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[66] Then coming to Rome and entering it, he appeared in the senate, and addressed the people at The Palm, 1 promising that with God's help he would keep inviolate whatever the former Roman emperors had decreed.

1 A name apparently used from the fifth or sixth century for the area at Rome lying between the Curia and the arch of Septimius Severus; undoubtedly the same as the Palma Aurea of Fulgentius, Acta S. Fulgenti, in Acta Sanctorum, i. p. 37, ch. 13, Jan.

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