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SPQR

Page 56

by Mary Beard

as Republican hero 422–3, 426

  usury 258, 339, 477

  C

  Caedicius, Marcus 155

  Caesar, Gaius Julius 286, Pl. 9

  adopts Octavian in his will 339–40

  affair with Cleopatra 290, 292

  ambitions of 220, 256, 278, 358

  assassination of (44 BCE) 15, 74, 215, 216, 291, 295, 296, 337–8

  campaigns in Gaul (58–50 BCE) 18, 214–15, 279, 283–5

  and the Catilinarian conspiracy 26, 35

  clementia 294–5

  dictatorship and reforms 216, 245, 292–4, 487

  divine status 74, 293, 340, 429, 431, 522

  entertained to dinner by Cicero 301–2, 318

  family background 47, 278

  in ‘Gang of Three’ 218, 278, 279, 309

  lands briefly in Britain 280, 284, 493

  month renamed after him 275, 293, 369

  portraits of 286, 357

  rivalry and civil war with Pompey 219, 256, 278, 286–90

  visits Alexander the Great’s tomb 161

  Caesarion 339, 347, 348

  Caledonia (Scotland) 203, 482, 494

  calendar 104–6, 105, 292–3, 489–90

  Caligula, Emperor see Gaius, Emperor

  Calpurnia (Pliny the Younger’s third wife) 475, 477

  Camillus, Marcus Furius 138, 154, 155–6, 370

  Cannae, battle of (216 BCE) 23, 175–6, 177, 179, 180–84, 480

  Caracalla, Emperor Pl. 11

  assassination 528

  gives citizenship to all free inhabitants of empire (212 CE) 17, 67, 334, 527–9,

  Carrara marble quarries, North Italy 33

  Carrhae, Battle of (53 BCE) 279, 280, 291

  Carteia, Spain 200

  Carthage

  Aeneas and Dido in 75, 76, 180, 210, 351, 376–7

  destruction and Roman decadence 213, 516

  execution of Perpetua 518–20

  resettlement 230, 292, 487

  vs Rome in Punic Wars 38, 170, 172, 174, 174–6, 181, 209–10, 212–13

  Cassius (Gaius Cassius Longinus) 337, 339, 341, 342, 343

  as Republican hero 422–3, 426

  Catiline (Lucius Sergius Catilina) 21–52, 243–4, 320

  as a byword for villainy 42–3

  Cato the Elder (Marcus Porcius Cato, third/second centuries BCE) 204–5, 207, 211–12, 298

  Cato the Younger (Marcus Porcius Cato, first century BCE) 279, 284–5, 289, 290, 295, 423

  Catullus, Gaius Valerius 214, 284, 306

  Caudine Forks, Battle of the (321 BCE) 157–8, 160, 161

  census 101, 106, 107, 108–9, 236, 240, 362–3

  Centuriate Assembly 108, 147, 190

  Chaerea, Cassius 391, 392, 394 ‘chief praetor’ 131, 132

  childbirth 313–16, 315, 316

  children

  child brides 311–13

  child labour 448–9, 449, 454

  death and ‘exposure’ of 22, 315–16, 144

  Christianity 429–30, 516–20

  and Pliny the Younger 476–7, 478–9, 517

  Cicero, Marcus Tullius 21–52, 31, 299–334, Pls. 1 and 2

  Against Catiline (In Catilinam; or the Catilinarians) 40–42

  Against Verres 253–5

  and Caesar’s assassination 337–9

  death 26, 341–2

  on death, and planned apotheosis, of Tullia 313, 317–18

  on the early history of Rome 109, 110, 141, 149, 153

  entertaining Caesar 301–2, 318

  First Catilinarian speech 41–2, 43–5, 51

  on the foundation of Rome 57–8

  On his Consulship 39–40

  Letters 39, 299, 300–303, 332–3

  on Pompey’s command against Mithradates 269–73, 283

  property and wealth 318–19, 325–8

  as provincial governor 257–60, 275, 283–4

  ‘the Romulus of Arpinum’ 54, 56, 66

  scorn for wage workers 441, 448, 451–2

  on slaves 328–33

  On the State 57, 65

  vs Clodius 36, 218, 281–2

  exile 36, 218, 281, 324

  vs Verres 253–6, 257, 264, 269

  Cicero, Quintus Tullius 301, 310–311, 332–3

  Cilicia 257–9, 275, 283–4, 310, 328, 331, 477

  Cincinnatus, Lucius Quinctius 140, 140

  Circus Maximus, Rome 118, 460, 462

  citizenship

  openness with citizenship 66–9

  civis Romanus sum 137, 254

  and Social War 155, 159, 165–6, 217, 233–41, 292

  Caracalla gives Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants of empire (212 CE) 17, 67, 334, 527–9

