Article contents
The Freedmen of Cicero
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Extract
The private life of one of the great figures of history, indeed, as a discerning judge has recently put it, ‘perhaps the most civilized man who ever lived, attracts and deserves attention. A considerable, though subordinate, part in the life of a Roman of the upper classes was played by his servants, who ministered to his comfort, supported his dignitas, and were essential agents in his political work. In the case of Cicero these servants are known to us from his letters, while the staffs of other republican magistrates are much less completely revealed. An investigation of his more trusted and important servants, that is his freedmen, should cast light both on Cicero's private character and on the extent to which he relied, in his political and private life, on his subordinates.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Classical Association 1969
References
page 195 note 1 Balsdon, J. P. V. D. in ‘Cicero the Man’ in Cicero, ed. Dorey, T. A. (London, 1964), 205.Google Scholar
page 195 note 2 Plut. Cic. 67. 6Google Scholar. All references are to Cicero's works unless otherwise stated.
page 195 note 3 Att. i. 12. 4Google Scholar. The idea that one's feelings about slaves should not be too warm recurs with reference to a freedman and not quite seriously in Att. vii. 4. I.Google Scholar
page 195 note 4 e.g. Rosc. Am. 140Google Scholar; Dom. 89Google Scholar; Prov. Cons. 10Google Scholar; cf. Acad. Pr. ii. 144.Google Scholar
page 195 note 5 Paradox, v. 33 ff.Google Scholar
page 195 note 6 Cat. iv. 16.Google Scholar
page 195 note 7 Caec. 96Google Scholar; Dom. 77Google Scholar; etc.; Livy, xlv. 15. 3 f.Google Scholar
page 195 note 8 Phil. viii. 32Google Scholar; cf. Rab. Perd. 15.Google Scholar
page 195 note 9 Drumann, W. and Groebe, P., Geschichte Roms in seinem Übergange von der republikanischen zur monarchischen Verfassung (Leipzig, 1929), vi. 353 ff.Google Scholar; Carcopino, J., Cicero: The Secrets of his Correspondence, trans. Lorimer, E. O. (London, 1951), 77Google Scholar; Park, M. E., The Plebs in Cicero's Day (diss. Cambridge, Mass., 1918), 10 ffGoogle Scholar. gives a more reasonable list, but it still needs curtailing.
page 196 note 1 Att. i. 12. 4.Google Scholar
page 196 note 2 Fam. xiii. 77. 3; v. 9–11.Google Scholar
page 196 note 3 Att. viii. 5. 1.Google Scholar
page 196 note 4 Att. vi. 9. 1.Google Scholar
page 196 note 5 Att. xiii. 25. 3.Google Scholar
page 196 note 6 Fam. xiv. 3. 1, 3. 4 (58 B.c.).Google Scholar
page 196 note 7 Fam. xiv. 3. 3 (58 B.c.).Google Scholar
page 196 note 8 QF i. 2. 12 (59 B.c.)Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 15. 2 (54 or 53 B.c.).Google Scholar
page 196 note 9 Fam. xvi. 1. 1Google Scholar; 3. 2; 5. 1 (50 B.c.).
page 196 note 10 Fam. xvi. 13Google Scholar; 14. 1 (54 or 53 B.c.).
page 196 note 11 Fam. vii. 23. 3.Google Scholar
page 196 note 12 Att. vii. 2. 8.Google Scholar
page 196 note 13 Carcopino, arguing from an inaccurate but grander total of twenty-six, makes this charge.
page 197 note 1 Freedmen normally swore an oath on manumission to do a certain amount of work (which varied widely) for their patrons. Some remained in their patrons' service after the obligatory operae had been completed. Others worked independently.
page 197 note 2 Att. i. 12. 4.Google Scholar
page 197 note 3 Fam. xiii. 77. 3.Google Scholar
page 197 note 4 Fam. xiv. 4. 4.Google Scholar
page 197 note 5 Cf. Fam. xvi. 16. 2.Google Scholar
page 197 note 6 Cf. the slaves of Atticus, every one of whom was qualified to act as a copyist or reader, Nep. Att. xiii. 3.Google Scholar
page 197 note 7 A familiar example is Marathus, the a memoria of Augustus (Suet. Aug. 79)Google Scholar, or the two freedmen who helped him to copy his will (ibid. 101).
page 197 note 8 As did Philotimus for Cicero, (Att. vi. 3. 1Google Scholar; ix. 5. 1; x. 7. 2; etc.), Cilix and Phamea for Ap. Claudius, (Fam. iii. 1. 1 f.)Google Scholar, or Diochares for Caesar, (Att. xi. 6. 7).Google Scholar
page 197 note 9 Fam. xvi. 15 (?54/3 B.c.)Google Scholar; Att. viii. 15. 1 (49 B.c.)Google Scholar; Att. xii. 37. iGoogle Scholar; xiii. 3. 2 (45 B.c.).
page 197 note 10 Att. iii. 8. 2Google Scholar; QF i. 4. 4 (58 B.c.).Google Scholar
page 198 note 1 ‘nec inhumanus’ in this context may well bear both senses.
page 198 note 2 Plut. Apophth. Cic. 21.Google Scholar
page 198 note 3 A fairly common relationship for a freedman and a Roman other than the patronus who had freed him.
page 198 note 4 Att. i. 12. 2.Google Scholar
page 198 note 5 See Dorey, T. A., ‘Honesty in Roman Polities’Google Scholar, in Cicero, ed. T. A. Dorey, 31 f.
