[1377] Cic. ad Att. iii. 24.

[1378] This was necessary when the supplies were destined for the army. See Sall. Jug. 104 “(Rufus) qui quaestor stipendium in Africam portaverat.” Compare the section on provincial government.

[1379] The phrase for opening this credit is attribuere. See Liv. xliv. 16 “ad opera publica facienda cum eis (censoribus) dimidium ex vectigalibus ejus anni (169 B.C.) attributum ex senatus consulto a quaestoribus esset.”

[1380] p. 194.

[1381] Cic. ad Fam. i. 1 sq.

[1382] Cic. ad Q. fr. ii. 6, 4 and 5 (56 B.C.) “consul est egregius Lentulus ... Dies comitiales exemit omnes. Nam etiam Latinae instaurantur: nec tamen deerant supplicationes. Sic legibus perniciosissimis obsistitur.”

[1383] In the later Republic these periods of thanksgiving had reached the inordinate length of fifteen, twenty, and even fifty days (Caes. Bell. Gall. ii. 35; iv. 38; Cic. Phil. xiv. 11, 29). At this period the supplicatio was considered the usual preliminary of a triumph; but Cato explains to Cicero that this was not always the case (ad Fam. xv. 5, 2 “Quodsi triumphi praerogativam putas supplicationem et idcirco casum potius quam te laudari mavis, neque supplicationem sequitur semper triumphus,” etc.).

[1384] Cic. pro Domo 49, 127 “video ... esse legem veterem tribuniciam quae vetat injussu plebis aedes, terram, aram consecrari.” The jussus plebis probably implies that of the populus as well. See Momms. Staatsr. iii. 2 p. 1050.

[1385] The Senate alone is mentioned as decreeing the reception of the Magna Mater in 205 B.C., and as ordaining the erection of her temple (Liv. xxix. 10 and 11; xxxvi. 36).

[1386] See p. 56.