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Satyrus, a literary slave of Atticus,

iii. 215.

Saufeius, L., an Epicurean, i. 10,
95, 231; ii. 138, 200, 202; iv.
42, 56, 107.
Saxa Rubra, iii. 325.
Scæva, iii. 302; iv. 18.
Scævola. See Mucius.
Scaptius, M., a friend and agent
of M. Brutus, ii. 128-131, 135-
136, 152-153, 169; iv. 143, 209,
324.

Scapula, iii. 239, 241, 249, 251,
285.

Scaurus. See M. Æmilius.

Scipios, the, i. 14, 309. See
Cornelius.

Scribonius Rupa, i. 347.
Scribonius Curio, C., the elder, i.
34-35, 37, 43, 161, 169, 208,
214-215; his death, 354; iii.
213.
Scribonius Curio, C., the younger :

Vol. I. His effeminacy, 34;
gives Cicero information, 93;
visits Cicero with news of Clo-
dius, 95, 99; opposes the trium-
virs, 109; cheered in the theatre,
112; accused by Vettius, 121-123;
letter of Cicero to, announcing
his father's death (B.C. 53), 354;
letter of Cicero to, on his way
back from his quæstorship in
Asia, 355; Cicero writes begging
him to support Milo's candi-
dature for the consulship, 356.

Vol. II. His wooden theatres
and panthers at the funeral
games, etc., 22, 50; candidate
for the tribuneship (B. C. 51), 40;
opposed by the Antonii, 41;
Cælius thinks that as tribune
he will stop all motions as to
the provinces, 49; helps to
draw up a Sctum, 76-77; gives
Cælius some wild animals, 50,
78; as tribune he will support
Pompey and oppose Cæsar, 83;
proposes to reserve the Cam-
panian land, 84; Cicero writes
to Curio congratulating him on

his tribuneship, 84-86; Cicero
promises Cassius the support of
Curio, 113; he goes over to the
populares (February, B. C. 50),
115; wishes to recall Memmius,
144; his law for taxation of
slaves, 145; resists the motion
as to the provinces, 151, 182,
227; stands up for Cæsar, 155,
168; opposes Cicero's suppli-
catio, but gives in, 175-176,
185; criticises Pompey's second
consulship, 177; allows a grant
of money for Pompey's troops,
197; defends Caesar's "offensive
despatch," and leaves Rome to
join him (7th-12th January, B.C.
49), 234; ridicules the mission of
L. Cæsar, 261; collects garri-
sons from Umbria and Etruria
for Cæsar, 274; acting under
Cæsar as Pompey under Sulla,
347; Cæsar visits his Alban
villa, 348; the cause of his
corruption, 363; comes to call
on Cicero at Cumæ, 364; is
afraid of Pompey's fleet, 365;
a second interview with Cicero,
369; again visits Cicero and
then goes to Sicily, 374, 389;
writes to Hortensius to give
Cicero a free passage, 392, 394;
writes announcing Cato's evacu-
ation of Sicily, 400.

Vol. III. Cælius wishes that
App. Claudius had been on the
Cæsarian side and Curio on the
Pompeian, 4.

Scribonius Libo, L. (annalist), iii.
268-269, 272, 310.

Scribonius Libo, L. (Tr. Pl. 56),
i. 204; ii. 271, 340; iii. 146,
272, 311; iv. 103.
Scrofa. See Tremellius.
Scyros, island, ii. 34.
Sebosus, i. 103-104.
Segulius Labeo, iv. 266, 290.
Seius, M., ii. 36, 89; iii. 76, 145;
iv. 165.
Seleucia, ii. 196.

Seleucia Pieria, iii. 50.

Seleucus, a slave, iii. 180.
Selicius, Q., a money-lender, i.
26, 210; iii. 94.
Selius, i. 348.
Sempronian law, i. 240.
Sempronius Atratinus, L. (Cos.
B.C. 444), iii. 140.

