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LEX OGULNIA.

232

LEX PUBLILIA.

OGULNIA, proposed by the tribunes, b. c.
300, increased the number of pontifices to
eight, and that of the augurs to nine ; it
also enacted that four of the pontifices and
five of the aufrurs should be taken from the
plebes.

OPPIA. [Leges Sumptuariae.]
ORCIIIA. [Leges Sumptuaeiae.]
OVINIA, of uncertain date, was a plebisci-
tum which gave the censors certain powers
in regulating the lists of the senators (ordo
senatorius) : the main object seems to have
been to exclude all improper persons from
the senate, and to prevent their admission,
if in other respects qualified.

PAPIA DE PEREGRIN IS. [Lex Juxia
de Peeegeixis.]

PAPIA POPPAEA. [Lex Julia et Papia

POPPAF.A.]

PAPIRIA or JULIA PAPIRIA DE MULC-
TARUM AESTIMATIONE (b. c. 430), fixed
a money value according to which fines were
paid, which formerly were paid in sheep and
cattle. Some writers make this valuation
part of the Aternian law [Ateexia Taepeia],
but in this they appear to have been mis-
taken.

PAPIRIA, by which the as was made se-
muncialis, one of the various enactments
which tampered with the coinage.

PAPIRIA, b. c. 332, proposed by the prae-
tor Papirius, gave the Acerrani the civitas
without the suffragium. It was properly a
^nvnegium, but is useful as illustrating the
history of the extension of the civitas Ro-
mana.

PAPIRIA, of uncertain date, enacted that
no aedes should be declared consecratae with-
out a plcbiscitum.

PAPIRIA PLAUTIA, a plcbiscitum of the
year b, c. 89, proposed by the tribunes C.
Papirius Carbo and M. Plautius Silvanus, in
the consulship of Cn. Pompeius Strabo and
L. Porcius Cato, is called by Cicero a lex of
Silvanus and Carbo. [See Civitas ; Foede-

eatae ClVlTATES.]

PAPIRIA POETELIA. [Lex Poetelia.]
PAPlRIA TABELLARIA. [Leges Ta-
bet.laeiae.J

PEDIA, relating to the murderers of Cae-
sar.

PEDUCAEA, b.c. 113, a plebiscitum, seems
to have been merely a privilegium, and not a
general law against incestum.

PESULANIA, provided that if an animal
did any damage, the owner should make it
good, or give up the animal.

PETILLIA, De Pecuxia Regis Antiochi.
(Liv. xxxviii. 54.)

PETREIA, de decimatione militum, in case
of mutiny.

PETRONIA, probably passed in the tim
of Augustus, and subsequently amended by
various senatusconsulta, forbade a master
to deliver up his slave to fight with wild
beasts.

PINARIA, related to the giving of a judex
within a limited time.

PLAETORIA. [Cueator.]

PLAUTIA or PLOTIA DE VI. [Vis.]

PLAUTIA or PLOTIA JUDICIARIA,
enacted that fifteen persons should be annu-
ally taken from each tribe to be placed in the
Album Judicum.

PLAUTIA ET PLOTIA DE REDITU
LEPIDANORUM. (Suet. Cues. 5.)

POETELIA, b. c. 3.38, a plebiscitum, was
the first lex against ambitus.

POETELIA PAPIRIA, b. c. 326, made
an important change in the liabilities of the
Nexi.

POMPEIAE. There were various leges so
called.

De Civitate, proposed by Cn. Pompeius
Strabo, the father of Cn. Pompeius Magnus,
probably in his consulship b. c. 89, gave the
jus Latii or Latinitas to all the towns of the
Transpadani, and probably the civitas to the
Cispadani.

De Ambitu. [Ambitus.,]

De Impeeio Caesaei Peobogaxdo. (Veil.
Pat. ii. 46 ; Appian, B. C. ii. 18.)

Judiciaeia. [Judex, p. 217, a.]

De Jure Magistratuum, forbade a person
to be a candidate for public offices [petitio
honorum) who was not at Rome; but J.
Caesar was excepted. This was doubtless
the old law, but it had apparently become
obsolete.

De Pareicidiis. [Paeeicidium.]

Tribuxitia (b. c. 70), restored the old tri-
bunitia potestas, which Sulla had nearly
destroyed. [Tribuxi.]

De Vi, was a privilegium, and only referred
to the case of Milo.

PORCIAE DE CAPITE CIVIUM, or DE
PROVOCATIONS, enacted that no Roman
citizen should be scourged or put to death.

PORCIA DE PROVINCIIS, about b. c.
198, the enactments of which are doubtful.

PUBLICIA, permitted betting at certain
games which required strength.

PUBLILIA. In the consulship of L. Pina-
rius and P. Furius, b. c. 471, the tribune
Publilius Volero proposed, in the assembly of
the tribes, that the tribunes should in future
be appointed in the comitia of the tribes (ut
plebeii magistratus tribulis comitiis fierent),
instead of by the centuries, as had formerly
been the case ; since the clients of the patri-
cians were so numerous in the centuries, that
the plebeians could not elect whom they
 
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