Memmius when demanding a triumph, 303; notice given of an accusation of for maiestas by Appius Claudius, 305; accused of bribery by P. Sulla, 306; ac- quitted of maiestas, 307, 326, 331, 338; defended by Crassus, 320; Cicero asked to defend him on a charge de repetundis, 330; Cicero gives evidence against him, 336-337; his recall from exile, iv. 195. Gabinius, Antiochus, a freedman of A. Gabinius, i. 326. Gades, iv. 287, 295: a Gadi- tanian (= Balbus), ii. 228. Galatians, ii. 180. Galeo, iii. 31.
Gallia Cispadana, i. 215; Trans- padana, ii. 30. A Gallic laager, iv. 172; Gallic auxiliaries, ii. 343; Gaul, i. 19, 53-54, 60, 66, 269, 282, 338, 352; ii. 16, 42, 48, 50, 76, 253-254, 281; a rising in Gaul feared (April, B. C. 44), iv. 8, 9, 13; better news from Gaul, 16; Antony wishes for the governorship of the Gauls, 29; see also 123. The war in Cisalpine Gaul, iv. 179; the adhesion of Transalpine Gaul expected by Dec. Brutus, 231; Plancus supported by leaders in, 240.
Gallinarian wood, the, iii. 147. Gallius, Q., i. 372. M. and Q. Gallius, ii. 40, 399; iii. 50, 233.
Gallus. See Fadius and Sul- picius and Caninius. Gamala, iii. 217.
Gargettian (= Epicurus, from an Attic deme), iii. 175. Gavius, L., i. 245; ii. 135, 170. Gavius Cæpio, T., ii. 87. Gellius, L. (on the staff of Plancus),
Gellius Publicola, L. (Cos. B.C.
72), i. 195, 199; iii. 213. Genucilius Curvus, L., ii. 92-93. Germalus, i. 195.
Germany ii. 384; the Germans, iv. 16. Getæ, ii. 334. Glabrio.
Gloria, de, the, iv. 93, 106, 112. Glyco, Pansa's physician, iv. 255. Gorgias, a rhetorician at Athens, iv. 130. Gracchus
(= Ti. Sempronius Gracchus, Cos. B.C. 177 and 169), i. 211.
Græceius, iv. 65, 165, 242. Græcostasis, the, i. 200. Granii, the, iii. 106. Granius, Q., ii. 170. Gratidius, M., i. 73.
Greece, i. 61, 76; ii. 31, 178, 247, 257-258, 289, 330, 353, 368, 401; iii. 100, 358; iv. 12, 26, 112, 131, 166. The Greeks, i. 25-26, 140, 150-151, 260, 340; iii. 290; iv. 156: Greek writers, ii. 142, 209. Greek states, iv. 246; Greek games, i. 259; iv. 100. Gutta, i. 336. Gyaros, ii. 34.
Hædui (or Ædui), i. 53, 340. Hales, R., iv. 109, 121. Halesa, in Sicily, iii. 350. Halicarnassus, i. 79. Halimetus, i. 254.
Hammonius, an Egyptian, i. 203; iv. 73.
Hannibal, ii. 241.
Harpalus, a slave of Cicero's, iv. 157. Haterius, iii. 95. Hector, i. 230; ii. 193. Hegesaratus of Larisa, iii. 161. Hegesias of Magnesia, iii. 142. Helico, a gardener, iii. 355. Hellespontus, ii. 93. Helonius, ii. 15. Helvetii, i. 53-54. Hephæstus, i. 127. Hera, i. 63.
Heraclea, in Thessaly, iv. 254. Heraclides of Pontus, a Platonic philosopher, his essay on po-
licies," i. 328; iv. 56, 93, 106, 142, 149, 151.
Herbalus (= Q. Hortensius), i. 285. Hercules, story of, in Xenophon, i. 228; statue of, ii. 141. Herennius, C. (Tr. Pl. B.C. 60), i. 51, 53; iii. 208. Herennius, Sextus, i. 51. Herennius Gallus, iv. 295. Hermæ, i. 6, 7, 12, 16. Hermathena, i. 12, 16. Hermeracles, i. 7.
Hermes, i. 12; 'Epμaiov, "god- send," iii. 291. Hermias, a slave of Cicero's, i. 131, 385-386. Hermippus, i. 127.
Hermogenes, a debtor of Cicero's, iii. 218, 226. Hermogenes Clodius, iii. 304. Hermon, ii. 126.