Sempronius Rufus, C., ii. 73, 154;
iv. 169, 186, 196.
Sempronius Tuditanus, C., the
elder, iii. 268, 274, 277; the
younger, iii. 274, 277.
Senate-house, debates in the, i.
30, 33-35, 41-42, 188, 199, 222,
267, 271; iii. 213; some senatus
consulta, ii. 76-78; numbers con-
stituting a full senate, i. 199;
cp. 266, 278, 304; time of meet-
ing, ii. 124.

Septima, a learned lady, iii. 185.
Septimia, iv. 141.
Septimius, C., i. 122.
Septimius, C. (Præt. B.C. 57), ii.
76-77; iii. 199, 200.
Septimius, T., ii. 76, 77.
Sepyra, in Mt. Amanus, ii. 104.
Serapion of Antioch, i. 88.
Serapion, a slave of Atticus, ii. 402.
Sergius Catilina, L., intends stand-

ing for the consulship (B. C. 65-
63), i. 13; Cicero considers
whether he will defend him, 16;
his set, 34; twice acquitted, 41;
Cicero's speeches against, 62;
his disreputable character, 195,
368-369; the debate about his
fellow conspirators, iii. 213.
Serranus. See Atilius.
Serranus Domesticus, i. 336.
Servæus, ii. 40.

Servilia, mother of M. Brutus, ii.

138; iii. 208, 283, 288; iv. 62,
68-69, 76, 84, 143.
Servilia, daughter of Cn. Cæpio,
iii. 208.

Servilius, a tribune (B. C. 43), iv.
215.

Servilius, M., ii. 74-75, 171; iv.
181.

Servilius Ahala, C., i. 123; iii.
324.

Servilius Cæpio, C. (Cos. B.C.
141), iii. 272.

Servilius Cæpio, Cn., iii. 200.
Servilius Cæpio, Q. (= M. Brutus),
i. 122-123, 157.

Servilius Cæpio, Q., a relation of
Appius Claudius, ii. 160, 171,
189.

Servilius Postumus, L., iv. 194.
Servilius Vatia Isauricus, P. (Cos.
B.C. 79), i. 199, 204, 298; ii.
141; his death, iv. 82.
Servilius Vatia Isauricus, P. (Præt.
B.C. 54, Cos. B. C. 48), son of
preceding, i. 57, 66, 214, 286,
309, 327; iii. 13; letters to,
107, 148-153; speaks against
Antony, iv. 136; speaks against
Plancus, 207, 209, 271; votes
for honours to Octavian, 321.
Servius, condemned, i. 222.
Servius, a cousin of Pætus, iii. 91.
See Claudius.

Servius Pola, ii. 195.

Sestius, a Pompeian, ii. 308; iii.
18.

Sestius, L., son of preceding, iii.
343.

Sestius, P., i. 158-159, 166, 168-

169, 178, 196, 211, 216, 219,
312; ii. 90, 238, 257; iii. 278,
330-331, 343.

Sestius Pansa, L., i. 266.
Seven Waters, the, i. 285.
Sextilius, Q., a friend of Milo, i.

201.

Sextilius Rufus, C., iii. 367; iv.
II, 13.

Sibyl, the, i. 237.

Sica or Sicca, a friend of Cicero's,

i. 137-138, 142; iii. 42, 217-
221, 224, 226-227, 236; iv. 40,
75, 110, 148.

Sicilian Straits, the, ii. 374.
Sicilian, the (= Philistus), i. 271;
(= Demetrius Megas), 352.
Sicilian word, a, úvɛžia, ii. 31;
Cicero's affection for the Sici-
lians, iv. 20.

Sicily, i. 63, 142, 227, 252, 274,

277, 283, 316, 358, 364-365,

393; iii. 50, 140, 167-168, 349-
350; iv. 66, 69.

Sicinius, ii. 9.

Sicura, a slave, i. 338.

