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during Cæsar's absence in Spain
(B.6. 45), 173-174, 193-194;
writes to tell Cicero of the as-
sassination of Marcellus, 298.

Vol. IV. His position after
the assassination of Cæsar, 2,
28, 36, 38-39, 320; issues an
edict with Brutus, 44-45; wishes
to win over Hirtius, 60-63, 65;
offered the curatorship of corn
in Sicily, 66, 68-69, 71; collects
a fleet at Naples, 104, 106, 109;
with Brutus writes to Antony,
118-119; with Brutus publishes
another edict, 119-120; Cicero
writes to him about Antony,
135-138; is expected in Syria,
143, 174, 179; collects legions
in Palestine, 180-181; the
hopes of the boni depend on
him and Brutus, 202, 204; gets
possession of Syria, 204-205,
209, 211, 226, 232; attacks
Dolabella, 274-275, 300, 309,
315; Cicero wishes him to come
to Italy, 299, 315-316, 325.

See also iv. 78, 83, 97, 189,
332.
Cassius Longinus, L. (brother of
C. Cassius), iv. 6, 136; cp.
181.
Cassius Longinus, Q. (brother of
C. Cassius), ii. 89, 125, 191,
198; expelled from the senate-
house, 234, 259.
Castor, temple of, i. 216.
Castricius, M., i. 94; iii. 221,
224.

Castrinius, or Castronius, Pætus,
L., ii. 23; iii. 64.

Castrum Truentinum, in Picenum,
ii. 269.

Castulonian Mountains, in Spain,
iv. 182.

Catienus, T., i. 128.
Catiline. See Sergius.
Catilius, iii. 360.

Catina, in Sicily, iii. 349; iv.
151.

Catius Insuber, iii. 94, 194.
Catius Vestinus, C., iv. 293.

Cato.

See Porcius.
Catulus. See Lutatius.
Catulus, i.e., the first book of the
Academica, iii. 269.

Caunus, in Caria, i. 82; ii. 94.
Celer. See Cæcilius Metellus and
Pilius.

Celer, a freedman of Atticus, ii.
359.
Censorinus (? Marcius), on the staff

of Q. Cicero in Asia, i. 131.
Ceos, one of the Cyclades, ii. 34.
Cephalio, a letter-carrier of Atti-

cus, ii. 268, 356, 358, 398; iii.
29, 38.

Cephalus, father of Lysias, i. 281.
Ceramicus, a district of Athens, i.

9.

Cerceii, iii. 206.

Cerealia, last day of the festival of
Ceres (19th April), i. 99, 100.
Ceres, i. 245.
Cestius, ii. 144.

Charippus, i. 75; ii. 9; iv. 167,
302.
Chaonia, ii. 168.

Chersonese, the, ii. 142, 179; iv.
263.

Chios, ii. 329; iii. 206.
Chrestus, ii. 33.

Chrysippus, head of the Stoics, iii.
83.
Chrysippus, a freedman of Cicero's,
i. 309, 330; ii. 216, 224; iii.
2, 264.
Chrysippus Vettius, a freedman of
the architect Cyrus, i. 351; iv.
15.
Cibyra, in Phrygia, ii. 43, 50, 126,
143; iii. 157.
Cicereius, iv. 255.

Cicero. See Tullius.
Cilicia, i. 129, 237, 323, 327; ii.
55, 59, 61, 63, 66, 77, 79, 81,
86, 102-103, 127-128, 129, 151,
156-157, 165, 178; iii. 63, 149,
198; iv. 233, 279; the Cilicians,
ii. 205; the Eleutherocilicians,
ii. 87; Eleutherocilicia, ii. 104.
Cilix, a freedman of App. Clau-
dius, i. 364.

Cillo, i. 292.
Cilo, Magius, iii. 209.
Cimber. See Tillius.
Cincia lex, i. 60, 283.

Cincius, L., i. 5, 6, 13, 44, 58,
60, 211, 212, 293; ii. 149.
Cineas, ii. 120.
Cinna. See Cornelius.
Cipius, iii. 329.

Circensian games, ii. 195.
Circeii, iv. 68.

Cisalpine Gaul, i. 19, 20.
Cispius, iii. 218, 270.
Cispius Lævus, iv. 240, 258.
Cistophori, i. 92 ; iii. 2.
Claterna, iv. 179.

Claudia (Clodia), i. 22, 214; ii.

321, 329. See Вowrig and Iuno.
Claudius Marcellus, C., an augur,

father of the consul of B.C. 50,
ii. 56.

Claudius Marcellus, C. (Cos. B. C.