Herodes, of Athens, i. 67; iv. 32,
Herodes, a freedman of Atticus, ii. 145; iv. 42. Herodotus, i. 230.
Herus, steward of Q. Cicero, i. 291.
Hesiod, ii. 261; iii. 181, 284. Hetereius, iii. 332.
Hieras, agent of Deiotarus, iv.
Hilarus, Cicero's library slave, i. 27; iii. 238, 351. Hilarus, a freedman, iv. 103. Hillus, lisping pronunciation of Hirrus, ii. 80. Hipparchus, i. 91.
Hippias, son of Pisistratus, ii. 334. Hippius, Q., iii. 362. Hippocrates, iv. 160. Hippodamus, i. 294, 298.
Hipponax, iii. 330. Hirrus. See Lucilius.
Hirtia lex, iv. 190. Hirtius, Aul. (Cos. B.C. 43):
Vol. II. Cæsar's intimate friend does not call on Pompey (B.C. 50), 223; visited by young Quintus Cicero, 363, 366.
Vol. III. Writes to Cicero about Quintus (B. C. 47), 34; studies rhetoric with Cicero, 93; entertained by Cicero at dinner, 95, 98; shews regard for Cicero, 127, 227, 250; at Narbo, 240; writes an anti-Cato, 249, 254- 255; defends Cicero against young Quintus (B. C. 45), 320.
Vol. IV. Calls on Decimus Brutus after Cæsar's assassina- tion, 1-3; stays with Cicero, 20, 49; entertains Cicero at dinner, 46; endeavours of Ci- cero to win him over to the boni, 49, 60-62; Octavian distrusts him, 72; in sympathy with Pansa, 83; his illness, 168; approaching Dec. Brutus, 172; at Claterna, 179; addressed in a letter by Antony, 189-191; at the battle of Forum Gallorum, 211-213; his death while attack- ing Antony's camp, 220-221, 225, 236, 241.
See also iv. 274, 288, 298. Homer, his way of speaking out of order, i. 37; Alexander's re- mark about him, 230; his doc- trine of divine retribution, 331. Quotations from Homer, i. 15, 36, 39, 69, 90, 98, 101, 107, 126, 233, 234, 286, 329, 331, 336, 337; ii. 144, 180, 203, 206, 225, 242, 319, 321-322,325, 328, 331, 349, 350, 393; iii. 228-229; iv. 23, 26, 102, 111, 151, 236. Horatius, iv. 303.
Hordeonius, T., iii. 328. Horse, The Trojan, a tragedy of Livius Andronicus, i. 259, 332. Hortalus (= Q. Hortensius), i. 125. Hortensius (unknown), iii. 271; iv. 105.
Hortensius, Q., the famous orator (Cos. B.C. 69), i. 30, 35, 37-38, 68, 148, 151-152, 204-206, 217, 232, 236, 338; ii. 6; hissed in theatre, 22, 34, 37, 47, 139; his
death, 182, 190, 386; iii. 268- 269, 276, 288-289, 291. Hortensius, Q., son of the orator,
ii. 171, 221, 363, 401-403. Hostilius Tubulus, L., iii. 271- 272.
Hydrus or Hydruntum, ii. 212; iv. 81, 101. Hymettus, in Attica, i. 352. Hypæpa, in Lydia, i. 132. Hypsæus. See Plantius.
Ialysus, hero of Rhodes, i. 117. Iamblichus, an Arab chief, ii. 66. Iconium, capital of Lycaonia, ii. 39, 51, 55, 70, 86, 101. Ides of March, the, iv. 5, 8, 20, 26, 34.
Iguvium (Gubbio), in Umbria, ii. 250.
Iliad of miseries, an, ii. 294. Ilium, i. 145.
Illyricum, ii. 324, 372; iii. 36. Intemelii, ii. 229. Interamna, i. 63, 285. Ionia, i. 79.
Isara (R. Isère), iv. 238-239, 258. 259.
Isauria, ii. 128; the Isaurians, ii. 61.
Islands of the Blest, the, ii. 84. Isocrates, i. 61, 323. Isodorus, iii. 10.
Issus, ii. 81, 87, 181. Italy, unanimity of, i. 133, 187; iv. 174; abandoned by Pompey and the consuls, ii. 288, 297, 321, 335; Pompey will not leave a tile on any roof in Italy, ii. 326.
Jerusalemitish, i. 96. Iuba, iii. 79.
Julian laws, the, i. 110; ii. 25- 45; iii. 180, 338; iv. 70. Iulius, C. (contemporary of Ma- rius?), ii. 121; a brother of Catulus, iii. 291. Iulius, L., i. 241.
