was a screen and a sham. Of the forces that lay behind or beyond it,
next
to the noble families the knights were the most i
him in 80 B.C. The Dictator himself had taken a Metella to wife. The
next
pair of consuls (P. Servilius Vatia and Appius Cl
dotal elections to the People: he was elected pontifex maximus in the
next
year. The son therefore inherited ‘urbana gratia’
betted by the praetor Caesar, Nepos went on with his proposals in the
next
year, causing bitter opposition from leaders of t
d an orator as well as a soldier. 5 Pompeius set all his hopes on the
next
year. By scandalous bribery he secured the electi
suls Metellus and Afranius into a date heavy with history. 5 In the
next
year the domination of Pompeius Magnus was openly
was soon added. Further, the three rulers designated consuls for the
next
year, L. Calpurnius Piso, a cultivated aristocrat
f the dynasts, whose influence decided the consular elections for the
next
two years as well. 2 Despite patronage at home
uption reigned, and disorder, with suspension of public business. The
next
year opened without consuls. Similar but worse wa
as a solemn duty. 3 The legion was not withdrawn, however, until the
next
year, along with another previously lent by Pompe
ver, Antonius and other adherents of Caesar, elected tribunes for the
next
year, promised to continue the tactics of Curio.
s (cos. suff. 45). PageBook=>095 With the designations for the
next
year, Hirtius and Pansa, the level of social emin
ictator’s secretary and confidant, Hirtius, designated consul for the
next
year, and Lepidus the Master of the Horse, now le
in the Forum. A speech of Marcus Brutus delivered on the Capitol the
next
day likewise fell flat. The mob was apathetic or
n leaders and the Liberators entertained one another to banquets. The
next
day, further measures were passed. On the insiste
be had, Dolabella an uncertain factor. The consuls designate for the
next
year, NotesPage=>099 1 Ad Att. 14, 10, 1
and leadership in the Senate, sorely to be felt in the course of the
next
eighteen months. Among the survivors, a few Caesa
head of the government, and so unassailable by legal weapons. In the
next
year, with A. Hirtius and C. Vibius Pansa as cons
still less the respectable nonentities designated as consuls for the
next
year. Cato too was dead. Averse from compromise a
nd favourable to the Liberators. 3 So much in public. What happened
next
is obscure. The enemies of Antonius, taking new c
te summer and autumn of the year. Men and money were the first thing,
next
the skill and the resolution to use them. An No
of his consular year. Nothing extraordinary in that. Compare, in the
next
year, what P. Lentulus says (Ad fam. 12, 14, 5):
the days following the Ides of March; and he will have reflected that
next
to Antonius he was the most hated of the Caesaria
of his agreement with Antonius: Antonius suppressed, he would be the
next
of the Caesarian generals to be assailed. They pr
entidius with the three veteran legions. The first round was won. The
next
task was to safeguard the march of the weary colu
ance. Lepidus himself, however, was to have a second consulate in the
next
year, with Plancus as his colleague. For 41 B.C.
champion one class against another. If he had begun a revolution, his
next
act was to stem its advance, to consolidate the e
ession of the census of a Roman knight; 1 and at the beginning of the
next
year a fresh list was drawn up, confiscating real
t Octavianus had designated him as consul for the following year. The
next
NotesPage=>220 1 Ecl. 4, 17. 2 Appian, B
3 Plutarch, Antonius 24. 4 CIL 12, p. 50. PageBook=>223 the
next
proconsul, Pollio, celebrated the suppression of
Gaul with useful achievements to his credit and the consulate for the
next
year as his reward, did not choose to hold the tr
ith the Sicilian triumph, and Octavianus pressed the advantage in the
next
few years with cheap and frequent honours for his
rutus, Caesar and Pollio are accorded the rank of ‘classical’ orators
next
to and below, but comparable to Cicero. 2 Tacit
ssed a social revolution, but it had been arrested in time. After the
next
subversion of public order it might go farther, e
and carouse. 1 The invasion of Media and Parthia was designed for the
next
summer. The dependent kingdoms of the East furn
e high-sounding names of Alexander Helios and Cleopatra Selene; 2 her
next
child was to bear the historic and significant na
o the discredit of their old general. 2 Antonius was delayed in the
next
year by the arrival of Sex. Pompeius in Asia and
the habit of keeping faith. In birth and in repute Ahenobarbus stood
next
to Antonius in the new Caesarian and Republican c
a Corvinus, and L. Cornelius Cinna, grandson of Sulla’s enemy. In the
next
year he would be consul with Corvinus, instead of
declare Antonius stripped of his powers and of the consulate for the
next
year. That office he allotted to an aristocratic
test a victory, but it portended no slackening of martial effort. The
next
generation was to witness the orderly execution o
gustus proposed himself to be consul without intermission. During the
next
four years his colleagues were T. Statilius Tauru
e τρυϕή and ὠμότης of Carisius). PageBook=>333 In Citerior the
next
three legates all had hard fighting to do. 1 Fina
a viceroy of equestrian rank yet there had been Cornelius Gallus. The
next
prefects, M. Aelius Gallus and P. Petronius, were
earlier than the legal term (Dio 53, 28, 3), becoming quaestor in the
next
year. PageBook=>341 Even had they not been
earlier than the legal term (Dio 53, 38, 3), becoming quaestor in the
next
year. PageBook=>342 The Roman loathed the
ssume the title of Dictator. When he refused, they persisted in the
next
best thing, leaving vacant one of the two consula
the next best thing, leaving vacant one of the two consulates for the
next
year, 21 B.C. Two nobiles then contended, L. Juni
at least two priesthoods; 4 the excellent Sentius Saturninus is found
next
to Augustus as deputy-master of the college that
eius, of M. Brutus and of Ti. Claudius Nero. PageBook=>384 The
next
generation was Caesarian. His father’s brother, a
, 39; Dio 58, 25, 4. PageBook=>398 After Varro, Agrippa is the
next
attested legate, governing the province in absent
rusus’ death he was succeeded by Sex. Appuleius (cos. 29 B.C.); 2 the
next
legate was L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, who marched a
here is a total of ten eminent men. Of these, three are novi homines,
next
to Agrippa and Taurus the most distinguished of t
members in A.D. 6, or the two curatores annonae of that year and the
next
, whose function passed at once to an equestrian p
e end with fortitude and faced it like a soldier. Next in power and
next
in crime was C. Sallustius Crispus, who inherited
In 21 B.C. the marriage of Agrippa and Julia was solemnized. In the
next
year a son was born, named Gaius. When a second s
Not merely spite and disappointment made the first man in the Empire
next
to the Princeps refuse his services to the Roman
ublic disapproval and bided his time with secret exultation. 3 In the
next
year it came out. Gaius was to have the consulate
he Princeps might die. Yet the princes Gaius and Lucius remained, and
next
to them the Claudian connexion. NotesPage=>4
had long been anomalous. It now became doubtful and perilous. In the
next
year his tribunicia potestas lapsed. Augustus did
eastern provinces. At once on his return in 19 B.C., and again in the
next
year, he was offered the cura legum et morum, whi
ative curse would propagate, from one generation of corruption to the
next
, each worse than the last, till the temples shoul
ple of Divus Julius vowed by the Triumvirs was at last dedicated. The
next
year saw the completion of the great temple of Ap
th a halo; and the omen of Romulus greeted his capture of Rome in the
next
year. Cicero in a political speech described his
mblem of sovranty from Jupiter, and recognized again by Cicero on the
next
day when he had the first sight of Caesar’s grand
tors and himself the last admiral of the Republic, Cn. Domitius stood
next
to Antonius for leadership in his party. To the