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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo014.perseus-eng2:16</requestUrn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div xml:lang="eng" type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo014.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="16" subtype="chapter"><p>The Spintriae he banished from the city, being prevailed upon not to throw them
					into the sea, as he had intended. The writings of Titus Lubienus, Cordus
					Cremutius, and Cassius Severus, which had been suppressed by an act of the
					senate, he permitted to be drawn from obscurity, and universally read;
					observing, "that it would be for his own advantage to have the transactions of
					former times delivered to posterity." He published accounts of the proceedings
					of the government-a practice which had been introduced by Augustus, but
					discontinued by <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>. <note anchored="true">See the Life of AUGUSTUS, cc. xxviii. and xciL </note> He
					granted the magistrates a full and free jurisdiction, without any appeal to
					himself. He made a very strict and exact review of the Roman knights, but
					conducted it with moderation; publicly depriving of his horse every knight who
					lay under the stigma of any thing base and dishonourable; but passing over the
					names of those knights who were only guilty of venial faults, in calling over
					the list of the order. To lighten the labours of the judges, he added a fifth
					class to the former four. He attempted likewise to restore to the people their
					ancient right of voting in the choice of magistrates. <note anchored="true">Julius Caesar had shared it with them (c. xli.). Augustus had only kept up
						the form (c. xl.). <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>
						deprived the Roman people of the last remains of the freedom of
						suffrage.</note> He paid very honourably, and without any dispute, the
					legacies left by <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName> in his will,
					though it had been set aside; as likewise those left by the will of Livia
					Augusta, which <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName> had annulled.
					He remitted the hundredth penny, due to the government in all auctions
					throughout <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>. He made up to many
					their losses sustained by fire; and. when he restored their kingdoms. to any
					princes, he likewise allowed them all the arrears of the taxes.-and revenues
					which had accrued in the interval; as in the case of Antiochus of Comagene,
					where the confiscation would have amounted to a hundred millions of sesterces.
					T6, prove to the world that he was ready to encourage good examples of every
					kind, he gave to a freed-woman eighty thousand sesterces, for not discovering a
					crime committed by her patron, though she had been put to exquisite torture for
					that purpose. For all these acts of beneficence, amongst other honours, a golden
					shield was decreed to him, which the colleges of priests were to carry annually,
					upon a fixed day, into the Capitol, with the senate attending, and the youth of
					the nobility, of both sexes, celebrating the praise of his virtues in songs. It
					was likewise ordained, that the day on which he succeeded to the empire should
					be called Palilia, in token of the city's being at that time, as it were, new
					founded. <note anchored="true">The city of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName> was founded on the twenty-first day of April, which
						was called Palilia, from Pales, the goddess of shepherds, and ever
						afterwards kept as a festival. </note></p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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