  Civilis, Julius 513, 515

  civilitas 356, 376, 406, 413–4, 421, 531

  Claudius, Emperor 387, 388, 393–4, 395, 396–7, 400, 401, 417, 418, 433, 455–6, 469

  advocates admitting Gauls to senate 67, 114, 156–7, 522

  death 415

  divine status 429, 432–4

  gaming enthusiast 433, 458

  invasion of Britain 367, 481–2

  knowledge of Etruscan history 114–15, Pl. 7

  and Livy 58

  clementia (mercy) 294–5, 299

  Cleopatra VII, Queen of Egypt 290, 292, 339, 346–51, 376–7

  clients, and patrons 144

  Cloaca Maxima (‘Great(est) Drain’) 119–20, 120

  Clodia (‘Lesbia’) 214, 218, 305–7, 318

  Clodius (Publius Clodius Pulcher) 218, 281–2, 283, 289, 319, 324, 342, 408

  Cloelia 125

  clothing 32, 355, 490, 491, 495, 525

  Cnidos, Turkey: temple of Aphrodite 407, 410

  Cocles, Horatius 124

  coins and coinage

  introduction 136

  minting 45–6, 46, 47

  portraits on coins 274–5, 293, 295, 353

  in Second Punic War 183

  in Social War 238–9, 239

  Collatinus, Lucius Tarquinius 121, 127, 132

  ‘colonies’ (coloniae) 165–6, 200, 230, 292

  settlements of veterans 248, 251, 342–3, 352, 436–7

  ‘colonies’ (Greek) 85

  Colosseum, Rome 231, 334, 398, 413, 446–7, 461–2, 532, 534

  Column of Marcus Aurelius 402–3, 402, 486, Pl. 10

  Column of Trajan 367, 403, 483, 486

  Commodus, Emperor 387, 388, 398, 420, 423–4

  assassination (192 CE) 420, 528

  Concord (Harmony) (goddess) 34–5, 233

  Conflict of the Orders 137, 146–51, 167, 189–90, 216, 247

  Constantine, Emperor 532–3, 533, 534

  conversion to Christianity (337 CE) 17, 532

  consulship

  claimed exclusivity 148, 266–7

  first consuls in Roman tradition 127, 129

  historical origin of consulship 132–3, 151–2

  lists 128, 132, 151, 267

  manipulation of elections, 218, 279, 294

  opened to plebeians 148, 152

  principles of consulship 64, 127–8, 188–9

  Roman dating by consuls 127–8

  contiones (public meetings) 191, 237

  contraception 314–15

  Corinth, Greece

  destruction of (146 BCE) 185, 210–13, 516

  origin of family of Tarquinius Priscus 100

  refounded 487

  Corinthian bronze 210–11, 253

  Coriolanus, Gaius Marcius 140–41, 217, 501

  Cornelia, mother of the Gracchi 231

  Crassus, Marcus Licinius

  and Catilinarian conspiracy 26, 30, 35

  defeat by Parthians at Carrhae and decapitation 279–80, 291

  in ‘Gang of Three’ 218, 278, 279

  wealth 26, 278, 319, 325

  Cremutius Cordus, Aulus 423

  crucifixion as punishment 120, 248, 254, 513, 521, 529

  Cybele see Great Mother goddess

  Cyprus, Cypriots 194, 258–9, 477
r />   Cytheris, Volumnia 305

  D

  Dacia, Romania, conquered by Trajan 483, 483

  decemviri (drafting Twelve Tables) 148–51

  Delos 76, 235, 275

  democratic aspects of Republican Rome 128–9, 188–92

  Dendera, Egypt: temple of Hathor 498

  dice games 287, 433, 455, 457, 458–61, 460, 472

  dictatorship 131–2, 216, 217, 245, 282, 294

  Dido, Queen of Carthage 75, 76, 180, 210, 351, 376

  dignitas 285, 295

  Dio, Lucius Cassius 423–4, 529

  Dionysius (Cicero’s librarian) 331–2

  Dionysius of Halicarnassus 65, 76, 78, 88, 119

  disease 33, 57, 316, 439–30, 503

  divorce 281, 302, 303, 311, 314, 319, 378

  Dolabella, Publius Cornelius 302, 303, 310, 342–3, 346

  Domitian, Emperor 388, 399, 400, 401, 403, 406, 415, 416, 425, 426, 427, 494

  black dinner party 424

  assassinated (96 CE) 414, 418

  dowry 303, 315, 319

  Druids 284, 489

  Drusilla, Gaius’s sister 396, 429

  Drusus, Marcus Livius (assassinated 91 BCE) 237, 325

  Drusus, son of Livia 351, 378

  Duris of Samos 135, 137, 159

  E

  economy

  banks and credit 325

  economic aspects of empire 178, 193, 195–6, 502–8, 508

  consequence of expansion on Italian agriculture 221–3

  problems in 63 BCE 45–6

