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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Titus Livius (Livy), The History of Rome, Book 23 (ed. Frank Gardener Moore, Professor Emeritus in Columbia University). Search the whole document.

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n into the senate, but would order their names merely to be copied and read out, that judgment and decision in regard to the reputation and character of a senator might not rest with one man. And in place of the deceased he would make his choice in such a way that rank should obviously have been preferred to rank, not man to man. After reading the list of the old senate, he chose in place of the deceased first those who since the censorship of Lucius Aemilius and Gaius FlaminiusIn 220 B.C.; Periocha 20. had held a curule office and hadB.C. 216 not yet been chosen into the senate,Pending the revision of the list by the censors, once in five years in the normal course of things. in each case in the order of his election. Then he chose those who had been aediles,I.e. plebeian aediles. tribunes of the people or quaestors; then, from the number of those who had not held offices, the men who had spoils of the enemy affixed to their houses or had received the civic wreath.The r