[1437] Lex Antonia de Termessibus i. 8.

[1438] Plin. Ep. ad Traj. 92 (93).

[1439] Cic. in Verr. iii. 6, 13; cf. App. B.C. i. 102 (ἐπὶ συνθήκαις ἔνορκοι).

[1440] Dig. 49, 15, 7, 1 “hoc adjicitur, ut intellegatur alterum populum superiorem esse, non ut intellegatur alterum non esse liberum.” Cf. Cic. pro Balbo 16, 35 “Id habet hanc vim, ut sit ille in foedere inferior.”

[1441] Dig. l.c. “is foederatus est item sive aequo foedere in amicitiam venit sive foedere comprehensum est ut is populus alterius populi majestatem comiter conservaret.”

[1442] Lex Agraria 1. 21 “socii nominisve Latini, quibus ex formula togatorum [milites in terra Italia inperare solent].”

[1443] Liv. xxii. 57; xxvii. 10 “milites ex formula paratos esse.”

[1444] The number of troops required was decreed every year by the Senate (Liv. xli. 5 etc.), the consuls fixing the amount which each state was to send in proportion to its fighting strength.

[1445] Cic. pro Balbo 9, 24.

[1446] Cic. pro Balbo 8, 21 “innumerabiles aliae leges de civili jure sunt latae; quas Latini voluerunt, adsciverunt.”