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1 (1960) THE ROMAN REVOLUTION
salutary criticism, so much the better. OXFORD, 1 June 1939 R. S. NOTE TO SECOND IMPRESSION THE occasion of a reprint
gustus’ remarks about Galba, cf. Suetonius, Galba 4, I; Dio 64, I, I; note , however, Tacitus, Ann. 6, 20. PageBook=>002
us (tr. pl. 83) and L. Junius Brutus Damasippus P-W x, 972 f.; 1025). Note also C. Marcius Censorinus (P-W XIV, 1550 f.) and
aepio and to a Porcius, whence double issue, five children of diverse note , among them the great political lady Servilia and
almost all the chief members of the government, the principes viri of note during the first decade of its existence. To the
od 68-63 B.C. On the influence of Crassus with the Senate in 70 B.C., note esp. Plutarch, Pompeius 22: ĸαὶ ἐν µὲν τ βυνλ µȃλ
onsulate in 67 (Val. Max. 3, 8, 3) and again in 65 (Ad Att. 1, 1, 1). Note also Pompeius’ legate L. Lollius (Appian, Mithr.
4. Against Mithridates: Plutarch, Pompeius 34, &c. For his origin note the dedication nr. Cupra Maritima (ILS 878). 6
ful of the provinces and some twenty legions. NotesPage=>037 1 Note the extravagant proposal of the tribune C. Messiu
. suff. A.D. 39) and domitius decidius (tacitus, Agr. 6, 1; ILS 966). Note also the championing of a wronged Gaul by Cn. Dom
1919), 407 F. among literary men of equestrian rank on Caesar’s side, note C. Asinius Pollio (Catullus 12, 6 ff.) and L. Tic
he restitution of Norbanus, Cinna and Carrinas, all names of historic note in the Marian faction. 2 Hostile to the oligarchy
For example, in Thessaly (BC 3, 34, 4; 35, 2; Cicero, Phil. 13, 33). Note also men of Cnidus (SIG3 761; Strabo, p. 656, &am
proconsuls. For Domitii in Narbonensis, cf. above, p. 44; for Valerii note C. Valerius Troucillus, Caesar, BG 1, 47, 4, &
nt examples of the ‘homo novus parvusque senator’ (Bell. Afr. 57, 4). Note the brothers Caepasii, ‘ignoti homines et repenti
F. Altheim, A History of Roman Religion (1938), 114 ff.; 144 ff. 4 Note the praenomina ‘Kaeso’ and ‘Numerius’ among the F
trusidius’, ILS 6132b, cf. Schulze, LE, 170; Münzer, P-W XIX, 1304 f. Note also the names of the centurions in Bell. Afr. 54
, clearly of the family of Vettius Scato, a Marsian insurgent leader. Note also Phil. 11, 4: ‘Marso nescio quo Octavio, scel
s (cos. suff. 43). Names in ‘-isius’ and ‘-asius’ also deserve study. Note the Caesarian C. Calvisius Sabinus (cos. 39 B.C.)
, I were to be dated immediately after the funeral (see the preceding note ), it would not prove, though it might support, th
ed encouragement from the absence of any Republican manifestations of note during the Ludi Apollinares, celebrated in the na
neyed to Campania to raise an army by bribery, five adherents of some note participated in the venture. Only two names can b
however, an early adherent (Plutarch, Brutus 27), is quite possible. Note the absence of Salvidienus. PageBook=>132
llies in the Senate would provide the rest. NotesPage=>161 (no notes ) Ch. XII THE SENATE AGAINST ANTONIUS PageBook
Italy, Trebonius, Lepidus and Vatinius. Fourteen remained, but few of note in word or deed, for good or evil, in the last ef
the Caesarian leaders to open negotiations with After interchange of notes and emissaries, the Triumvirs and Pompeius met ne
d the plebs, reinforced in devotion, but had attached few senators of note , even when four years had elapsed since the found
d service as an admiral. Presumably one of Caesar’s new senators. 4 Note Statius Statilius in 282 B.C. (Val. Max. 1, 8, 6)
d gathered the materials of history rather than written any annals of note or permanence. The old scholar lacked style, inte
ly the pride and monopoly of the senator that it was held a matter of note , if not of scandal, when an inferior person presu
onius, who journeyed from Rome to the conference of Tarentum. 6 Of no note in the arts of peace were certain military men an
tium (Plutarch, Antonius 65), perhaps a son of the consul of 76 B.C.: note M. Octavius as a Pompeian admiral in 49 and 48 B.
