Today's term to learn comes from my reading about
Apuleius' connection to magic.

The
lex Cornelia de sicariis et venefici(i)s, which was passed in 81 B.C., was a Roman law on magic named for the dictator Lucius
Cornelius*
Sulla. According to J.D. Cloud, the law is also referred to as the
lex Cornelia de sicariis and, simply, when no confusion results, as the
lex Cornelia. Apuleius wrote
The Golden Ass and an
Apology in which he defends himself (with unknown results) against charges of magic based on this law.
Read more...

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Wordless Wednesday and About.com's Wordless Wednesday
This is the traditional date for the death of
St. Patrick in A.D. 461. It was also the occasion of two Roman festivals, Liberalia and Agonalia, the victory at Munda (near Cordoba, Spain) of
Julius Caesar in 45 B.C. (against Pompey's sons) [see
Roman Battles], and the death of

Marcus Aurelius
Public Domain
Marcus Aurelius in A.D. 180.
The Liberalia was celebrated with games on the Campus Martius in honor of an ancient fertility god named Liber. Agonalia was a coming-of-age celebration.

Tiberius
Public Domain. Courtesy of Wikipedia
On this day in A.D. 37, the second emperor of Rome, Tiberius, died. When Tiberius took power following the death of Augustus, he refused to assume many of the proffered honors and rejected flattery. He tried to moderate greedy tax collectors and allow the rule of law. However, his reputation in history is largely negative. Read more about this emperor in my brief summary and in the accompanying account from Suetonius:
Tiberius.