who threw contempt on the meanness of his condition,
he contended with much firmness. He made public
the rules of proceeding in judicial causes, hitherto
shut up in the closets of the pontiffs; and hung up
to public view, round the forum, the calendar on white
tablets, that all might know when business could be
transacted in the courts. To the great displeasure
of the nobles, he performed the dedication of the
temple of Concord, in the area of Vulcan’s temple;
and the chief pontiff, Cornelius Barbatus, was compelled
by the united instances of the people, to dictate to
him the form of words, although he affirmed, that,
consistently with the practice of antiquity, no other
than a consul, or commander-in-chief, could dedicate
a temple. This occasioned a law to be proposed
to the people, by direction of the senate, that no
person should dedicate a temple, or an altar, without
an order from the senate, or from a majority of the
plebeian tribunes. The incident which I am about
to mention would be trivial in itself, were it not
an instance of the freedom assumed by plebeians in
opposition to the pride of the nobles. When Flavius
had come to make a visit to his colleague, who was
sick, and when, by an arrangement between some young
nobles who were sitting there, they did not rise on
his entrance, he ordered his curule chair to be brought
thither, and from his honourable seat of office enjoyed
the sight of his enemies tortured with envy. However,
a low faction, which had gathered strength during
the censorship of Appius Claudius, had made Flavius
an aedile; for he was the first who degraded the senate,
by electing into it the immediate descendants of freed
men; and when no one allowed that election as valid,
and when he had not acquired in the senate-house that
influence in the city which he had been aiming at,
by distributing men of the meanest order among all
the several tribes, he thus corrupted the assemblies
both of the forum and of the field of Mars; and so
much indignation did the election of Flavius excite,
that most of the nobles laid aside their gold rings
and bracelets in consequence of it. From that
time the state was split into two parties. The
uncorrupted part of the people, who favoured and supported
the good, held one side; the faction of the rabble,
the other; until Quintus Fabius and Publius Decius
were made censors; and Fabius, both for the sake of
concord, and at the same time to prevent the elections
remaining in the hands of the lowest of the people,
purged the rest of the tribes of all the rabble of
the forum, and threw it into four, and called them
city tribes. And this procedure, we are told,
gave such universal satisfaction, that, by this regulation
in the orders of the state, he obtained the surname
of Maximus, which he had not obtained by his many
victories. The annual review of the knights,
on the ides of July, is also said to have been instituted
by him.