[747] Auct. de vir. illustr. 72, 6 (for the occasion see p. 171); the consul “ne quis ad eum (praetorem) in jus ire edixit.” Dio Cass. xlii. 23; amongst the other penalties imposed by Servilius Isauricus on Caelius Rufus (see p. 171) was the transference of his functions to another praetor, τά τε προσήκοντα τῇ ἀρχῇ αὐτοῦ ἄλλῳ τῳ τῶν στρατηγῶν προσέταξε.

[748] Cic. in Verr. iii. 58, 134 “quaestores, legates, praefectos, tribunos suos, multi missos fecerunt et de provincia decedere jusserunt, quod illorum culpa se minus commode audire arbitrarentur, aut quod peccare ipsos aliqua in re judicarent.”

[749] Liv. iii. 27; vii. 9.

[750] C.I.L. vi. n. 895.

[751] Liv. iii. 3; Cic. Phil. v. 12, 31.

[752] Liv. iii. 5; vi. 7; Cic. l.c.

[753] Mommsen conjectures that, on the occasion of every public funeral in the forum, a short justitium was declared (Staatsr. i. p. 251 n. 4).

[754] Liv. x. 21.

[755] Cic. de Har. Resp. 26, 55 “justitium edici oportere, jurisdictionem intermitti, claudi aerarium, judicia tolli.” Cf. Plut. Ti. Gracch. 10; Cic. pro Plancio 14, 33.

[756] Liv. vi 7.