Marcus Fabius Ambustus (pontifex Maximus 390 BC)
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Marcus Fabius Ambustus (pontifex Maximus 390 BC)
Marcus Fabius Ambustus may refer to: * Marcus Fabius Ambustus (pontifex maximus 390 BC) * Marcus Fabius Ambustus (consular tribune 381 BC) * Marcus Fabius Ambustus (consul 360 BC) Marcus Fabius Ambustus ( fl. 360–351 BC) was a statesman and general of the Roman Republic. He was the son of Numerius Fabius Ambustus. He served as consul three times: in 360, 356, and 354 BC. His consulships occurred during a time in which Rom ... * Marcus Fabius Ambustus, ''magister equitum'' in 322 B.C. {{hndis ...
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Marcus Fabius Ambustus (pontifex Maximus 390 BC)
Marcus Fabius Ambustus may refer to: * Marcus Fabius Ambustus (pontifex maximus 390 BC) * Marcus Fabius Ambustus (consular tribune 381 BC) * Marcus Fabius Ambustus (consul 360 BC) Marcus Fabius Ambustus ( fl. 360–351 BC) was a statesman and general of the Roman Republic. He was the son of Numerius Fabius Ambustus. He served as consul three times: in 360, 356, and 354 BC. His consulships occurred during a time in which Rom ... * Marcus Fabius Ambustus, ''magister equitum'' in 322 B.C. {{hndis ...
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Marcus Fabius Ambustus (consular Tribune 381 BC)
Marcus Fabius Ambustus was a consular tribune of the Roman Republic in 381 BC, and a censor in 363. He was the son of Caeso Fabius Ambustus, and the father of two daughters, the elder of whom married Servius Sulpicius Praetextatus, and the younger Gaius Licinius Stolo, one of the authors of the ''Lex Licinia Sextia''. The Fabii were patricians. The younger Fabia had married a plebeian, and according to Livy, persuaded her father to support the legislation that would open of the consulship to plebeians and hence her husband. As consular tribune a second time in 369, Ambustus took an active part in passing the ''Lex Licinia Sextia''.Livy, ''Ab Urbe Condita'' vi. 36 See also * Ambustus, for other men with the same ''cognomen'' * Fabius Ambustus, for other men who used the same combination of ''gens In ancient Rome, a gens ( or , ; plural: ''gentes'' ) was a family consisting of individuals who shared the same Roman naming conventions#Nomen, nomen and who claimed descent from ...
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Marcus Fabius Ambustus (consul 360 BC)
Marcus Fabius Ambustus ( fl. 360–351 BC) was a statesman and general of the Roman Republic. He was the son of Numerius Fabius Ambustus. He served as consul three times: in 360, 356, and 354 BC. His consulships occurred during a time in which Rome was reasserting itself following its defeat at the hands of the Gauls in the Battle of the Allia of 387 BC. He defeated the Hernici in 356, and Tibur in 354, earning a triumph for the latter victory. He further succeeded against the Falisci, but was defeated by Tarquinia. As he was absent from Rome when the time came for holding the ''comitia'', the senate, which did not like to entrust them to his colleague, who had appointed a plebeian dictator, and still less to the dictator himself, nominated '' interreges'' for the purpose. The object of the patricians was to secure both places in the consulship for their own order again, which was effected by Ambustus, who seems to have returned to Rome in the meantime. He was appointed the elevent ...
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