Gaius Claudius Crassus
Gaius Claudius Crassus was a Roman politician, briefly dictator in 337 BC.
Family
Caecus belonged to the patrician gens Claudia, one of the most important families of the Republic, which counted prominent men from its beginning to the Roman Empire. He was the father of Appius Claudius Caecus and the son of Appius Claudius Crassus, dictator in 362 and consul in 349.
Political career
Crassus was briefly dictator in 337, but had to resign immediately because the augurs had found a fault in his appointment.[1][2]
gollark: I do have a prototype audio modem thing.
gollark: I was just espeak-ing /dev/urandom, and definitely not encrypted data which would be indistinguishable from that.
gollark: Also that, yes.
gollark: Also base64ing it and pasting it into my website's comments (someone did this).
gollark: Also breaking it into 8MiB chunks and uploading to Discord.
References
- Livy, viii. 15.
- Broughton, vol. I, p. 139.
Bibliography
- Livy, Ab Urbe Condita (English translation by Rev. Canon Roberts on Wikisource).
- T. Robert S. Broughton, The Magistrates of the Roman Republic, American Philological Association, 1951–1952.
- George Converse Fiske, "The politics of the Patrician Claudii", Harvard Journal of Classical Philology, Vol. 13 (1902), p.1–59.
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