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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Titus Livius (Livy), The History of Rome, Book 27 (ed. Frank Gardner Moore, Professor Emeritus in Columbia University). Search the whole document.

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a centuriata. whom they preferred to have named dictator, and should name as dictator the man ordered by the people; that if the consul should refuse, the praetor should ask the people; in case of his refusal also, the tribunes should bring the matter before the commons.Probably meaning the comitia tributa here, as directly contrasted with the centuriata. Livy uses the term plebis concilium in ยง 18 just below, but in such technicalities he is very often vague, e.g. in XXV. iii. 13-iv. 9. In 217 B.C., after Trasumennus, the populous had made Fabius Maximus dictator; XXII. viii. 6. When the consul refused to submit to the people a question that belonged to his own authority, and forbade the praetor to do so, the tribunes asked the commons and the commons ordained that Quintus Fulvius,B.C. 210 who was then at Capua, should be named dictator. But on the day on which that plebeian assembly was to be held the consul left for Sicily secretly by night. And the fathers, being desert