  Rome’s early trading relations 119, 153

  slave trade 329, 503

  sources of elite wealth 326–7, 327

  Egnatius 65, 73

  Egnatius Metellus, legendary wife beater, 305

  Egnatius Rufus, Marcus, dissident under Augustus 375–6

  Egypt

  Augustus makes it a Roman possession 363–4

  crime records 463, 464

  images of Roman emperors 497, 498

  invaded by Antiochus Epiphanes 194, 197

  murder of Pompey 219, 287, 289–90

  see also Alexandria, Antonius, Dendera, Marcus Cleopatra VII, Mons Claudianus

  elections

  end of popular elections 354–5, 372, 375

  expense of electioneering 28

  importance of the poor 190–91

  local electoral slogans 454

  methods of voting 190, 224, 227

  organisation of voting assemblies 29, 108–9, 147

  qualification for standing 189–90

  whitened togas 32

  elephants in combat 23, 170, 172, 174–5, 181

  emergency powers decree 30, 35, 36, 232–3

  empire

  ‘of annexation’ 255–6

  depredations 254–5, 257–60, 263–4, 328, 488, 515–16

  and early Roman literature 170–73

  imperium 196, 255,

  ‘of obedience’ 192–7, 265, 273

  Roman critics 18, 38, 213, 515–6

  ‘without limit’ 193, 215, 274, 364, 480–86,

  employment 448–55

  casual work 446

  child labour 448–9, 449, 454

  tombstones of workers 449, 449, 450–51, 450, 451–2, 452

  trade associations and ‘strikes’ 453

  working environment 454–5, Pl. 18

  Ennius, Quintus 170, 171–2, 176–7, 182

  equestrians/knights (equites) 32, 190, 262–4, 373, 409

  Etruria, Etruscans 109–17, 123–4, 153–5, Pl. 7

  Etruscan version of Roman history 114–17, Pl. 7

  myth of Etruscan kings at Rome 109–110

  Eurysaces, Marcus Vergilius 451–2, 452

  Evander, King 78

  F

  Fabius Maximus Verrucosus Cunctator, Quintus 181–2, 281

  Fannia, widow of Helvidius Priscus 427

  Felicitas (Christian martyr) 519

  ‘Ficoroni Cista’ Pl. 5

  Fidenae, near Rome 81–2, 83–4, 298

  fire service 375, 463

  Fishbourne Roman Palace, near Chichester 493

  Flamininus, Titus Quinctius 431

  food and dining 82, Pl. 14

  bar culture 455–6, 456, 457

  diet study in Herculaneum 16, 446

  distribution and supply 228–30, 282, 445, 507–8

  evidence in burials 81

  food riots 469

  hunger 46, 446, 447

  fortune-telling 465–7

  Forum

  early remains beneath the Forum 81, 83, 117–18, 132

  Forum of Augustus 366, 366, 369–70, 376

  monuments in Roman Forum 24, 66, 69, 70, 74, 76, 100, 124, 125, 128, 162, 178, 233

  see also black stone

  François Tomb paintings, Vulci 115–17, Pl. 7

  fratricide 59, 65, 528

  Fregellae, Italy 234–5, 236

  Fronto, Marcus Cornelius 411, 440–41

  Frugi, Lucius Calpurnius Piso 229

  Fulvia, wife of Marcus Antonius 30, 342, 345, 350

  funerals 144, 187, 339, 381–84, 453

  G

  Gaius, Emperor (‘Caligula’) 387–98, 388, 390, 395, 401, 417, 423, 430, Pl. 13

  assassination 387, 389–92

  building projects 392, 396

  nickname 390–91

  reputation 392, 395, 396–7

  Galba, Emperor 211, 388, 419

  Galen 16, 33, 439, 462

  gambling see dice games

  ‘Gang of Three’ (‘First Triumvirate’) 218, 278–86, 309, 321, 393

  Gaul, Gauls

  ancient anthropology of Gauls 283–4, 496

  buried alive in Rome 180, 268–9

  Caesar’s command and conquest 214–15, 279, 283–5

  Caesar criticised for atrocities 18, 284–5

  and Catilinarian conspiracy 34, 48

  conflicts with Romans in Italy 159, 176, 183

  occupation of Rome (390 BCE) 23, 137–8, 155–7, 167, 408

  potential senators 67, 114, 156, 522

  Germans, Roman conflict with 374–5, 402, 402, 513

  Geta, Publius Septimius, brother of Caracalla 528, Pl. 11

  Gibbon, Edward, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 16, 17, 401–2, 406, 529

  gladiators, gladiatorial shows 217–18, 231, 248–9, 249, 251, 307, 365, 447, 461–2, 500, 532

