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Footnotes

[24]

"Life of Romulus."

[25]

This was a law of Solon.

[26]

"Mimam res suas sibi habere jussit, ex duodecim tabulis causam addidit." — Philipp, ii. 69.

[27]

Justinian altered this, Nov. 117, cap. x.

[28]

Book ii.

[29]

Book ii. 4.

[30]

Book iv. 3.

[31]

According to Dionysius Halicarnassus and Valerius Maximus; and five hundred and twenty-three, according to Aulus Gellius. Neither did they agree in placing this under the same consuls.

[32]

See the "Speech of Veturia" in Dionysius Halicarnassus, viii.

[33]

Plutarch, "Life of Romulus."

[34]

Ibid.

[35]

Indeed sterility is not a cause mentioned by the law of Romulus: but to all appearance he was not subject to a confiscation of his effects, since he followed the orders of the censors.

[36]

In his comparison between Theseus and Romulus.

[37]

Book xxiii, 21.