Page:Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1870) - Volume 2.djvu/574

Rh 5 GO ICILIUS. to do so, bis life and property should be forfeited. (Dionys. vi. 88, vii, 14, 17; comp. Cic. pro Sest. 37.) Niebuhr remarks (Hist, of Boine, vol. ii. p. 232), that this law could not have been passed before the Publilian law (b. c. 471), which transferred the elec- tion of the tribunes from the comitia centuriata to the comitia tributa, and which gave the tribunes power to originate measures in the comitia tributa, a power which they had not possessed in the comitia centuriata. He therefore supposes that the Icilian law was enacted in B. c. 471, in which year a Sp. Icilius is mentioned as one of the first five tribunes elected by the tribes. (Liv. ii. 58.) It is therefore most probable that this law was not passed till B.C. 471; but there is no reason for believing that the Sp. Icilius who was tribune in B. c. 492, is a different person from the tribune of B. c. 471. Dionysius speaks (ix. 1 ) of a Sp. Icilius, who was tribune of the plebs in B. c. 481, and who attempted to force the patricians to pass an agrarian law, by preventing them from levying troops to carry on thfe war against the Aequi and Veientes. This tribune is called by Livy (ii. 43), Sp. Licinius; but if the name in Dionysius is correct, he is pro- bably the same as the tribune of B. c. 492, so that Sp. Icilius would have been tribune for the first time in 492, the second time in 481, and the third time in 471. In the year after his first tribunate (b. c. 491), according to the common chronology, Sp. Icilius was elected to the aedileship, and took an active part in the prosecution of the proud patrician, Coriolanus. He and his colleague L. Junius Brutus, were commanded by the tribunes to seize Coriola- nus, but were driven away by the patricians by main force; and when they afterwards attempted to hurl him down from the Tarpeian rock, they were again prevented by the patricians. (Dionys. vii. 2G, 35.) 2. C. Icilius Ruga, is mentioned by Diony- sius (vi. 89) as one of the first five tribunes of the plebs, upon the establishment of the office in B. c. 493. 3. L. Icilius, a son of the preceding (Dionys, xi. 28), is described as a man of great energy and eloquence. In his first tribunate (b. c. 456), he claimed for the tribunes the right of convoking the senate, and also carried the important law for the assignment of the Aventine (de Ave?iH7io publicando) to the plebs, notwithstanding the furious opposition of the senate and the patricians. The Aventine had up to this time been part of the domain land, enjoyed by the patricians, to whom the plebeians paid rent for the houses which they occupied. By the Icilian law the patricians were indemnified for the value of their buildings; but it was, as Niebuhr remarks, of great importance for the independence of the plebeians that the patricians should not be their landlords, and thus able to control their votes, and likewise, when bloody feuds were so likely to break out, that the plebeians should be in exclusive possession of a quarter of their own, and one too so strong as the Aventine. (Dionys. x. 31, 32; Liv. iii. 31; Niebuhr, Hist, of Rome, vol. ii. p. 301.) In the following year (b. c. 455), Icilius and his colleagues were again elected tribunes, and proposed an agrarian law, which the patricians pre- vented by open violence from being put to the vote. Three patrician houses, the Cloelii, the Posturaii, and the Serapronii, were brought to trial, and their property confiscated; but the patricians restored it ICTINUS. to the accused. The discussion upon the agrarian law was then renewed, but was again interrupted by an invasion of the Aequi. (Liv. iii. 31; Dionys. X. 33—43.) Six years afterwards (b. c. 499) Icilius was one of the chief leaders in the outbreak against the decemvirs. Virginia had been betrothed to him, and he boldly defended her cause before App. Claudius; and when at length she fell by her father's hand, to save her from the lust of the de- cemvir, Icilius bearded the tyrant, and over her dead body roused the people to throw off the yoke of their oppressors. While Virginius induced the army on the Algidus to disown the decemvirs, and to march to the Aventine, Icilius hurried to the army which was carrying on the war against the Sabines, and prevailed upon them likewise to desert the government. Both armies subsequently united and encamped upon the Sacred Mount : the patri- cians were obliged to give way, the decemvirs re- signed, and the tribuneship and right of appeal were restored to the plebs. The troops thereupon returned to the Aventine; and in the election of tribunes which followed, Icilius obtained the office for the third time. On his proposition, a plebis- citum was passed, securing indemnity to all who had taken part in the insurrection. He likewise took an active part in the subsequent proceedings against App. Claudius, and he in particular came forward as the accuser of the M. Claudius, the client of the decemvir, who had claimed Virginia as his slave. Icilius is mentioned once more at the close of the year as proposing to the tribes that the con- suls, L. Valerius and M. Horatius, should enjoy a triumph for their victory over the Sabines, an honour which had been refused them by the senate, on account of their popularity with the plebs. The proposition was carried; and this is mentioned as the first instance in which a triumph was celebrated without the authority of the senate. (Liv. iii. 44 —54, 63; Dionys. xi. 28—46.) Livy (iii. 46) speaks of a brother of Icilius, who hastened with the son of Numitorius to the Roman army, to inform Virginius of the foul plot formed against his daughter. (Comp. Dionys. xi. 37, who speaks of this Icilius under the title of ueai/icrKos, by which he perhaps means to distinguish him from his brother.) 5 — 7. IciLiL Three of this family were elected tribunes of the plebs, in B. c. 409 (Liv. iv. 54), one of whom was probably the L. Icilius, who was tribune of the plebs three years before, B. c. 412. (Liv. iv. 52.) The three Icilii in their tribunate urged the plebs to elect quaestors from their own body; and this was the first time the plebeians obtained this dignity, three out of the four quaes- tors being chosen from them. The Icilii also made great efforts to secure the consular tribunate next year for the plebeians, but they were defeated and patricians elected. (Liv. iv, 54 — 56.) ICTl'NUS ('iKTij/os), a contemporary of Peri- cles, was the architect of two of the most celebrated of the Greek temples, namely, the great temple of Athene, in the acropolis of Athens, called the Par- thenon, and the temple of Apollo Epicurius, near Phigalia in Arcadia. The former was built under the administration of Pericles, and was completed in B. c. 438 : Callicrates was associated with Ictinus in the work. The latter is thought to have been completed before B. c. 431, on the ground that it is not likely that Ictinus built it after the breaking