[2634] Cic. Dom. 30. 79; Sall. Hist. i. 55. 12; cf. Pseud. Ascon. 102.
[2635] Cic. Caecin. 35. 102.
[2636] App. B. C. i. 102. 474; cf. Cic. Leg. Agr. ii. 14. 35.
[2637] Sall. Hist. i. 55. 11. They were then being made according to the law of M. Octavius (p. 401), or if that was repealed by Cinna, according to the lex Sempronia of 123 (p. 372).
[2638] Lange, Röm. Alt. ii. 693. The statement in iii. 161 is less exact.
[2639] App. B. C. i. 102. 474.
[2640] Cic. Off. iii. 22. 87.
[2641] P. 409 f.
[2642] Hence it was that T. Crispinus, quaestor in the following year, treated the Valerian law as no longer in force; Cic. Font. 15; Lange, ibid. iii. 162. To this date seems to belong the lex Cornelia de sponsu (Gaius iii. 124), which Poste, 359, reasonably assigns to the dictator.
[2643] CIL. i². p. 333; Vell. ii. 27. 6; Cic. Verr. i. 10. 31; Pseud. Ascon. 150; Wissowa, Relig. u. Kult. d. Röm. 128.