50), son of the preceding and
husband of Octavia, elected
consul, ii. 40, 56, 109; iii. 68;
prosecuted for ambitus, ii. 49:
ordered on entering his consul-
ship to bring forward the ques-
tion of the provinces, 76; con-
tests with Curio, 175; supports
Cicero's supplicatio, 187; at
Liternum the year after his
consulship, 393, 396; his tim-
idity, 399; intercedes for his
cousin, iii. 137; his influence
on Octavian, iv. 72, 156.
Claudius Marcellus, C., M.f.
(Cos. B.C. 49), brother of the
consul of B.C. 51, urged by
Pompey to join him at Brun-
disium, ii. 276; pleads for his
brother, iii. 116, 119. See also
ii. 78; iii. 215; iv. 53, 160.
Claudius Marcellus, M. (Cos. B.C.
51):

Vol. II. Applied to as con-
sul for the equipment of Cicero's
provinces, 9; postpones the
motion as to the allotment of
provinces, 16, 22; his treatment
of the magistrate of Comum, 30;

his attempt to bring on the sub-
ject of the provinces, 48-49;
Cicero's letter of congratulation
to, 56; his motion as to the
provinces, 76-77; Cælius calls
him "slow and ineffective," 83;
moves to remonstrate with tri-
bunes, 182; resisted by Pompey
when proposing to limit Cæsar's
government of Gaul, 281.

Vol. III. Cicero writes to
him when in exile in Mitylene,
113, 114, 117; his restitutio
allowed by Cæsar, 123, 136-
137; consents to return, 138;
Cicero expects him home, 184;
his assassination in the Piræus,
272-274, 281, 298.

See also ii. 128; iv. 277.
Claudius, Serv., cousin of L.
Papirius Pætus, i. 60; cp. i.
66; iii. 91.
Claudius Pulcher, App. (Cos. B. C.
54), Cicero's predecessor in
government of Cilicia, threatens
to go to his province with a lex
curiata, i. 324; letters to, ii. 1,
13, 19, 38, 68, 159, 171,
188, 192; suppresses a mutiny,
37; his misgovernment, 44, 129,
133-136, 169; his avoidance of
a meeting with Cicero, 46-47,
118; the complimentary lega-
tions in his honour, 69, 117;
impeached by Dolabella, 113-
115, 190; writes cordially to
Cicero, 122; builds a propy-
læum at Eleusis, 146; quarrels
with Cælius, 154, 186, 194-195;
his censorship, 193, 197; his insta-
bility, 273; a Pompeian, iii. 4;
succeeded in his augurship by
Vatinius, iii. 360 his son Ap-
pius, ii. 74. See also ii. 64.
Claudius Pulcher, C., brother of
P. Clodius and App. Claudius,
his son likely to accuse Quintus
Cicero, i. 165; his son recom-
mended to Dec. Brutus, iv.
316.

Claudius Nero, Tiberius, after-

wards married to Livia, i. 296,
303; wishes to marry Tullia, ii.
97, 190.
Cleopatra alluded to as "the
Queen," iv. 43, 50, 73-74, 76.
Clitarchus, ii. 81.

Cliternum, iii. 296.

Clodia. See Claudia.

Clodia, owner of certain horti, iii.
241, 246, 249, 250-253, 258,
264.
Clodia (mother of Dec. Brutus,

Cos. B.C. 138), iii. 215.
Clodian gens, i.e., the party of
P. Clodius, i. 270; Clodian
violences, i. 199.
Clodianus, Cn. Cornelius Lentulus
(Cos. B.C. 72), i. 54.
Clodii, the, iv. 23.

Clodius, of Patavium, iii. 251.
Clodius, C., brother of Publius,
i. 165.

Clodius, Sext., a Sicilian rhetor,
i. 284.

Clodius, Sext., a partisan of Pub-
lius Clodius, i. 221; ii. 380;
iv. 22, 24, 27-28, 39, 40.
Clodius Archagathus, M., iii.
350.
Clodius Hermogenes, iii. 304.
Clodius Philo, C., iii. 351.
Clodius, L., præfectus fabrum of
Appius Claudius, ii. 19, 20, 39,
53, 71; iii. 224; iv. 142, 262-
263.
Clodius Pulcher, P., his violation

of the mysteries of the Bona Dea
i. 27, 31, 33; his riotous pro-
ceedings to stop the bill for his
trial, 34, 35; his trial, 38-39,
55; the debate in the senate
afterwards, 41; the bribing of
the jury, 43; Clodius wishes to
be adopted into a plebeian gens,
51-52, 55; wishes to go on a
mission to Tigranes, 88, 90;
his threats against Cicero, III,
113-114, 117-119, 121, 124; (Tr.
Pl. B.C. 59-58) his opposition
to Cicero's recall. 159, 163, 177;
still attacks Cicero after his re-