Sicyon, i. 30, 57, 60, 66; iii. 21-
22; iii. 158.
Sicyonians, the, i. 107.
Sida, ii. 53, 189; iv. 278.
Sidicinum, ii. 144.

Sidon, ii. 329.

Sigeum, i. 230.

Silanus. See Iunius.

Silius, Aulus, ii. 205, 396; iii.

205, 215, 217-221, 223-224, 226-
227, 249, 251, 258, 275, 279;
iv. 84, 87.

Silius Nerva, P., letters to, ii. 95,
96-98, 132, 139; iii. 333, 366.
Sinuessa, ii. 351; iii. 367; iv.

13, 51, 152-153.
Sipontum, ii. 150, 349, 374.
Sipylus, Mt., i. 265.
Siregius, iv. 75.

Siro, iii. 280.

Siser, P., iii. 31.

Sittius, P., i. 359; ii. 43.
Skepsis, in Mysia, i. 88.
Smyrna, i. 127.

Socrates, i. 282; ii. 279; iv. 15.
Solon, ii. 358.

Solonium, a plain near Lanuvium,
i. 69, 96.

Sophocles, i. 94, 290.
Sopolis, a painter, i. 326.
Sosius, C., ii. 287, 311.

Sosthenes, Cicero's reader, i. 27.
Spain, i. 250, 257, 315; ii. 13, 30,
73, 232, 253, 257, 260, 317, 321,
340, 349, 351, 353, 364, 368,
371, 379, 383, 387, 393-394,
397; iii. 4, 6, 30, 121, 144,
174, 180, 193, 195, 198, 216,
239; iv. 103, 142.
Spaniards, the, iv. 13.
Sparta, i. 59, 232; iv. 66.
Spartan Agesilaus, i. 279; bath, i.
250; brevity, iv. 308.
Spintharus, iii. 307.
Spinther. See Cornelius Lentulus.
Spongia, i. 40.

Spurinna Vestricius, iv. 178.

Spurius Mæcius, manages the
plays at Rome, i. 258.

Stabiæ, villa of M. Marius at, i.
258.

Staterius, Q., iii. 278.
Statielle (Aqua), iv. 231.
Statilius, L., an augur, iii. 199

200.

Statius, favourite slave and freed-
man of Q. Cicero, i. 111, 125-126,
387; iii. 89; iv. 72-73, 77, So.
Statius, Sext., a banker, ii. 136.
Statius Murcus, L., iii. 71; iv.
180.

Stoics, the, i. 332; ii. 118; iii.
293.

Strabo, Servilius, a Carian, ii. 97.
Strabo, an augur, v. 204.
Strenia, iv. 91.

Subernius, C., iii. 196.
Sufenas, i. 285; ii. 308.
Sulla. See Cornelius.
Sulmo, ii. 276, 285.

Sulpicius Galba, P., i. 13, 368; ii.

186.

Sulpicius Galba, Serv. (Cos. B.C.
144), iii. 272, 291; iv. 87.
Sulpicius Galba, Serv., ii. 180;
iv. 191; describes the battle at
Forum Gallorum, 211-213, 260.
Sulpicius Gallus, C., iii. 233.
Sulpicius Rufus, P., iii. 171.
Sulpicius Rufus, Serv. (Cos. B.C.

51), i. 90; ii. 8, 14, 76, 128;
his dilatory character, 83; satis-
fies Atticus in his conduct to
Cæsar (B.C. 50), 219; Cæsar
writes to him, 258; stays at
Rome, 273; has a son in Cæsar's
camp, 354, 361; Cicero writes
to Servius about an interview
(B. C. 49), 272, 375, 389; at
Minturnæ and Liternum, 396;
visits Cicero, 398. After Phar-
salia (B. C. 48) retires to Samos, iii.
20; writes to Atticus, 31 ; made
governor of Greece, 123; Cicero
writes to him there, 133-138,
his wife Postumia, 146; letters
of introduction to him, 153-165;
with Torquatus at Athens, 188;

