A late-Republican Latin municipal-law statute (c. 45 BCE) demonstrating the LEX genre's extension into municipal administration. The bronze tablet from Heraclea preserves ~163 lines including detailed provisions on professiones (formal declarations to consuls or praetors), urban administration, sumptuary regulation, and the relationship to Roman law. Per Crawford 1996 has extensive intertextual cross-references to other leges, demonstrating lex-as-system. The text's identification with the legendary "lex Iulia municipalis" remains disputed (Dirksen vs Mommsen et al.).[ZH pending]