| 32. For the extent to which George Washington consciously emulated this tradition, see Garry Wills, Cincinnatus: George Washington and the Enlightenment (Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1984).
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| 33. A. W. Lintott, Violence in Republican Rome (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1968), p. 200.
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| 34. Lintott, Violence in Republican Rome , p. 1.
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| 35. Cicero, Catilinarian 1.3.
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| 36. Cicero, Catilinarian 6.15 (tr. Grant).
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| 37. Cicero, Pro Milone 911.
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| 38. Pliny, Natural History 3439.139; cf. Digest 48.6.1.
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| 39. Lintott, Violence in Republican Rome, p. 123.
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| 40. Cicero, Pro Caelio 70.
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| 41. Lintott, Violence in Republican Rome , p. 111.
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| 42. So Lintott, Violence in Republican Rome , p. 123. Aulus Plautius was still active in that year, and it would have been a good time to reinforce the earlier laws against violence, given the restitution of full powers to the tribunes.
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| 43. Sallust, Catilinarian War 31.4.
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| 44. Suetonius, Julius Caesar 17.
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|