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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Titus Livius (Livy), The History of Rome, Book 29 (ed. Frank Gardener Moore, Professor Emeritus in Columbia University). Search the whole document.

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, Publius Villius Tappulus, the last two being made praetors while they were plebeian aediles. The consul after the elections were over returned to the army in Etruria. Priests who died that year and successors appointed in their places were: Tiberius Veturius Philo,B.C. 204 elected and installed flamen of Mars in place of Marcus Aemilius Regillus, who had died in the preceding year;Immediately correcting the opening words of the paragraph. Cf. xi. 14 for Regillus' death in 205 B.C. in succession to Marcus Pomponius Matho, augur and decemvir,Pomponius, probably praetor in 216 B.C., had held two priesthoods concurrently, as did Otacilius in XXVII. vi. 15. were elected Marcus Aurelius Cotta as decemvir, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus as augur, being a mere youth, which was then a very unusual thing in the assignment of priesthoods. A gilded four-horse chariot was set up in that year on the Capitol by the curule aediles Gaius Livius and Marcus Servilius Geminus.
During the same summer in the land of the Bruttii Clampetia was taken by storm by the consul. ConsentiaChief town of the Bruttii, modern Cosenza, captured by the Carthaginians in 216 B.C. It returned to the Romans in 213, but had changed sides once more; cf. XXIII. xxx. 5; XXV. i. 2; XXX. xix. 10 (a repetition). Later an important point on the great inland road, Via Popilia, from Capua to Reggio (Regium); C.I.L. X. 6950 (= I. ii, ed. 2, 638). Clampetia was on the coast south-west of Consens Regillus, who had died in the preceding year;Immediately correcting the opening words of the paragraph. Cf. xi. 14 for Regillus' death in 205 B.C. in succession to Marcus Pomponius Matho, augur and decemvir,Pomponius, probably praetor in 216 B.C., had held two priesthoods concurrently, as did Otacilius in XXVII. vi. 15. were elected Marcus Aurelius Cotta as decemvir, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus as augur, being a mere youth, which was then a very unusual thing in the assignment of priest