MMDCCLV
Home| Latíné | Deutsch | Español | Français | Italiano | Magyar | Português | Română | Русский | English
| MMDCCLIV | MMDCCLV | MMDCCLVI | |
|---|---|---|---|
|  Marcus Octavius Germanicus |  Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix (II) | ||
M. Octavio L. Sulla (II) cos. ‡ MMDCCLV a.u.c.
| Consul | Marcus Octavius Germanicus | Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix | 
| Praetor | Pompeia Cornelia Strabo | Titus Labienus Fortunatus | 
| Praetor suffectus | Patricia Cassia | 
| Censor | Lucius Equitius Cincinnatus | Caius Flavius Diocletianus | 
| Aedilis Curulis | Caeso Fabius Quintillianus | Amulius Claudius Petrus | 
| Aedilis Curulis suffectus | Gnaeus Equitius Marinus | 
| Aedilis Plebis | Tiberius Apollonius Cicatrix | Marcus Scribonius Curio Britannicus | 
| Quaestor | Marcus Minucius Audens | Gaius Quirinus Caesar Longinus | 
| Quaestor suffectus | Ianus Minicius Sparsus | 
| Quaestor | Decia Cornelia Sepulchatia | Titus Octavius Pius | 
| Quaestor | Quintus Fabius Maximus | Franciscus Apulus Caesar | 
| Quaestor | Gaius Minucius Hadrianus | Gaius Popillius Laenas | 
| Tribunus Plebis | Gnaeus Salix Astur | Marcus Arminius Maior | 
| Tribunus Plebis | Claudius Salix Davianus | Manius Villius Limitanus | 
| Tribunus Plebis | Lucius Mauricius Procopius | 
Vigintisexviri
| Curator aranei | Marcus Octavius Germanicus | 
| Curator differendi | Marcus Scipiadus Scipio Africanus | 
| Curator sermonis | Priscilla Vedia Serena resigned | 
| Rogator | Julilla Sempronia Magna | Titus Horatius Atticus | 
| Rogator | Marcus Scipius Scipiadus Africanus | Publius Domitianus Artorinus Longinus | 
Ianuarius
Nova Roma incorporated in Maine, USA.
Februarius
Martius
Aprilis
Maius
Iunius
A conflict arose between the two Consuls, on the issue of the Censores power. Consul L. Cornelius had privately shown M. Octavius a proposed lex that would substantially modify the Censores' power to create Senators, in some cases, making adlection automatic, even against the wishes of the Senators. M. Octavius opposed this - thinking it was retaliation for the Censores' actions in the events three months prior - and privately insisted that the proposal be modified, or it would be vetoed. When Consul Cornelius finally posted a call for votes, however, the text included several of the features that the two had agreed would be removed, and Octavius vetoed it within hours. This ended a truce that had existed between the two Consuls, and for much of the remainder of their term, they quarrelled publicly and privately.
