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Proscriptio

(from proscribere, “to advertise for sale”). From the time of Sulla (B.C. 82) it came to mean the sale of the property of those whom he had condemned to death and who were themselves styled proscripti. During the civil strife of the following fifty years, other leaders used the precedent thus established as a means of weakening the opposing party. A famous proscription is that of the Second Triumvirate (B.C. 43), under which Cicero was put to death. See Cicero; Sulla.

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