In 214 BC, Furius was a censor with
Marcus Atilius Regulus, but he died at the beginning of the following year, before the solemn purification (
lustrum) of the people had been performed; and Regulus accordingly, as was usual in such cases, resigned his office. These censors visited with severity all persons who had failed in their duty to their country during the great calamities that Rome had lately experienced. They reduced to the condition of
aerarians all the young nobles who had planned to leave Italy after the battle of Cannae, among whom was
Lucius Caecilius Metellus, who was a
quaestor in the year of their censorship. As, however, Metellus was elected tribune of the plebs for the following year notwithstanding his degradation, he attempted to bring the censors to trial before the people, immediately after entering upon his office, but was prevented by the other tribunes from prosecuting such an unprecedented course. Furius was also one of the
augurs at the time of his death. ==Footnotes==