Iulius Cæsar, C. (Cos. B.C. 59, 48, 47, 46, 45, 44; Dict. B.C. 49, 47, 45-44):
Vol. I. Thinks of making terms with Lucceius as to the consulship, 48; his improved position after his Spanish gov- ernment, 64, 66; his agrarian law, 69, 93; Clodius at enmity with him, 99; Pompey's support of his laws, 106; offers Cicero a legatio, 110, 113; in the theatre, 112; his contests with Bibulus, 117; his connexion with Vettius, 121, 123; commends Flavius to Q. Cicero, 131; Cicero hopes for his support in his recall, 161, 174; Lupus at- tacks his agrarian measure, 199; proposed bills to be brought in against (B. C. 56), 221; visited by App. Claudius, 222, 277; grants for pay and ten legates to, 240; written to by Balbus about Cicero (B. C. 54), 267; letter of Cicero to, 268-270; M. and Q. Cicero's friendship with, 270, 272-277, 279, 282, 283, 288- 289, 294, 311-319, 322, 329, 330, 333; his attempt to recon- cile Cicero and Crassus, 321; his legatus Messius recalled, 286; his mourning for Iulia, 287, 335; his opinion of Cicero's poem, 290; Trebatius introduced to, 294, 340-345, 350-351; does not answer a letter from Clo- dius, 295; hears of Milo's re- ception in the theatre, 296; writes to Cicero about Iulia, 297; writes to P. Servilius, 298; his autumn visit to Luca, 304; his expedition to Britain (B.C. 54), 282, 306, 327, 329; likely to oppose Milo's candidature for the consulship (B.C. 53), 336; his good government of N. Italy, 338.
Vol. II. Cicero's interview with, at Ravenna (B.C. 52), 204; his conduct as consul, 219; Pompey's former sub- servience to, 362; an auctoritas of the senate in regard to
his tenure of his province, 6, 7; Cicero wants news of, 10; Cicero's debt to, 12, 26, 36; his colony at Comum, 30; reports of his failure in Gaul (B. C. 51), 16, 35; his relations with C. Curio, 41, 83-84, 115, 155, 176, 186, 227; the legions borrowed from Pompey by Cæ- sar, 42; his tenure of his pro- vince and army (B.C. 51-50), 49, 51, 76-78, 89, 126, 177, 182, 186, 196 (cp. iii. 121, 198, 202, 204, 225, 231-232, 234); proposal to send Cæsar against the Parthians, 82; his debt to Atticus and his building at the Nemus Dianæ, 145; his selection of Antony as his quæstor (B.C. 52), 191; his dis- putes with Pompey, 197, 203, 223, 230, 234, 281; Cicero wishes to preserve his goodwill, 205, 216, 218, 227, 376, 381; the publicani favour him, 228; abandoned by Labienus, 241, 245, 250, 255, 273, 289; in open hostility to senate, 243, 248; sends message by L. Cæsar, 249, 250, 350; his gladiators at Capua, 251, 278 (iv. 333); his offer of terms to the consuls, 252-255; their answer, 257-260; his invasion of Italy, 263, 267-269, 274- 275, 282-283, 295-296, 304- 305, 315, 342; writes to Cicero to urge him to promote peace, 264, 266, 290, 294; his prob- able severity, 265; Balbus's ac- count of his wish for peace, 292, 301-302, 308, 312-313, 325-326, 328; Cicero's relations with him, 298-299, 307, 319, 334, 336, 339; writes to Oppius and Balbus about Corfinium, 303; rush of the boni to meet Cæsar in Rome, 309, 311; Cicero wishes to avoid meeting him or coming to Rome, 310, 320, 322; Postumus's account
of his plans, 316-318; ap- proaching Rome, 327, 329, 337, 348-349, 351; Cicero medi- tates on his interview with Cæsar, 330-332, 341, 344; the interview, 353; Cæsar's forces, 343; writes to Oppius of his arrival at Brundisium, 345, 347; personal feeling against him influencing men to join Pompey, 355; possibility of negotiating with, 358; Cæsar's stay at Rome, 360, 374; ex- cuses Cicero's attendance, 361; assumes authority in the state, 363; young Quintus writes to him, 363; in Spain, 364, 379, 380; his liking for Cicero, 366, 378; Cælius declares that Cæsar will not continue his policy of lenity, 367-369; writes to Cicero begging him not to leave Italy, 370-371, 384; confirmed by letter from Antony, 388-389.
