Book,  Par.

 1     I,      8|   people plunged into slavery - consuls, senators, knights. The
 2     I,      8|        and Sextus Apuleius, the consuls, were the first to swear
 3     I,      8|  inaugurate everything with the consuls, as though the ancient constitution
 4     I,     18|      negative the motion of the Consuls. Tiberius instantly broke
 5     I,     96|       Tiberius, he wrote to the consuls "that his father had not
 6     I,    106|       names he had given to the consuls, and that others might offer
 7    II,     35|        the accused, went to the consuls, and demanded an inquiry
 8    II,     40|       to ancient custom, by the consuls outside the Esquiline Gate,
 9    II,     46|      progeny of a succession of consuls and dictators. Not to excite
10   III,      3|         and Caius Aurelius, the consuls, who had already entered
11   III,     32|         also handed over to the consuls Lepida's slaves, who were
12   III,     71|   Didius Haterius were the next consuls. It was a year free from
13   III,     81|     date, the names, not of the consuls, but of those who were holding
14   III,     89|    intrusted the inquiry to the consuls, who were to sift each title
15   III,     89|   states already mentioned, the consuls reported that they had ascertained
16    IV,      1|        and Caius Antistius were consuls was the ninth of Tiberius'
17    IV,     10|         and funeral. Seeing the consuls, in token of their grief,
18    IV,     11|       their present misery. The consuls went out, and having encouraged
19    IV,     12| republic, and the wish that the consuls or some one else might undertake
20    IV,     44|      digression, the strifes of consuls with tribunes, land and
21    IV,     63|                  While the same consuls were in office, an atrocious
22     V,      4|        waverers, and warned the consuls not to enter on the debate.
23     V,     14|        growing feud between the consuls broke out. Trio, a reckless
24    VI,      2|        protection of one of the consuls, so that he might go in
25    VI,      5|   Agrippa inveighed against the consuls of the previous year for
26    VI,     16|       Superbus. Afterwards, the consuls made the appointment. The
27    VI,     18|    spirit of antiquity, and the consuls issued a not less stringent
28    VI,     20|         grandfather having been consuls, and his family, on the
29    VI,     57|        to the despatches of the consuls, and almost behold the bloodshed
30    VI,     59|   Sextus Papinius were the next consuls. The fact that that year
31    VI,     69|        on the nomination of the consuls. Various honours were devised
32    VI,     70|      afterwards Tiberius's last consuls, Cneius Acerronius and Caius
33    XI,     27|      curiata plainly shows. The consuls retained the power of selecting
34   XII,     79|        prayers rehearsed by the consuls and priests for the emperor'
35  XIII,      5|     before the tribunals of the consuls, who would give them a hearing
36  XIII,     30|         supported this. But the consuls did not venture to put the
37  XIII,     33|       authority of praetors and consuls, or to summon from any part
38  XIII,     33|        to be allowed, which the consuls were to decide.~ ~
39  XIII,     57|       was prosecuted before the consuls by the father of the murdered
40  XIII,     65|        taxes had been formed by consuls and tribunes, when the freedom
41   XIV,     24|   Senate, and the Senate to the consuls, and then again the matter
42   XIV,     61|       of a cowardly temper. The consuls, however, did not dare to
43   XIV,     62|    showing his displeasure, the consuls did not for that reason
44    XV,     27|       be finally passed, as the consuls decided that there had been
45    XV,     40|     with as much respect as the consuls. Accustomed, forsooth, to
46   XVI,     35|   facing one another before the consuls' tribunal, the aged parent,
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