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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Titus Livius (Livy), The History of Rome, Book 22 (ed. Benjamin Oliver Foster, Ph.D.). Search the whole document.

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fused to abdicate his command because of an alleged flaw in his election, and had conquered the Insubres and triumphed in virtue of a popular decree (223 B.C.). See Summary of Book XIX, and xxi. Ixiii. 2. and lacked all proper reverence, not only for the laws and for the senate's majesty, but even for the gods. This native rashness had been nourished by the success which Fortune had bestowed on him in political and military enterprises.Livy has in mind the passage of an agrarian law in 232 B.C., the continuation of the Via Flaminia to Ariminum, the erection of the Circus Flaminius, and the victory over the Insubres. It was therefore sufficiently apparent that, seeking no counsel, either divine or human, he would manage everything with recklessness and headlong haste; but to make him incline the more towards his characteristic faults, the Phoenician planned to provoke and exasperate him. Leaving the enemy therefore on his left,See Map 4. and looking out for an opportunity
ng the army —everything, in short, which it was important to find out. The district was one of the most fertile in Italy, for the Etruscan plains between Faesulae and Arretium abound in corn and flocks and all sorts of provisions. The consul had been proud and headstrong since his former consulship,When, in defiance of the senate, he had refused to abdicate his command because of an alleged flaw in his election, and had conquered the Insubres and triumphed in virtue of a popular decree (223 B.C.). See Summary of Book XIX, and xxi. Ixiii. 2. and lacked all proper reverence, not only for the laws and for the senate's majesty, but even for the gods. This native rashness had been nourished by the success which Fortune had bestowed on him in political and military enterprises.Livy has in mind the passage of an agrarian law in 232 B.C., the continuation of the Via Flaminia to Ariminum, the erection of the Circus Flaminius, and the victory over the Insubres. It was therefore sufficie