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Suétone · Unknown

is on the institution of offices.
Suetonius, however, mentioned it in passing in the fourth book of the Books on Praetors. Praetors: The Lex Laetoria a Roman law protecting minors which forbids one under the age of 25 from entering into a contract.
Suetonius in the fourth book of the Praetors: He said in passing that a person under 25 years of age cannot enter into a contract.
Suetonius in the eighth book of the Praetors: Fasti dies court days are those on which the law is spoken, that is, declared, just as nefasti days when legal business is forbidden are those on which it is not.
But it is more rare and more wonderful to speak of the lyre. This matter Book on games and spectacles, or various books. both other learned men and Suetonius Tranquillus himself affirm in the first book of his Ludicra Historia History of Games to be sufficiently understood and sufficiently agreed upon: that the strings of the lyre sound differently on a winter day when touched by the fingers.
And to which idols they established the games is set down by Suetonius Tranquillus, or by those from whom Tranquillus received it.
Tranquillus the Roman original: "Tranquillus" with "scipinus" likely a corruption of "latinus" or similar; translated as Roman in the games of the Greeks,
Speaks of many other games and symposia.