Vol. III. (B. C. 48.) Cælius took messages to Cæsar from Cicero, 4; his strongest posi- tion the military one, 5; Dola- bella urges Cicero to join neither Cæsar nor Pompey, 6-7; Cæsar writes to the senate from Epirus, 8; after Pharsalia is anxious to preserve Cicero, 16; his horti coveted by Lucullus, 17; his letter to Antony on the return of Pompeians to Rome, 18; he sends word to Cicero to return to Italy, 19-20; Quintus and his son make peace with him and attack Cicero, 22, 24, 50, 52-53; (B.C. 47) Cicero unwilling to ask him for restoration, 37-38; Cicero thinks of sending his son to him, 39, 41-42; Cicero sends a letter to him, 61; at Alexandria, 40-41, 43, 48; in Asia, 51, 55; meets Cicero at Taren- tum, 56; treats Ateius Capito with indulgence, 67-69; grants Cicero's claim on an estate, 84;
his return from Africa (B. C. 46), 86-87; Cæsar's partisans friendly with Cicero, 90, 127, 329; his collection of epigrams, 91; his admiration of Cicero's eloquence, 97; his recall of exiles, 99, 125, 127, 142, 191, 197; his kind- ness to Cicero, 109, 110, 124, 156, 178, 352-353, 368; Cicero asserts that he urged Pompey not to form a union with Cæsar, 120; his placable char- acter, 122-123; his opinion of Sulpicius Rufus, 134; his in- dulgence to Marcellus, 137-138; his promise as to Buthrotum, 143 (iv. 95-96, 114-117); young Marcus wishes to go with Cæsar to Spain, 144; his elections, 145; his agents Balbus and Op- pius, 167; his anger with A. Cæcina, 176-178; his campaign in Spain (B. C. 45), 180, 193, 195; his auctions of confiscated property, 185, 193, 343; the mistake of Cæsar's opponents, 188; his speech on the question of Catiline's accomplices, 213; Cicero's letters to Cæsar in Spain, 228-229, 232, 257-258, 260-262, 266, 310, 332, 334; his Anticato, 243, 249, 332; his bust in the temple of Quiri- nus, 254-255; the pseudo- Marius claims kinship with, 256 (cp. iv. 11); application of Ariarathes to, 265; his re- solve not to go on the Par- thian war, 278; his alleged connexion with the death of Marcellus, 282; his return from Spain, 283-284, 287-289, 292, 309, 321-322, 326-327, 329, 332; the pro Ligario sent to him, 290; writes to condole with Cicero, 296, 299; his plan for extending the city, 300; his bust among the gods at the games, 310; his games cele- brating his victories, 312, 336; wishes Cicero to attend the
senate, 318; receives a legacy, 319; said to favour the boni, 324; his agrarian commission in Etruria, 339-342; Vatinius asks to be commended to Cæsar, 345, 361; visits Cicero at Puteoli, 346-347; his return of Caninius as consul for a day, 358. Vol. IV. (B.C. 44). Cicero expects a libera legatio from Cæsar (iv. 26). News of his death, 2, 103; the view of Matius as to the death of Cæsar, 5; his opinion of M. Brutus and of Cicero, 5-7; the riots after his death, 9; his acta, 15, 18, 20-22, 27-28, 56, 113, 137, 330; his will, 17; attitude of Gaul and Germany on Cæsar's assassination, 8, 16; speeches delivered about him, 19; his public funeral, 29; Quintus the younger honours his memory at the Palilia, 40; his chair in the theatre, 54; Tre- bonius wishes to be recorded among the assassins of, 59 (cp. 189, 191); Cleopatra in Cæsar's horti, 74; Oppius after his death attached to Cicero, 89; Brutus and Cassius defend them- selves for the assassination of, 118-119; Cicero defends his conduct to, 123-125; Matius on Cæsar, 125-128; Antony accuses Cicero of instigating the assassi- nation of Cæsar, 135; Asinius Pollio's friendship for Cæsar, 183; Cæsar's favourites, 190; the survivors of his party, 211, 286. See also 244-247, 295, 320, 327.
Iulius Cæsar, L. (Cos. B.C. 64),
uncle of Antony, i. 13, 14, 16; iii. 213; iv. 34, 57, 137, 176, 180.
Iulius Cæsar, L. (son of pre-
ceding), i. 303; ii. 249, 250, 255, 257-258, 259, 261, 300, 350; iii. 76.
See also Octavius.
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