[1067] Plut. C. Gracch. 2. See p. 184.
[1068] Liv. xxvii. 11 (209 B.C.) “(Censores) addiderunt acerbitati (the deprivation of the public horse) etiam tempus, ne praeterita stipendia procederent eis, quae equo publico meruerant, sed dena stipendia equis privatis facerent.”
[1069] Gell. iv. 12; Festus p. 108.
[1070] Cic. pro Cluent. 48, 134; Liv. xxix. 37. Removal from the ranks is described as a deprivation of the horse (adimere equum, Liv. xxiv. 18, xli. 2, 7).
[1071] A fragment of a censorian edict of 92 B.C. directed against the “Latini rhetores” has been preserved. It contains the words “Haec nova, quae praeter consuetudinem ac morem majorum fiunt, neque placent neque recta videntur” (Suet. de Clar. Rhet. 1; Gell. xv. 11, 2).
[1072] “Judex domesticus,” “domesticus magistratus” (Sen. Controv. ii. 3; de Benef. iii. 11).
[1073] Cic. de Rep. iv. 6, 16 “Nec vero mulieribus praefectus praeponatur, qui apud Graecos creari solet; sed sit censor qui viros doceat moderari uxoribus.”
[1074] Dionys. xx. 13.
[1075] p. 55.
[1076] Dionys. l.c.