- The gens
Genucia was a
prominent family of the
Roman Republic. It was
probably of
patrician origin, but most of the
Genucii appearing in
history were...
-
Leges Genuciae (also Lex
Genucia or Lex
Genucia de feneratione) were laws p****ed in 342 BC by
Tribune of the
Plebs Lucius Genucius Aventinensis. These...
-
three laws
extending the plebeians' powers. His
first law
followed the lex
Genucia by
reserving one
censorship to plebeians, the
second made
plebiscites binding...
- and 570 BCE.
During the
Roman Republic,
interest was
outlawed by the Lex
Genucia reforms in 342 BCE,
though the
provision went
largely unenforced. Under...
-
Aternia Atilia Claudia Cloelia Cornelia Curtia Fabia Foslia Furia Gegania Genucia Herminia Horatia Julia Lartia Lucretia Manlia Menenia Metilia Minucia Mucia...
-
Furia Furnia Gabinia Galeria Gallia Gargonia Gavia Gegania Gellia Geminia Genucia Gessia Glicia Grania Gratidia Gratia Hateria Heia
Helvia Helvidia Herennia...
- Livy
confused the
contents of the Lex
Licinia ****tia of 366 with the Lex
Genucia of 342. Livy, vii. 42. Brennan, The Praetorship, pp. 65-67,
where he shows...
-
originates from its role as
vacation resort for the
ancient Roman gens
Genucia. In the
fifth century,
during the
reign of Pope
Sixtus III, the town of...
-
Lucius Genucius Aventinensis, was a
nobleman of
ancient Rome of the
Genucia gens who
lived in the 4th
century BC. He,
along with
Quintus Servilius Ahala...
- the
regular and
unbroken sharing of the
consulship stemmed from the Lex
Genucia proposed by the
plebeian tribune Lucius Genucius in 342 BC which, it is...