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Quote of the day: He had long had a fancy for driving a fo
Notes
Parallel Lives by Plutarchus

Publicola, chapter 20: Fourth War of Rome and Sabines[505 BC]
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Afterwards, the Sabines making incursions upon the Romans, Marcus Valerius, brother to Publicola, was made consul, and with him Postumius Tubertus. Marcus, through the management of affairs by the conduct and direct assistance of Publicola, obtained two great victories, in the latter of which he slew thirteen thousand Sabines without the loss of one Roman, and was honored, as all accession to his triumph, with an house built in the Palatium at the public charge; and whereas the doors of other houses opened inward into the house, they made this to open outward into the street, to intimate their perpetual public recognition of his merit by thus continually making way for him. The same fashion in their doors the Greeks, they say, had of old universally, which appears from their comedies, where those that are going out make a noise at the door within, to give notice to those that pass by or stand near the door, that the opening the door into the street might occasion no surprisal.

Event: Fourth War of Rome and Sabines