necessary by the great increase of the duties of the
senate through the transference to it of the functions
of jurymen. As, moreover, both the extraordinarily
admitted senators and the quaestors were nominated
by the -comitia tributa-, the senate, hitherto resting
indirectly on the election of the people,(18) was now
based throughout on direct popular election; and thus
made as close an approach to a representative government
as was compatible with the nature of the oligarchy
and the notions of antiquity generally. The senate
had in course of time been converted from a corporation
intended merely to advise the magistrates into a board
commanding the magistrates and self-governing; it
was only a consistent advance in the same direction,
when the right of nominating and cancelling senators
originally belonging to the magistrates was withdrawn
from them, and the senate was placed on the same legal
basis on which the magistrates’ power itself
rested. The extravagant prerogative of the censors
to revise the list of the senate and to erase or add
names at pleasure was in reality incompatible with
an organized oligarchic constitution. As provision
was now made for a sufficient regular recruiting of
its ranks by the election of the quaestors, the censorial
revisions became superfluous; and by their abeyance
the essential principle at the bottom of every oligarchy,
the irremoveable character and life-tenure of the
members of the ruling order who obtained seat and vote,
was definitively consolidated.
Regulations As to the Burgesses
In respect to legislation Sulla contented himself
with reviving the regulations made in 666, and securing
to the senate the legislative initiative, which had
long belonged to it practically, by legal enactment
at least as against the tribunes. The burgess-body
remained formally sovereign; but so far as its primary
assemblies were concerned, while it seemed to the
regent necessary carefully to preserve the form, he
was still more careful to prevent any real activity
on their part. Sulla dealt even with the franchise
itself in the most contemptuous manner; he made no
difficulty either in conceding it to the new burgess-communities,
or in bestowing it on Spaniards and Celts en masse;
in fact, probably not without design, no steps were
taken at all for the adjustment of the burgess-roll,
which nevertheless after so violent revolutions stood
in urgent need of a revision, if the government was
still at all in earnest with the legal privileges
attaching to it. The legislative functions of
the comitia, however, were not directly restricted;
there was no need in fact for doing so, for in consequence
of the better-secured initiative of the senate the
people could not readily against the will of the government
intermeddle with administration, finance, or criminal
jurisdiction, and its legislative co-operation was
once more reduced in substance to the right of giving
assent to alterations of the constitution.