region where the Greek language was used, but at a period when a thorough Hellenic culture was not yet attained.
12. III. VI. Guerilla War in Sicily.
13. III. XII. Falling Off in the Population.
14. IV. I. War against Aristonicus.
15. IV. I. Cilicia.
16. Even now there are not unfrequently found in front of Castrogiovanni, at the point where the ascent is least abrupt, Roman projectiles with the name of the consul of 621: L. Piso L. f. cos.
17. II. III. Licinio-Sextian Laws.
18. III. I. Capital and Its Power in Carthage.
19. II. III. Influence of the Extension of the Roman Dominion in Elevating the Farmer- Class.
20. III. XI. Assignations of Land.
21. II. II. Public Land.
22. III. XII. Falling Off of the Population.
23. IV. II. Permanent Criminal Commissions.
24. III. XI. Position of the Governors.
25. III. IX. Death of Scipio.
26. III. XI. Reform of the Centuries.
27. III. VII. Gracchus.
28. IV. I. War against Aristonicus.
29. IV. I. Mancinus.
30. II. III. Licinio-Sextian Laws.
31. II. III. Its Influence in Legislation.
32. IV. I. War against Aristonicus.
33. II. III. Attempts at Counter-Revolution.
34. This fact, hitherto only partially known from Cicero (De L. Agr. ii. 31. 82; comp. Liv. xlii. 2, 19), is now more fully established by the fragments of Licinianus, p. 4. The two accounts are to be combined to this effect, that Lentulus ejected the possessors in consideration of a compensatory sum fixed by him, but accomplished nothing with real landowners, as he was not entitled to dispossess them and they would not consent to sell.
35. II. II. Agrarian Law of Spurius Cassius.
36. III. XI. Rise of A City Rabble.
37. III. IX. Nullity of the Comitia.
Chapter III
The Revolution and Gaius Gracchus
1. IV. I. War against Aristonicus.
2. IV. II. Ideas of Reform.