leaves Athens, 192; his letter
of consolation to Cicero, 209-
211; Cicero's answer, 233-234;
writes to Cicero an account of
the assassination of Marcellus,
272-274, 298; one of the few
surviving consulars, 282. His
timidity, iv. 40; his death while
on a mission to Antony (B. C. 43),
176; the Rhodian treaty in his
consulship, 277; his motion in
favour of Octavian, 321.
Sulpicius Rufus, Serv., son of the
preceding, ii. 131, 375-376; iii.
135, 138, 168, 233.
Sunium, iii, 221, 282.
Swift-foot, ii. 324.
Sybota, iii. 20.

Synnada, diocese of, ii. 45, 69,
70-71, 101, 128.

Syracuse, ii, 400; iii. 92, 95; iv.
III, 151.

Syria, i. 41, 129, 250, 270; ii. 52,
58-59, 63, 66, 73, 87, 147, 177,
180, 184, 199, 312; iii. 31, 107,
132, 336; iv. 174, 189, 204, 209,
232, 274-275, 278-279.
Syron, an Epicurean, ii. 34.
Syrus, a literary slave of Atticus,
iii. 215; iv. 75.

Tadius, i. 3, 6.
Tanusii, the, i. 369.
Tarcondimotus, ii. 66.
Tarentum, i. 140, 348; ii. 11-13,
348; iii. 34; iv. III, 124.
Tarichea, in Galilee, iv. 181.
Tarquinius Superbus, ii. 334.
Tarquitius, L., ii. 198.

Tarracina, i. 256; ii. 224, 271.
Tarsus, ii. 46-47, 54, 72, 87, 127,
129, 171, 177, 183, 306.
Tartessus, ii. 222.
Tauromenium, iv. 151.
Taurus, Mt., ii. 44, 59, 61, 66,
70-71; gates of, 87, 187.
Taurus, M., i. 293; coupled with
Calvisius, iv. 188.

Teanum, in Apulia, ii. 243, 250.
Teanum Sidicinum, ii. 271, 295;
iv. 151.

Tebassi, the, iv. 18.

Tellus, temple of, i. 286; iv.
156.

Tempe, of the Reatini, i. 285.
Tenea, ii. 150.

Tenedos, people of, i. 265.
Terence, quoted, i. 111, 320, 340;
ii. 221; iv. 187.

Terentia, wife of Cicero, has rheu-
matism, i. 3; gives birth to a
son, 16; the wife of Sestius calls
on her, 25; Cornelius has not
visited her, :26; invites Pom-
ponia, 70; her woodlands, 89;
her controversy with Mulvius,
104; her gratitude to Atticus
during Cicero's exile, 139, 147-
148; Cicero begs Atticus to pro-
tect her, 152, 168, 178. Cicero
writes to her consenting to Tul-
lia's marriage with Dolabella,
ii. 138, 178; meets Cicero at
Brundisium (B.C. 50), 212, 214;
Dolabella agreeable to her, 222;
Cicero's alarm for her (B.C. 49),
247; remains with Tullia at
Rome, 255; Cicero tells her to
apply to Atticus for help, 256;
her business with the Oppii, 265,
367; arranges for payment of 20
sestertia, 270; Hortensius calls
on her, 401. Cicero wishes her
to sell plate, iii. 43; the di-
vorce, 183; her will, 38, 205; the
repayment of her dowry, 199,
207-208, 212, 214-215, 239; iv.
160; has a legacy from Cluvius,
328; iv. III.

See

Letters from Cicero to her,
i. 140-143, 170-171, 173-175,
179; ii. 201-202, 245, 248, 404;
iii. 7, 9, 11, 12, 14, 17, 21, 25,
40, 42, 45-46, 49, 54, 56.
also i. 98, 100; ii. 234.
Terentina, tribe, ii. 76-77.
Terentius, a tribune, i. 233, 302.
Terentius, L., iii. 40.
Terentius, P., iii. 26.

