[827] Lex Jul. Munic. l. 132 “neve quis ejus rationem comitieis conciliove [habeto, neive quis quem, sei adversus ea comitieis conciliove] creatum est, renuntiato.” In 67 B.C. the consul Piso, questioned “Palicanum num suffragiis populi consulem creatum renuntiaturus esset,” answered “non renuntiabo” (Val. Max. iii. 8, 3).

[828] p. 47.

[829] Mommsen (Staatsr. i. p. 599) places this change in 222 B.C. Liv. xxxi. 5, etc.

[830] Fasti Praenestini (C.I.L. i. p. 364) “[ann]us nov[us incipit], quia eo die mag[istratus] ineunt: quod coepit [p. R.] c. a. DCI.”

[831] Quaestors (Cic. in Verr. Act. i. 10, 30; Lex de XX. quaest. in Bruns Fontes l. 15); tribunes (Dionys. vi 89).

[832] Dio Cass. xl. 66; Cic. in Verr. i. 41, 105; Liv. xxi. 63.

[833] The execratio is given by Pliny (Paneg. 64), “explanavit verba quibus caput suum, domum suam, si sciens fefellisset, deorum (Jupiter and the Dii Penates) irae consecraret.”

[834] Cic. ad Att. ii. 18, 2 “habet ... Campana Lex (of the consul Caesar in 59 B.C.) execrationem in contione candidatorum.”

[835] Liv. xxxi. 50; if we may argue from municipal law (Lex Salpens. c. 26), omission to take it due to mere neglect was visited in the first instance by a fine.

[836] Liv. l.c.