page 198 note 6 Carcopino, J., op. cit. 131 f.Google Scholar
page 199 note 1 I do not think that the Hilarus mentioned in later letters (Att. xii. 37. 1Google Scholar; xiii. 19. 1) is the same man. The name was common.
page 199 note 2 QF iii. 4. 5.Google Scholar
page 199 note 3 Att. vii. 2. 8; 5. 2.Google Scholar
page 199 note 4 It would have been hard for Cicero to enforce this at law.
page 199 note 5 Att. xi. 2. 3Google Scholar refers in all likelihood to Vettius Chrysippus the architect.
page 199 note 6 He is commonly identified with M. Tullius the scribe, but there is no evidence for this.
page 199 note 7 NH xxxi. 7.Google Scholar
page 200 note 1 It was possible for Cicero to have freedmen not named Marcus, but we hear of none.
page 200 note 2 Fam. v. 20. 2Google Scholar; 20. 9; Att. viii. 11 b. 4.Google Scholar
page 200 note 3 Cf. Verr. iii. 187.Google Scholar
page 200 note 4 That of Chrysippus is mentioned retrospectively. For Cicero's reactions to the manumission of other men's slaves we may compare that of Dionysius by Atticus and that of Statius by Cicero, Q. (Att. iv. 15. 1Google Scholar; ii. 18. 4; 19. 1).
page 200 note 5 Fam. xvi. 13Google Scholar; 14; 15; 10.
page 200 note 6 Fam. xvi. 16.Google Scholar
page 200 note 7 Fam. xvi. 16. 2.Google Scholar
page 200 note 8 Fam. xvi. 21.Google Scholar
page 200 note 9 e.g. QF iii. 1. 19Google Scholar; Att. xiii. 25. 3Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 22Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 11Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 24Google Scholar; Att. xii. 19. 4Google Scholar; xii. 51. 3; xvi. 15. 3.
page 201 note 1 Fam. xvi. 18. 3Google Scholar; 20; 21. 7.
page 201 note 2 A homosexual link was alleged, but may be dismissed as the usual slander.
page 201 note 3 Cf. Plaut. Persa 798, 838 ff.Google Scholar; Tac. Ann. xiii. 26 f.Google Scholar; Digest, xxxviii. 2. 1. 1.Google Scholar
page 201 note 4 Att. iv. 15.Google Scholar
page 201 note 5 Att. v. 9. 3; cf. vi. 1. 12.Google Scholar
page 201 note 6 Att. viii. 18. 3.Google Scholar
page 201 note 7 Att. vii. 18. 3.Google Scholar
page 201 note 8 Att. v. 9. 3; vii. 7. 1; vii. 4; vii. 8. 1.Google Scholar
page 201 note 9 Att. viii. 10.Google Scholar
page 201 note 10 Att. viii. 5. 1.Google Scholar
page 201 note 11 Att. xiii. 2 b.Google Scholar
page 201 note 12 Fam. xiii. 21. 2.Google Scholar
page 202 note 1 Fam. xvi. 4. 3.Google Scholar
page 202 note 2 Cic. 48. 2.Google Scholar
page 202 note 3 NA xiii. 9.Google Scholar
page 202 note 4 Suet. Vita Ter. 1Google Scholar; Gram. 7Google Scholar; Macrob. Sat. ii. 7. 6.Google Scholar
page 202 note 5 Successful scribae needed patronage as well as ability: cf. the freedman's son, Cn. Flavius, the aedile of 304 B.c. and protégé of Ap. Claudius (Livy, , ix. 46)Google Scholar, Sarmentus, probably freedman of Maecenas (Hor. Sat. i. 5. 51 ff.)Google Scholar, a freedman of Octavia, (EJ 149).Google Scholar
page 202 note 6 Fam. xvi. 4. 4; 4. 3; 12. 6.Google Scholar
page 202 note 7 Att. xv. 1. 1; 2. 4.Google Scholar
page 203 note 1 Att. ii. 3. 2Google Scholar; QF ii. 2. 2Google Scholar; Att. iv. 10. 2Google Scholar; Att. ii. 4. 7Google Scholar; xiii. 29. 2; xiv. 9.
page 203 note 2 Att. iv. 4. 3Google Scholar; vi. 1. 19, etc.; xii. 19. 4; 51. 3; xvi. 15. 3; etc.
page 203 note 3 Att. iv. 4 aGoogle Scholar; 5. 3; 8. 2.
page 203 note 4 Att. xiii. 9. 1Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 22.Google Scholar
page 203 note 5 Fam. xvi. 10. 2.Google Scholar
page 203 note 6 Att. xvi. 5. 5Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 17. 1Google Scholar; Nep. Att. 16. 3.Google Scholar
page 203 note 7 Quint, , x. 7. 31Google Scholar; Cell. NA i. 7Google Scholar; xv. 16. 2.
page 203 note 8 Asc. p. 48Google Scholar; Tac. Dial. 17Google Scholar; Plut. Cic. 41. 3Google Scholar; 49. 2.
page 203 note 9 Suet. Gram. 5. 12. 15Google Scholar; Fam. xiii. 16.Google Scholar
page 203 note 10 Att. x. 9. 1Google Scholar; Fam. xvi. 11.Google Scholar
page 203 note 11 QF iii. 1. 1Google Scholar; Ap. Claudius: Fam. iii. 1 f.Google Scholar
page 203 note 12 Plut. Cic. 7. 1 f.Google Scholar
page 204 note 1 QF i. 1. 13.Google Scholar
page 204 note 2 QF i. 1. 17.Google Scholar
page 204 note 3 QF i. 2. 1 ff.Google Scholar
- 5
- Cited by