AGRĀRÏAE, the name of laws which had relation to the ager publicus. [[Ager Publicus].] The most important of these are mentioned under the names of their proposers. [[Appuleia]; [Cassia]; [Cornelia]; [Flaminia]; [Flavia]; [Julia]; [Licinia]; [Sempronia]; [Servilia]; [Thoria].]
AMBĬTUS. [[Ambitus].]
AMPĬA, to allow Cn. Pompeius to wear a crown of bay at the Ludi Circenses, &c. Proposed by T. Ampius and T. Labienus, tr. pl. B.C. 64.
ANNĀLIS or VILLĬA, proposed by L. Villius Tapulus in B.C. 179, fixed the age at which a Roman citizen might become a candidate for the higher magistracies. It appears that until this law was passed, any office might be enjoyed by a citizen after completing his twenty-seventh year. The Lex Annalis fixed 31 as the age for the quaestorship, 37 for the aedileship, 40 for the praetorship, and 43 for the consulship.
ANTĬA. [[Sumptuariae Leges].]
ANTŌNĬA De Thermensibus, about B.C. 72, by which Thermessus in Pisidia was recognised as Libera.
ANTŌNĬAE, the name of various enactments proposed or passed by the influence of M. Antonius, after the death of the dictator J. Caesar.
APPŬLĒIA, respecting sureties.
APPŬLĒIA AGRĀRĬA, proposed by the tribune L. Appuleius Saturninus, B.C. 101.
APPŬLĒIA FRŪMENTĀRĬA, proposed about the same time by the same tribune.