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Footnotes

[20]

Dionysius Halicarnassus, Book ii, p. 120, and Book iv, pp. 242, 243.

[21]

See Tanaquil's "Discourse on Livy," Book i, dec. l, and the regulations of Servius Tullius in Dionysius Halicarnassus, Book iv. p. 229.

[22]

See Dionysius Halicarnassus, Book ii, p. 118, and Book iii, p. 171.

[23]

It was by virtue of a senatus-consultum that Tullius Hostilius ordered Alba to be destroyed. — Ibid., Book iii, pp. 167 and 172.

[24]

Ibid., Book iv, p. 276.

[25]

Ibid., Book ii. And yet they could not have the nomination of all offices, since Valerius Publicola made that famous law by which every citizen was forbidden to exercise any employment, unless he had obtained it by the suffrage of the people.

[26]

Ibid., Book iii, p. 159.

[27]

Ibid., Book iv.

[28]

He divested himself of half the regal power, says Dionysius Halicarnassus, Book iv, p. 229.

[29]

It was thought that if he had not been prevented by Tarquin he would have established a popular government. — Ibid., Book iv, p. 243.

[30]

Ibid., Book iv.