  Glycon (snake god) 479, 480

  Golden House, Rome 404, 405, 407–8

  Gracchus, Gaius Sempronius 221, 223, 228–33, 260–64

  aims to extend Roman citizenship 233–4

  compensation law 260–64

  elected tribune twice 216, 232

  grain distribution 216, 228–9,

  murdered 216–17, 232–3

  overseas colonies 230

  Gracchus, Tiberius Sempronius 216, 221–7

  land reform 216, 221, 222–4, 225, 236

  murdered 216, 223–4, 225, 247, 291

  stands for election again 223, 226

  grain allowance 216, 228–9, 245, 282, 292, 362, 445

  Great Mother goddess (Cybele) 179, 206–7, 206

  Greek culture and Rome 171–3, 202–3, 210–12, 225, 243, 471–2, 498–502

  Cato the Elder 204–205

  Greeks in Italy 85, 119

  buried alive in Rome 180, 268–9

  hostages (168 – c.150 BCE) 184–5

  H

  Hadrian, Emperor 67, 122, 367, 388, 401, 402, 403, 405, 411–12, 412, 413, 420, 422, 430, 483, 492, 534

  Hadrian’s Pantheon 334, 367, 504, 505–6

  Hadrian’s Villa, Tivoli 407, 407

  Hadrian’s Wall 484–5, 485, 487, 490, 509

  Hannibal

  advises Antiochus 176

  Africanus secures final defeat (202 BCE) 169–70, 212

  as general 180–81

  Second Punic War against 23, 27, 175–6, 180–4, 221

  Helvidius Priscus, Quintus 427, 428

 
Herculaneum, southern Italy 173, 320, 445–6

  diet study 16

  local legal dispute 464–5

  Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) 65, 73, 216, 278–9, 355, 499

  housing

  Cicero’s properties 318–19, 322–4, 325–6, 347, 408

  early huts 81, 82, 83, 86, 94,

  of elite 33, 118, 320–23

  emperors’ palaces and estates 355–6, 406–8, 405, 407, 468

  ‘House of the Tragic Poet’, Pompeii 322

  House of the Griffins, Palatine, Rome 319–20, 320

  imperial pleasure barges Pl. 13

  of non-elite 33, 443–4, 445, 447–8, 462

  Pliny the Younger’s properties 435–6, 437, 507

  human sacrifice 180, 268–9, 489, 512

  I

  imagines (wax masks of ancestors) 187, 323

  imperium see empire

  India 363, 502, 503

  intermarriage (conubium) 62, 150, 165, 303

  interrex (a ‘between king’) 97, 99

  ‘Italy’, as political identity 233–9

  see also Social War

  J

  Jerusalem and Judaea 194, 273, 415, 511

  Jewish revolt (66 CE – 73/4 CE) 413, 511–12, 512

  Josephus, Titus Flavius 389, 514–15

  on Gaius’ assassination 389–95

  Juba (African prince) 61

  Judaism 429, 517, 519

  Jugurtha, King 213, 265–8, 516

  Julia, daughter of Julius Caesar 309, 313

  Julia, daughter of Augustus 351, 354, 359, 378, 379–80, 379, 390

  Julia Domna, wife of Septimius Severus Pl. 11

  juries and jury courts 218, 262, 263–4

  ‘just war’ 60, 62, 193

  Juvenal (Decimus Junius Juvenalis) 68–9, 228, 438–9, 440, 447, 455, 458, 527

  K

  kings of Rome see regal period

  knights see equestrians/knights (equites)

  L

  Laenas, Gaius Popilius 197

  Latins and Latin rights 60, 63, 85, 153, 158–9, 165–6, 237

  Latin War (341 – 338 BCE) 158–9

  laundries 399, 448–9, 454–5, 470–71, Pl. 18

  law 464–5

  see also Twelve Tables

  Lepidus, Marcus Aemilius 338, 341, 344, 346

  ‘Lesbia’ see Clodia

  libertas, liberty 93, 125–30, 189, 227, 295, 299, 515

  and Caesar’s assassination 216, 289, 291, 295, 296 295, 338

  in Conflict of the Orders 146, 148, 150, 220

  as goddess 36, 129,

  under emperors 393–4, 401, 422–3, 515

  life expectancy 316

  literacy levels 470

  Livia (Augusta), wife of Augustus 97, 377, 378, 380, 381, 384, 409, 414, 415, 418, 429, 432

  in Augustan image making 305, 355–6, 377–8, 379, Pls. 12 and 20

  her staff 409

  Livy (Titus Livius) 42–3, 58, 138, 423

  on battle forces and casualty figures 159, 177

  compares Rome with Alexander the Great 158–9, 160–61, 163

 

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