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I was reading Plutarch's Life of Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus, and a note to chapter 14 says that the opponent of Tiberius Gracchus was consul 141 and censor 131. The article on the consul 141 doesn't say he was censor 131, which throws the whole thing into question (though if the opponent of Tiberius was in fact the son of the consul, it is highly unlikely - certainly not the case, I would say - that the son would have been censor without being consul). My reference was the first one cited for this page, so based off of that I would assume the note to a published book (included in Oxford World's Classics series, at that) is more likely to be correct. I don't have any more information than the endnote though JW (talk) 07:54, 9 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]