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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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st to suggest such contribution, since the treasury was empty and the common people unable to pay a tax.Cf. XXVI. xxxv. 4 ff., 9. This reminder was welcomed by the senators, and bidding the consuls to introduce the measure, they decreed that the money should be paid in three instalments; that the consuls who were then in office should pay the first in ready money, that the consuls of the third and fifth years should pay two instalments.I.e. biennial payments. See Vol. IX. p. 40, note (200 B.C.). Final settlement, however, was not made until 196 B.C.; XXXIII. xlii. 3. Thereafter all other concerns yielded place to a single one, when the atrocities suffered by the LocriansCf. ix, esp. §§ 11 f. but up to that time unknown were spread abroad by the arrival of their envoys. And it wasB.C. 204 not so much the crime of Pleminius that provoked men to anger as Scipio's partiality for him or else indifference. The ten envoys of the Locrians, in soiled and neglected clothin
mpty and the common people unable to pay a tax.Cf. XXVI. xxxv. 4 ff., 9. This reminder was welcomed by the senators, and bidding the consuls to introduce the measure, they decreed that the money should be paid in three instalments; that the consuls who were then in office should pay the first in ready money, that the consuls of the third and fifth years should pay two instalments.I.e. biennial payments. See Vol. IX. p. 40, note (200 B.C.). Final settlement, however, was not made until 196 B.C.; XXXIII. xlii. 3. Thereafter all other concerns yielded place to a single one, when the atrocities suffered by the LocriansCf. ix, esp. §§ 11 f. but up to that time unknown were spread abroad by the arrival of their envoys. And it wasB.C. 204 not so much the crime of Pleminius that provoked men to anger as Scipio's partiality for him or else indifference. The ten envoys of the Locrians, in soiled and neglected clothing and holding out the woollen bands of suppliants and oli
In like manner another matter which had been passed over in silence for about the same length of time was broached by Marcus Valerius Laevinus, who said it was proper that the sums contributedCf. XXVI. xxxvi, including Laevinus' speech on that occasion and the generous response (§§ 11 f.). It was in 210 B.C., a year before the refusal of the colonies named in xv. 5. when he and Marcus Claudius were consuls should at last be repaid to private citizens; and that no one ought to be astonished that a matter in which the credit of the state-was involved should especially concern himself. For in addition to the responsibility that in a way belonged peculiarly to a consul of the year in which the moneys had been contributed, he had also been the first to suggest such contribution, since the treasury was empty and the common people unable to pay a tax.Cf. XXVI. xxxv. 4 ff., 9. This reminder was welcomed by the senators, and bidding the consuls to introduce the measure, they d