Tiberius Sempronius Longus (consul 194 BC)

Tiberius Sempronius Longus († 174 BC) was a politician and consul of the Roman Republic in 194 BC

The son of the consul of the year 218 BC, held at an early age from 210 BC, the sacred offices of an augur and a decemvir sacris faciundis. He was tribune in 200 BC and 198 BC kurulischer Adil From 197-194 BC, Sempronius was one of the tresviri establishing colonies in Campania and Lucania. 196 and 195 BC, he was praetor or propraetor governor in the province of Sardinia. During his consulship 194 BC Sempronius stressed the registrar primacy of senators by assigning prominent seats at the games. In the north of Italy, he is said to have fought a battle against the Boii and fought according to Livy also in the following year as legate or with private empire on. Probably as legate he took in 191 BC at the battle against Antiochus III. in part. Sempronius applied 184 BC by the censor, but lost the older Cato. Ten years later he died of a plague.

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