Adam Glantz

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the Republic settled upon a remarkable formula. Carefully, they divided the powers of the exiled Tarquin between two magistrates, both elected, neither permitted to serve for longer than a year. These were the consuls,† and their presence at the head of their fellow citizens, the one guarding against the ambitions of the other, was a stirring expression of the Republic’s guiding principle—that never again should one man be permitted to rule supreme in Rome.
Rubicon: The Last Years of the Roman Republic
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