call, 187; his building on the
site of Cicero's house, 188; op-
poses the restoration of Cicero's
house, 191, 194; attacked by
Milo, 196-197; prosecuted for
a breach of the peace, 199, 200;
his gang interrupt Pompey, 213-
215; kept in check by Milo,
238; Crassus recommends Cicero
to conciliate him, 248; Clodius
writes to Cæsar, 295; his quarrel
with Pompey, 308; Cicero's
feeling towards him, 365; ii.
169; iv. 24; his adoption with
Pompey acting as augur, ii. 281;
his statue (?), iii. 45; the scuffle
in which he was killed called
battle of Bovillæ, ii. 35; battle of
Leuctra, ii. 146; his son Publius
Clodius, iv. 23-24.

Cluatius, an architect, iii. 203,
238.

Cluvius, C., a land commissioner
in Gallia Cisalpina, iii. 340.
Cluvius, M., of Puteoli, who left
Cicero a legacy, ii. 93-94, 150;
iii. 328, 340; iv. 13, 18-19, 31,

III.

Clytemnestra, a play of Accius, i.
259.

Cocceius, iii. 200, 204, 206; iv.
160.
Coctius, iii. 83.

Colchis, ii. 329; the Colchians,

334.
Colophon, in Ionia, i. 127; iii.
150.
Commagene, district of Syria, ii.
51, 82, 102; the Commagenian
(king), i. 266-267; ii. 52.
Compitalia, festival of the Lares,
i. 69, 70; ii. 227.

Comum, ii. 30; New Comum, iii.
352.

Connus, a musician, iii. 295.
Conon, the Athenian general, ii.
179.

Considius Gallus, Q., a friend of
Verres, i. 124.

Considius Gallus, Q., an heir of
Furius, iv. 194.

Considius Nonianus, M. (Præt.

B.C. 52), ii. 253, 271.
Coponius, C. (Præt. B.C. 49), ii.
277; iii. 226.

Corcyra (Corfu), i. 61, 234; ii.
20, 39, 53, 71, 154, 211-212,
215; iii. 14, 68, 182, 304; iv.

III.

Corduba (Cordova), iii. 239; iv.
183, 294.

Corfidius, L., iii. 311.
Corfinium, a town of the Pæligni,

ii. 267-268, 273, 275, 283, 286,
296, 302-303, 305, 315, 345,
351.

Corinth, i. 67; iii. 95, 210, 275,
277.

Coriolanus, ii. 334.

Cornelia, wife of P. Sestius, i. 25.
Cornelian law (of Sulla) to regu-
late the provinces, i. 324; ii.
53, 161.

Cornelius, ii. 142.

Cornelius, Cn., a friend of Tre-
batius, i. 287, 332.
Cornelius, M., i. 29.

Cornelius, P. (Tr. Pl. B.C. 51),
ii. 77.

Cornelius, P., in Cisalpine Gaul,
iii. 64.

Cornelius, P., introduced to Orca,

i. 242.

Cornelius, Q., a jurisconsult, i.
276, 289.

Cornelius, Q. (a relation of Pætus),
i. 25, 26.

Cornelius Balbus, L. (Cos. B.C.
40), friend and agent of Cæsar,

i. 69; ii. 176, 222-223, 278,
292, 301, 308, 312, 320, 325,
345, 347, 392, 403; iii. 144,
167, 180, 199, 206, 212, 223,
251, 265, 275-276, 290, 292,
298, 312, 318, 320-321, 326-
328, 331-332, 346; iv. 8, 16,
20, 45-46, 57, 60, 62, 65, 82,
108, 151, 158.

Cornelius Balbus, L. (the younger),

ii. 291, 320; iii. 24, 29, 33, 41,
52, 104, 127, 240, 320, 331; iv.
294-297.

Cornelius Cinna, L., ii. 228, 282,

291, 334.
Cornelius Dolabella, P. (Cos. B.C.
44):

Vol. II. One of the quin-
decimviri, 40; Cicero wishes to
stand well with him, 92; he
impeaches Appius Claudius,
113, 155; divorced by his wife,
114; Cælius cautions Cicero
against him, 114; his marriage
with Tullia, 182, 186, 201, 378;
receives a legacy under will of
Livia, 229; joins Cæsar in B.C.
49, and is expected to protect
Cicero's family, 245, 248, 264;
writes from Brundisium, 242-
243; Cæsar commends him,
352, 366; Cicero hopes that he
will gain enough in the Civil
War to clear his debts, 387-
388.

