Description acceptable. Roman citizens who completed this achievement were exempt from jury duty or acting as guardians. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name this achievement that granted a namesake right, or ius (“YOOSE”), under Augustus’s Lex Iulia et Papia (“LAKES YOO-lee-ah ET pah-PEE-ah”). Later emperors granted the privileges associated with this achievement to men who had not actually completed it, such as Martial and Suetonius.
ANSWER: having three or more children [or ius trium liberorum; accept sons, daughters, kids, or offspring in place of “children”; accept more than two in place of “three”; prompt on having children, sons, daughters, kids, or offspring by asking “how many”?; reject “having a child,” “having a son,” or “having a daughter”]
[10m] Augustus gave his wife Livia the ius trium liberorum (“YOOSE TREE-um lee-bear-OR-um”), which let women inherit property, after her son with this cognomen died. A tribune with this cognomen was killed in 91 BCE, sparking the Social War.
ANSWER: Drusus [accept Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus or Drusus the Elder or Drusus Maior; accept Marcus Livius Drusus the Younger or Marcus Livius Drusus Minor]
[10e] The historian Suetonius gained the ius trium liberorum from this emperor, Hadrian’s predecessor. This second of the Five Good Emperors brought the Roman empire to its largest territorial extent.
ANSWER: Trajan [or Marcus Ulpius Traianus]
<Other History>