[1087] Even amateur performances might call down the nota. See Suet. Dom. 8 (Domitian) “suscepta correctione morum ... quaestorium virum, quod gesticulandi saltandique studio teneretur, movit senatu.”
[1088] The lex Julia Municipalis excludes them, like actors, from the municipal senate; the lex Acilia repetundarum from the bench of judices.
[1089] Suet. Aug. 39 “notavitque aliquos quod, pecunias levioribus usuris mutuati, graviori foenore collocassent.”
[1090] Plut. Cat. Maj. 17; C. Gracch. 2.
[1091] Gell. xiv. 7 “opus etiam censorium fecisse existimatos, per quos eo tempore (i.e. at an unlawful time) senatus consultum factum esset.”
[1092] Cic. de Div. i. 16, 29 “Appius ... censor C. Ateium (tribune 55 B.C.) notavit, quod ementitum auspicia subscriberet.”
[1093] Val. Max. ii. 9, 5 “M. autem Antonius et L. Flaccus censores (97 B.C.) Duronium senatu moverunt, quod legem de coercendis conviviorum sumptibus latam tribunus plebi abrogaverat.”
[1094] Cic. pro Cluent. 42, 119; 43, 121; Suet. Dom. 8.
[1095] Liv. xxiv. 18; xxvii. 11 and 25.
[1096] In 204 B.C. the censor M. Livius disfranchised for the purposes of the comitia centuriata (aerarios reliquit) thirty-four out of the thirty-five tribes “quod et innocentem se condemnassent et condemnatum consulem et censorem fecissent” (Liv. xxix. 37).