Vol. III. His illness, 17; tells
Cicero to come to Italy, 19; visits
Cicero at Tusculum, 83; studies
rhetoric under Cicero, 93, 97;
leaving Cicero at Tusculum,
145; divorced from Tullia, 181;
in Spain, 184, 196; defends
Cicero from the abuse of Quin-
tus, 236, 240; his debt to Cicero
for repayment of Tullia's dowry,
265, 292 (cp. also iv. 39, 41, 108,
157-158); assists the recall of
Trebianus, 279; and of Torqua-
tus, 280, 315 (? iv. 54); stays
with Cicero, 326, 329; Cæsar
passes his villa, 347.

Vol. IV. Going to Syria, 16,
224; suppresses riots round the
pillar at Cæsar's place of crema-
tion, 30, 32-35, 40; Cicero
commends his contio, 43; names
Cicero his legatus, 70, 76, 78;
assists Atticus as to Buthrotum,
85; complimentary allusion to
him in the second Philippic, 149;
declared a hostis for putting
Trebonius to death, 189, 190,
210; his severities in Asia, 205,
232-233; writes to the senate,

215; the war against Dolabella,
217, 226-227, 255, 263, 272,
274-279, 305-306, 309, 315.

See also iii. 263, 281, 353;
iv. 38, 57, 71.
Cornelius Gallus, iv. 297.
Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus,
Cn. (Cos. B.C. 56), i. 191, 196,
199, 200, 220-221, 313; ii. 129,
332.

Cornelius Lentulus, Cn. (Cos. B.C.
146), iii. 276.

Cornelius Lentulus, L., son of the
flamen, i. 122, 307; iii. 144.
Cornelius Lentulus, P. (governor
of Cilicia, B.C. 54), iii. 367.
Cornelius Lentulus, P., son of
Tullia and Dolabella, iii. 222;
cp. 205.

Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus,
Cn., and his son, i. 54.
Cornelius Lentulus Crus, L. (Cos.
B.C. 49), i. 134; ii. 40, 198,
235, 243, 263-265, 276, 291,
295-296, 302, 311, 313, 317,
320, 327; iii. 78, 86, 95, 278;
iv. 53, 295.

Cornelius Lentulus Niger, L.
(flamen Martialis), i. 231-232;

iii. 144.
Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, P.
(Cos. B. C. 57), twice acquitted,
i. 41, 159, 173-174, 176, 182;
letters to him while in Cilicia,
205-210, 211; he wishes to
restore Ptolemy, 212-213, 217-
218, 235-240, 305, 310-324,
340; spared by Cæsar at Cor-
finium, 338; comes to Puteoli,
339, 345, 350; at Rhodes in
B.C. 47, iii. 31; not received
at Rhodes, iv. 273; his inglori-
ous death, iii. 95.

Cornelius Lentulus Spinther, P.
(son of preceding), i. 202, 213,
240; ii. 7, 118-119, 126; iii.
31, 258, 282; iv. 20, 272.
Cornelius Lentulus Vatia, Cn., i.
225.

Cornelius Nepos, iv. 102, 106.
Cornelius Scipio Africanus Æmili-

anus, P., i. 18, 78, 215, 280, 328;
ii. 138, 141, 290, 293, 382;
iii. 140; iv. 155.
Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus, L.,
proscribed by Sulla, ii. 349.
Cornelius Sulla Felix, L., the dic-
tator, i. 54, 78, 82, 130; ii.
172, 326, 334, 336, 347, 374,
382; iv. 267.
Cornelius Sulla Faustus, L. (son
of the dictator), ii. 277, 283,
340.
Cornelius Sulla, P. (nephew of
the dictator), iii. 51, 53, 185,
193.
Cornelius Sulla (nomenclator of
Quintus Cicero), i. 130.
Cornicinus. See Oppius.
Cornificia, daughter of Q. Corni-
ficius, iii. 263.

Cornificius, Q., a candidate for
the consulship with Cicero, i.
13, 31; ii. 200, 204, 263.
Cornificius, Q. (son of preceding),
ii. 116; iii. 131, 200, 204, 206,
336, 362, 367; in Africa, iv.
139, 168, 173, 185, 192, 225,
301.
Cornutus, C. (Tr. Pl. B.C. 61), i.
35.

Cornutus, M. (Prætor Urbanus
B.C. 43), iv. 8, 271.
Corycus, in Pamphylia, ii. 403;
iv. 305.

Cos, island in the Ægean, ii. 330.
Cosa, in Etruria, ii. 321, 330; iv.

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