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Legendary Genealogies in Late-Republican Rome
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Extract
When the quaestor C. lulius Caesar began his aunt's funerary laudatio with these words in 69 B.c., he was not claiming any unique glory appropriate only to ‘imperial Caesar’, but indulging a form of family pride shared by many aristocrats in the late Republic.
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References
page 153 note 1 Suet. DJ 6. 1.Google Scholar
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page 153 note 5 Suet. Galba 2Google Scholar. Crawford, M. H., Roman Republican Coinage, i (Cambridge, 1974), no. 312Google Scholar; Mr. Crawford's numeration will be used for all coins mentioned below. Lavinium: Virg. Aen. viii. 42–8Google Scholar; Livy, i. 1. 10Google Scholar; Dion. Hal. i. 59. 3.Google Scholar
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page 157 note 3 Serv. Aen. v. 389Google Scholar (Hyginus), 704 (Varro).
page 157 note 4 Virg. Aen. v. 568, 123Google Scholar. No son of Cicero's client is mentioned in the pro Cluentio, but the family reappears eight generations later with the prefect of the first cohort of Batavians who dedicated one of the altars in the Carrawburgh Mithraeum on Hadrian's Wall (RIB 1545).
page 157 note 5 Dion. Hal. iii. 29. 7Google Scholar; de comp. verb, 3 for the patron.Google Scholar
page 158 note 1 Crawford no. 399. Poseidon's children take up five pages of Pauly-Wissowa, : RE xxii (1953), cols. 469–78.Google Scholar
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page 158 note 6 Cic. Brut. 62Google Scholar—but he calls Tullius, Servius ‘meus gentilis’ at TD i. 38.Google Scholar
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page 158 note 9 Empiricus, Sextus, adv. gramm. i. 252Google Scholar: τῆς γὰρ ἱστορήας τὴν μέν τινα ἀληθῆ εῑναί φησι [sc. Ἀσκληπιάδης]. τὴν δὲ ψευδῆ τὴν δὲ ὡς ἀληθῆ, καὶ ἀληθῆ μὲν τὴν πρακτικήν, ψευδῆ δέ τὴν περὶ πλάσματα καὶ υύ,θους, ὡς ἀληθῆ δὲ οῑα ἐστὶν ἡ κωμῳδία καὶ οἱ μῑμοι … (253) τῆς δὲ ψευδοῦς, τουτέστι τῆς μνθικῆς, ἕν εἶδος μόνον ὑπάρχειν λέγει τό γενεαλογικόν.
page 159 note 1 Polybius, ix. 1.4Google Scholar (cf. 2. 1): ὁ γενεαλογικὸς τρόπος appeals to τὸν φιλήκοον, ὁ περὶ τὰς άποικίας καὶ κτίσεις καὶ συγγενείας appeals to τὸν πολυπράγμονα καὶ περιττόν.
page 159 note 2 Livy, , praef. 7Google Scholar. So too Varro, ap. Aug. Civ. Dei iii. 4.Google Scholar
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page 159 note 4 Cic. Att. i. 16. 15Google Scholar (‘nunc ad Caecilianam fabulam spectet’); Archias also wrote a poem on Marius, (Cic. Arch. 19)Google Scholar, but the derivation of the Marii from Mars (cf. Plut. Mar. 46. 8Google Scholar) presumably comes from a Latin source. Boethus: Strabo xiv. 674.
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page 160 note 1 There are of course many more examples than those cited above, often too allusive for us to understand.
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page 160 note 3 See the chronological index to Plainer, S. B. and Ashby, T.'s Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (Oxford, 1929), 589–92.Google Scholar
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page 161 note 2 Best illustrated in Kähler, op. cit. Dimensions: Kähler, , op. cit. 11Google Scholar. Position: Coarelli, , op. cit. 324–5.Google Scholar
page 161 note 3 Kähler, , op. cit. 10Google Scholar; Coarelli, , op. cit. 338.Google Scholar
page 161 note 4 Kähler, , op. cit. 30–5Google Scholar; Coarelli, , op. cit. 302–18Google Scholar (Neptune temple), 325–37 (chronological context), 338–43 (Antonius).
page 161 note 5 See Lugli, G., Itinerario diRoma antica (Milan, 1970), 413–15Google Scholar. I have tried to deal in detail with the problems of the Circus Flaminius and its buildings in an article in PBSR xlii, forthcoming.
page 162 note 1 Convincingly inferred by Coarelli, , op. cit. 324f.Google Scholar
page 162 note 2 I have included both 89 and 86 B.c.: cf. JRS lix (1969), 63 fGoogle Scholar. No lustrum between 70–69 and 29–28: Augustus, , RG 8. 2.Google Scholar
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page 163 note 1 Tribe: ILLRP 515. 4Google Scholar. Local magistrate: CIL x. 6017Google Scholar. Laestrygonian kingdom: Hor. Odes iii. 17. 6–8 with Porph. ad loc.Google Scholar
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page 163 note 4 Catullus cxvi. 2, xci. 7Google Scholar. For this Gellius and his relatives, see the work cited above (p. 159 n. 3), 119 ff.
page 163 note 5 Catullus lxxxviii. 5–6Google Scholar: ‘quantum non ultima Tethys / nee genitor Nympharum abluit Oceanus’. Their daughter Doris was the mother of the Nereids: Hesiod, , Theogony 240–3Google Scholar (cf. 337, 350); Apollodorus i. 2. 2, 7.
page 163 note 6 Cic. Brut. 174Google Scholar (‘nee Romanarum rerum immemor’); for his attitude to Greeks, cf. the story at Cic. leg. i. 53Google Scholar, which dates back to 93 B.c.
page 164 note 1 Cic. Cluent. 119Google Scholar, red. Quir. 17Google Scholar, Pis. 6Google Scholar. He was himself the family's first consul (72 B.c.).
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