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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Titus Livius (Livy), The History of Rome, Book 30 (ed. Frank Gardener Moore, Professor Emeritus in Columbia University). Search the whole document.

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ca. When this was noised abroad at Rome, at first the senators had voted that the praetorThe city praetor Aelius Paetus (i. 9), presiding in the senate. But he lacked authority to give orders to a consul. Hence the resort to a dictator, whose maius imperium must be respected by the consul. should write to the consul that the senate thought it proper for him to return to Italy. Then, as the praetor said that Servilius would disregard his letter, Publius SulpiciusConsul in 211 and 200 B.C. was made dictator for that very purpose; and by virtue of his higher authority he recalled the consul to Italy. The rest of the year he spent with his master of the horse, Marcus Servilius,Brother of the consul Gaius Servilius Geminus and himself consul in the following year; xxvi. 1; xxvii. 1. in making the rounds of such cities in Italy as had been estranged by the war and in hearing their cases one after another. During the armistice a hundred transports sent from Sardinia by