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See also: Roman senator, who was defended (63 B.c.) by See also: Cicero in a speech still extant
.
Nearly See also: forty years after the See also: death of L
.
Appuleius See also: Saturninus, Titus See also: Labienus (whose See also: uncle had lost his See also: life among the followers of Saturninus on that occasion) was put up by Caesar to accuse See also: Rabirius of having been implicated in the See also: murder
.
Caesar's real See also: object was to warn the Senate against interference by force with popular movements, to uphold the See also: sovereignty of the See also: people and the inviolability of the See also: person of the tribunes
.
The obsolete accusation of perduellio was revived, and the See also: case was heard before See also: Julius and See also: Lucius Caesar as commissioners specially appointed (See also: duoviri perduellionis)
.
Rabirius was condemned, and the people, to whom the accused had exercised the right of See also: appeal, were on the point of ratifying the decision, when See also: Metellus Celer pulled down the military See also: flag from the Janiculum, which was See also: equivalent to the dissolution of the See also: assembly
.
Caesar's object having been attained, the See also: matter was then allowed to drop
.
A See also: nephew, known as C
.
RABIRIUS POSTUMUS, was also defended by Cicero (54 B.C.) in the extant speech See also: Pro Rabirio Postumo, when charged with extortion in See also: Egypt and complicity with Aulus See also: Gabinius (q.v.)
.
See Cicero, Pro Rabirio, ed
.
W
.
E
.
Heitland (1882) ; Dio Cassius,See also: xxxvii
.
26–28; H
.
Putsche, Uber das genus judicii der Rede Ciceros pro C
.
Rabirio (See also: Jena, 1881); O
.
Schulthess, Der Prozess See also: des C
.
Rabirius (See also: Frauenfeld, 1891)
.
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