Tabula Hebana

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Tabula hebana

Tabula Hebana is the modern name of a Roman inscription that was found in Heba in Etruria (today Sant'Andrea di Magliano, district of Magliano in Toscana ). It contains fragments of a senate resolution , which, like the fragments of the Tabula Siarensis and other fragments from Todi and Rome , are to be assigned to a dossier that contains a senate resolution and a consuls law based on it from 20 AD ( Lex Valeria Aurelia ) with honorary resolutions for Germanicus, who died in AD 19contained. The Tabula Hebana, which was published for the first time in 1947, provides information that the law lex Valeria Cornelia created a body consisting of senators and knights , which predetermined the most suitable candidates for the praetur and the consulate.

literature

  • Dietmar Kienast : Augustus. Princeeps and Monarch. 3rd, revised and expanded edition. Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, Darmstadt 1999, ISBN 3-534-14293-4 , p. 163.
  • Bert Lott: Death and Dynasty in Early Imperial Rome. Key Sources, with Text, Translation, and Commentary. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2012, ISBN 978-1-139-04656-5 , pp. 47-48, 101-115. 239-254.
  • Greg Rowe: Princes and political cultures. The new Tiberian senatorial decrees. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor 2002, ISBN 0-472-11230-9 .

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