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The Background to the Grain Law of Gaius Gracchus

176

Citations

10

References

1985

Year

Abstract

One of the measures carried by Gaius Gracchus in the course of his first tribunate in 123–2 B.C. provided for the regular sale of grain to citizens of Rome at the price of 6⅓ asses per modius. Gracchus also, presumably by the same law, provided for the construction of state granaries. The sources for the law are meagre. None of them is contemporary, and those later writers who do comment on the law furnish few details. What is known of its content is conveyed in a brief sentence from Livy's Epitomator supported by a scholiast on Cicero's pro Sestio , and in a few words of Appian. The Epitomator and Scholiast give the price at which the grain was sold.

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