Rome establishes the first permanent court in…
149 BCE
Rome establishes the first permanent court in 149 BCE.
After Galba returns in this year to Rome, the tribune, Titus Scribonius Libo, brings a charge against him for the outrage he had committed on the Lusitanians; and Cato the Elder, now eighty-five years old, attacks him most unsparingly in the assembly of the people.
Galba, although a man of great oratorical power himself, has nothing to say in his own justification; but bribery, and the fact of his bringing his own children and the orphan child of a relative before the people, and imploring mercy, procure his acquittal.
Meanwhile, Scipio Aemilianus sides with the conservatives, including the elderly Cato, in pressing for a third Punic War.
The older conservatives, scarred by their earlier experience, harbor fear and loathing of Carthage; younger Romans, such as Aemilianus, see another war as an avenue to glory.
Rome therefore declares war shortly before Cato’s death in 149 BCE.