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Browsing named entities in a specific section of A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith). Search the whole document.
Found 4 total hits in 4 results.
357 BC (search for this): entry calvus-bio-5
376 BC (search for this): entry calvus-bio-5
Licinius Calvus Stolo or Calvus Stolo
4. C. LICINIUS CALVUS, surnamed STOLO, which he derived, it is said, from the care with which he dug up the shoots that sprung up from the roots of his vines.
He brought the contest between the patricians and plebeians to a crisis and a happy termination, and thus became the founder of Rome's greatness.
He was tribune of the people from B. C. 376 to 367, and was faithfully supported in his exertions by his colleague L. Sextius.
The laws which he proposed were:
1. That in future no more consular tribunes should be appointed, but that consuls should be elected as in former times, one of whom should always be a plebeian.
2. That no one should possess more than 500 jugers of the public land, or keep upon it more than 100 head of large and 500 of small cattle.
3. A law regulating the affairs between debtor and creditor, which ordained that the interest already paid for borrowed money should be deducted from the capital, and that the remainder of the
366 BC (search for this): entry calvus-bio-5
364 BC (search for this): entry calvus-bio-5