’ The inscr. ILS 5531 (Iguvium) may attest contributions for the war: note the phrase ‘in commeatum legionibus’. 3 Horace,
town (ILS 894). On the origin of the Vinicii, cf. above, p. 194. 3 Note , in this period, L. Ovidius Ventrio, a municipal
n the Roman franchise on enlistment by certain partisans of Antonius. Note also the inscription from Philae in Egypt (OGIS 1
th, true to noble and patrician tradition. She was the last person of note in a family that claimed descent from the nobilit
identum, bearing the title of ‘legatus’, perhaps c. 23 B.C. (ILS 86). Note also a proconsul, L. Piso, sitting in justice at
ion-myth of the new order. There is something unreal in the sustained note of jubilation, as though men knew its falsity: be
&c.; BC 3, 60, 4. L. Decidius Saxa probably belongs to this type. Note also P. Considius (BG 1, 21, 3), a centurion or k
like Lanuvium, provide senators for Rome there are remote towns of no note before or barely named, like Aletrium in the Hern
V, 3341) was of praetorian rank before A.D. 26 (Tacitus, Ann. 4, 56). Note also Sex. Papinius Allenius (ILS 945: Patavium);
11, 24: ‘manent posteri eorum. ’ 2 Junius Gallio, a speaker of some note , who adopted one of the three sons of Seneca the
alba 3, 4), the first wife of C. Sulpicius Galba (cos. suff. 5 B.C.). Note the praenomina, Paullus and Africanus, of the two
ipis fuerant sed avitae opes, provinciarum scilicet spoliis partae. ’ Note also the numerous slaves of the Lollii in Rome (f
>385 1 Plutarch, Lucullus 6. 2 Mommsen, Ges. Schr. IV, 311 ff. Note the ‘cohors primae admissionis’ (Seneca, De clem.
tment. The legates of Galatia are an instructive class. Four men of note governed Galatia at different times, one when pra
last consular Marcellus is Aeserninus (22 B.C.), a person of no great note who had been a partisan of Caesar the Dictator. A
olla (OGIS 468). 3 Varus was related to the Nonii (see the previous note ); and his sister was the mother of P. Cornelius D
he whole episode is mysterious. NotesPage=>425 1 ILS 8892. 2 Note M. Livius Drusus Libo (cos. 15 B.C.), whose conne
ibidius (Tacitus, Ann. 2, 48); Titedius (ib. 85); Bruttedius (3, 66). Note also the orator Murredius, who dragged in obscene
est was C. Julius Vercondaridubnus, an Aeduan noble (Livy, Per. 139). Note , as fighting for Rome in 10 B.C., Chumstinctus an
, Brutus 53. 3 Pliny (NH 36, 33) speaks of his ‘acris vehementia. ’ Note also Seneca, Controv. 4, praef. 3: ‘illud strictu
e was in the habit of delivering as a lecture. 3 PageNotes. 506 1 Note , in the militia equestris, C. Stertinius Xenophon
s, the elogia of the noble families. The earliest native historian of note , Cato the Censor, made his protest against this p
ostea bellum inferentis rei publicae | vici b[is a]cie. ’ 2 Ib. 30. Note also the prominence of the naval expedition in A.
S. The Italic Dialects I–II. Cambridge, 1897. CORBISHLEY, T. ‘A Note on the Date of the Syrian Governorship of M. Titi
Verfassung 12–VI2. BERLIN–LEIPZIG, 1899–1929. DUCHESNE, J. ‘ Note sur le nom de Pompée’, L’antiquité classiqu
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