The Plebiscitum Ovinium (often called the Lex Ovinia) was an initiative by the Plebeian Council that transferred the power to revise the list of members of the Roman Senate (the lectio senatus) from consuls to censors.[1][2]

Date

Since Appius Claudius Caecus is said to have changed the membership of the senate during his censorship in 312 BCE, the law must have been passed by then, but not much earlier because the censors of 319 removed a man from his tribe, but not from the Senate.[3]

Reaction

The patricians did not recognize the validity of the Plebiscitum Ovinium, but nevertheless did not attempt to prevent the lectio senatus being carried out by the censors rather than the consuls.[4]

See also

References

  1. Lintott, Andrew (1999). The Constitution of the Roman Republic. Oxford, New York: Clarendon Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-19-158467-1.
  2. T.J. Cornell, "The Lex Ovinia and the Emancipation of the Senate" in C. Bruun, ed. The Roman Middle Republic; Politics, Religion, and Historiography; c. 400-133 B.C., Rome, 2000, pages 69-90.
  3. Rotondi, Giovanni (1912). Leges publicae populi romani: elenco cronologico con una introduzione : sull'attività legislativa dei comizi romani (in Italian). Milan: Società editrice libraria. pp. 233–234. OCLC 10152672. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
  4. Ferenczy, Endre (1976). From the Patrician State to the Patricio-plebeian State. Amsterdam: Adolf M. Hakkert. p. 163. ISBN 9789630506717.


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