Gaius Canuleius
Gaius Canuleius, according to Livy book 4, was a tribune of the plebs in 445 BC.[1] He introduced a bill proposing that intermarriage between patricians and plebeians be allowed. As well, with his fellow tribunes he proposed another bill allowing one of the two annually elected consuls to be a plebeian.
Despite fierce opposition from the patricians, his laws were eventually passed when the plebeians went on a military strike, refusing to defend the city against its attacking neighbors. That law, the Lex Canuleia, bears his name.
The accuracy of Livy's description of Canuleius' tribunate and the Struggle of the Orders in which his laws played a major part is doubted by some modern scholars.
References
- Naphtali Lewis; Meyer Reinhold (January 1990). Roman Civilization: Selected Readings. Columbia University Press. pp. 118–. ISBN 978-0-231-07131-4.
External links
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- Text of Ab Urbe Condita
- Complete works of Livy at The Latin Library in Latin only
- Ab urbe condita (History of Rome), Books I-III (eBook in English) at Project Gutenberg.
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