Gaius Furius Pacilus Fusus

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According to legendary ancient tradition, Gaius Furius Pacilus Fusus was a Roman consul in 441 BC. Together with Marcus Papirius Crassus .

Pacilus Fusus is mentioned in the tradition of Livius with the cognomen Pacilus. The prenomen in Diodorus is corrupt, the prenomen Gaius is passed down in several places in Livius.

In the year 435 Pacilus Fusus and Marcus Geganius Macerinus supposedly formed the first college of censors .

In 426 Pacilus Fusus was consular tribune in a four-member college. Livius and Diodorus do not provide any cognomen for this year. Nothing worth mentioning is reported about Pacilus Fusus this year; the military clashes against Veji and Fidenae that year were led by the dictator Mamercus Aemilius Mamercinus .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ T. Robert S. Broughton: The Magistrates of the Roman Republic. Volume 1. 1951, p. 54 f.
  2. Livy IV 12.1.
  3. Diodor XII 35.1.
  4. ^ Livius IV 22.7 and XXXI 1.
  5. Livius IV 22.7; see also notes in T. Robert S. Broughton: The Magistrates of the Roman Republic. Volume 1. 1951, p. 61.
  6. Livius IV 31.1; Diodor XII 80.1.

literature

  • T. Robert S. Broughton : The Magistrates Of The Roman Republic. Volume 1: 509 BC - 100 BC (= Philological Monographs. Vol. 15, Part 1, ZDB -ID 418575-4 ). American Philological Association, New York NY 1951, pp. 54 f., 61 and 66 f., (Unchanged reprint 1968).
  • Friedrich Münzer : Furius 76). In: Paulys Realencyclopadie der classical antiquity . (RE VII, 1). Volume 7, 1st half volume: Fornax - Glykon. JB Metzlersche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Stuttgart 1910, Sp. 359.