Terentius Culleo, Q., i. 162, 211,
301; iv. 237.

Terentius Hispo, P., ii. 98, 139.

Terentius Varro Murena, A., ii.
254; iii. 158.
Terentius Varro, M., does all that
Cicero expects against Clodius,
i. 114, 117, 119, 124, 146, 160-
161, 166 (B.C. 58-57); Cicero
expects a visit from him (B. C.
57), 192; wishes to consult his
books, 274; his name to come
into the de Republica, 280; his
property near Satricum, 293.
Says that Pompey means to go
Spain, ii. 30. Commends the
style of Hegesias, iii. 142; goes
to Spain before the war, 196;
his promise of a dedication to
Cicero, 284 (cp. iv. 142); intro-
duced into the Academica, 285-
291, 298-299, 301; Cicero's de-
dication of the Academica to
Varro, 304, 307, 316; writes a
funeral oration on Porcia, 320.
(B.C. 44) Cicero writes to him,
iv. 92; expected at Puteoli, 144;
disapproves of Octavian's plans,
147; his Peplographia, 149; his
work on constitutions, 152; his
treasures, 230. Letters to Varro,
iii. 65, 73-78, 304.

Terentius Varro Gibba, M., iii. 60.
Tereus, a play of Accius, iv. 100,
105.

Terminalia, the (19th February),

ii. 133-

Testa. See Trebatius.
Tettius, Sext., ii. 75.
Teucris (a feigned name), i. 26, 32,
35.

Thallumetus, a slave of Atticus,

ii. 35.
Thalna, or Talna. See Iuventius.
Themistocles, i. 229, 230; ii. 334,
3So, 352; iv. 323.
Theophanes of Mitylene, a friend
of Pompey, i. 90, 99, 109; ii.
30, 301, 312, 341; iv. 77.
Theophilus, a freedman, iii. 184.
Theophrastus, the philosopher, i.
70, 97, 106; ii. 142; iii. 317.
Theopompus of Chios, historian,
i. 92; ii. 139; iii. 243.

Theopompus, a friend of Cicero,
iii. 278.

Theopompus, expelled from Asia
by Trebonius, iv. 190.
Theopompus, on the staff of Q.
Cicero in Asia, i. 130, 267.
Thermus. See Minucius.
Thespiæ, in Boeotia, iii. 158.
Thesprotia, ii. 168.

Thessalonica, i. 46, 145-146, 148,
152, 154, 156, 157-158, 163,
167, 173.
Thessaly, iv. 254.
Theudas, a freedman, iii. 130.
Thirty Tyrants, the, ii. 279.
Thoranius. See Toranius.
Thraso, a freedman, ii. 85.
Thrasybulus, ii. 282.

Three Taverns, the, i. 29.
Thucydides, i. 271; ii. 205, 382.
Thurii, i. 140; ii. 356.
Thyamis, a river in Epirus, iii.
215.
Thyillus, i. 27, 44.

Thyreum, in Acarnania, ii. 210.
Tiber, the, iii. 217, 300; a flood
of, i. 331.
Tiberius, ii. 127.

Tigellius, the singer, iii. 329, 333-

334.
Tigranes, king of Armenia, i. 88,
93; his son released by Clo-
dius, 146.

Tillius Cimber, L., iii. 127; iv.
255, 306.

Timæus of Tauromenium, i. 227,
230; iii. 142.

Timoleon of Corinth, i. 230.
Timotheus, a freedman of Teren-
tia's, ii. 179.

Tiretian bridge at Minturnæ, iv.
153.

Tiro, Cicero's favourite freedman
and secretary, i. 295, 298, 386-
387; ii. 181, 206-208, 210-212,
224, 234, 286-288, 352; iii. 83,
85, 207-208, 227, 254, 256-257,
280, 307, 313-315, 317, 355-
356; iv. 57, 65, 74, 76, 79, 81-
82, 94, 102, 129, 154, 160, 169,
170.

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