senātūs consultum ultimum (‘the final resolution of the senate’), issued to the magistrates in a grave emergency, authorizing the consuls to use force for the protection of the state and suspending the right of appeal to the people. It was first used in 122 BC against C. Gracchus, and, among other occasions, against Saturninus in 100 and Catiline in 63. It was last employed (against Salvidienus Rufus) in 40 BC. The senate's legal right to enforce such a measure was always contested by the popularēs, for example in connection with C. Rabirius, who in 63 BC was defended by Cicero.




