In 474 BC, he may have been elected consul with Lucius Furius Medullinus.
[1][2] Whether or not the decemvir is the same man as the consul of 474 BC remains unknown.
[2] He had a son by the name of Aulus Manlius Vulso Capitolinus, who was consular tribune in 405, 402, and 397 BC.
In 454 BC, under pressure by the tribunes of the plebs, the patricians accepted sending a delegation of three former consuls, among which was Vulso, Spurius Postumius Albus Regillensis, and Servius Sulpicius Camerinus Cornutus, to Athens and Magna Graecia so that they could study Greek law.
[6] Vulso actively worked alongside the decemviri,[7] where he participated in the creation of the first written Roman laws.