury Courts, IV. III. Character Of The Constitution Of Gaius Gracchus

8. This tax-tenth, which the state levied from private landed property, is to be clearly distinguished from the proprietor's tenth, which it imposed on the domain-land. The former was let in Sicily, and was fixed once for all; the latter--especially that of the territory of Leontini--was let by the censors in Rome, and the proportion of produce payable and other conditions were regulated at their discretion (Cic. Verr. iii. 6, 13; v. 21, 53; de leg. agr. i. 2, 4; ii. 18, 48). Comp, my Staatsrecht, iii. 730.

9. The mode of proceeding was apparently as follows. The Roman government fixed in the first instance the kind and the amount of the tax. Thus in Asia, for instance, according to the arrangement of Sulla and Caesar the tenth sheaf was levied (Appian. B. C. v. 4); thus the Jews by Caesar's edict contributed every second year a fourth of the seed (Joseph, iv. 10, 6; comp. ii. 5); thus in Cilicia and Syria subsequently there was paid 5 per cent from estate (Appian. Syr. 50), and in Africa also an apparently similar tax was paid--in which case, we may add, the estate seems to have been valued according to certain presumptive indications, e. g. the size of the land occupied, the number of doorways, the number of head of children and slaves (-exactio capitum atque ostiorum-, Cicero, Ad Fam. iii. 8, 5, with reference to Cilicia; --phoros epi tei gei kai tois somasin--, Appian. Pun. 135, with reference to Africa). In accordance with this regulation the magistrates of each community under the superintendence of the Roman governor (Cic. ad Q. Fr. i. 1, 8; SC. de Asclep. 22, 23) settled who were liable to the tax, and what was to be paid by each tributary ( -imperata- --epikephalia--, Cic. ad Att. v. 16); if any one did not pay this in proper time, his tax-debt was sold just as in Rome, i. e. it was handed over to a contractor with an adjudication to collect it (-venditio tributorum-, Cic. Ad Fam. iii. 8, 5; --onas-- -omnium venditas-, Cic. ad Att. v. 16). The produce of these taxes flowed into the coffers of the leading communities--the Jews, for instance, had to send their corn to Sidon--and from these coffers the fixed amount in money was then conveyed to Rome. These taxes also were consequently raised indirectly, and the intermediate agent either retained, according to circumstances, a part of the produce of the taxes for himself, or advanced it from his own substance; the distinction between this mode of raising and the other by means of the -publicani- lay merely in the circumstance, that in the former the public authorities of the contributors, in the latter Roman private contractors, constituted the intermediate agency.

10. IV. III. Jury Courts

11. III. VII. Administration Of Spain

12. IV. X. Regulation Of The Finances

13. For example, in Judaea the town of Joppa paid 26,075 -modii- of corn, the other Jews the tenth sheaf, to the native princes; to which fell to be added the temple-tribute and the Sidonian payment destined for the Romans. In Sicily too, in addition to the Roman tenth, a very considerable local taxation was raised from property.

14. IV. VI. The New Military Organization

15. IV. II. Vote By Ballot

16. III. VII. Liguria

17. IV. V. Province Of Narbo

18. IV. V. In Illyria

19. IV. I. Province Of Macedonia

20. III. XI. Italian Subjects, III. XII. Roman Wealth

21. IV. V. Taurisci

22. III. IV. Pressure Of The War

23. IV. VII. Outbreak Of The Mithradatic War

24. IV. IX. Preparations On Eithe Side

25. III. XII. The Management Of Land And Of Capital

26. IV. V. Conflicts With The Ligurians. With this may be connected the remark of the Roman agriculturist, Saserna, who lived after Cato and before Varro (ap.

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