Turn 3: Januarius - Junius - 195 B.C.
Turn 3: Januarius - Junius - 195 B.C.
Consuls leave March 14. New consuls start March 15.
Re: Turn 3: Januarius - Junius - 195 B.C.
Governors do not need to do budgets again unless they are selected for another term
Re: Turn 3: Januarius - Junius - 195 B.C.
It is now March, and the new consuls have taken power.
Re: Turn 3: Januarius - Junius - 195 B.C.
Common Veto Procedure for Senate
The exercise of intercession in the senate was simplified by the magistrate, who intended to veto the resolution, declaring his intention beforehand. This must be the meaning of the declaration often made by magistrates in the senate--by the consul, for instance, against his colleague, that “he would not allow any business to proceed,” “non passurum quicquam agi” (Liv. 26.26, 7; 30.40, 8: cf. 42.10, 10, “Popillius prae se ferens, si quid decerneret, intercessurum, collegam deterruit” ). This threat did not necessarily suspend the particular business in the senate; the motion on which the veto was put, was, if passed by a majority, drawn up as a senatus auctoritas. Sometimes the senate requested the magistrate to suspend the intercession ( “intercessionem remittere,” Liv. 36.40, 10)
TL:DR - The Senate can still vote on measures despite a fellow Consul vetoing something, and it is written down, but it does not take the force of law (Consultum) unless he removes his veto.
The exercise of intercession in the senate was simplified by the magistrate, who intended to veto the resolution, declaring his intention beforehand. This must be the meaning of the declaration often made by magistrates in the senate--by the consul, for instance, against his colleague, that “he would not allow any business to proceed,” “non passurum quicquam agi” (Liv. 26.26, 7; 30.40, 8: cf. 42.10, 10, “Popillius prae se ferens, si quid decerneret, intercessurum, collegam deterruit” ). This threat did not necessarily suspend the particular business in the senate; the motion on which the veto was put, was, if passed by a majority, drawn up as a senatus auctoritas. Sometimes the senate requested the magistrate to suspend the intercession ( “intercessionem remittere,” Liv. 36.40, 10)
TL:DR - The Senate can still vote on measures despite a fellow Consul vetoing something, and it is written down, but it does not take the force of law (Consultum) unless he removes his veto.
Re: Turn 3: Januarius - Junius - 195 B.C.
Theres now a limit to the number of markets and insulae that can be owned. The list is in the properties thread. Land is still the foremost important stash of wealth and generation of revenues.
