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Anser
(104 words)
[German version] [1] see Goose Richmond, John A. (Blackrock, VA) [German version] [2] Love poet, probably 1st cent. BC In a listing of love poets, Ovid (Tr. 2,435) names a certain A., as livelier than
(procacior) Helvius Cinna. Servius maintains that Virgil refers with contempt to a poet of this name (
... inter strepere anser olores), who had ridiculed him, had written panegyrics to the triumvir Antonius and who had been attacked by Cicero:
de Falerno Anseres depellantur (Cic. Phil. 13,11; Serv. ecl. 9,36; 7,21; there is probably no allusion: Prop. 2,34,83 f.). No fragments survive. Ric…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Elegiae in Maecenatem
(120 words)
[German version] In some manuscripts of the Appendix Vergiliana there are 89 distichs under the heading ‘Maecenas’ that were correctly divided into two parts by J. J. Scaliger (1572f.). The first part (v. 1-144) is a lamentation and defence of Maecenas that ends with an epitaph. The second is a speech of the dying Maecenas to Augustus. The use of myth is on occasion obscure, expression and metre are consistent with the Augustan period. The relationship to the Consolatio ad Liviam and to Seneca the Younger is disputed and, therefore, its dating is uncertain. Richmond, John A. (Blackro…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Consolatio ad Liviam (Epicedion Drusi)
(240 words)
[German version] In about 1450 a MS that has since been lost was brought to Rome, which is the source [1] for the work preserved in several MSS of the latter half of that century, as
P. ... Ovidii Nasonis ... ad Liviam de morte Drusi. This poem was included in editions of Ovid from 1471 onwards. It takes the form of an address to Livia Drusilla: the death of her son Nero Claudius Drusus in Germany in 9 BC is lamented (1-166) and the funeral rites described (167-264 or 298), before it reverts to largely traditional consolatory themes (265 or 299-474). The
Elegiae in Maecenatem may contain allusio…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Catalepton
(161 words)
[German version] Surviving manuscripts under this name ( Appendix Vergiliana) include 19 short poems: 3 Priapea and 16 mixed ones, obviously the result of confusion in earlier collections (
C. et Priapea et Epigrammata: Donat. vita Verg. 56;
Priape a C. Epigrammata: Servius, vita Verg. 15). The title (κατὰ λεπτόν;
katà leptón) is Alexandrian and means ‘small things’ or ‘smaller poems’. The collection is metrically very varied. The influence of Catullus and parallels with Virgil can be observed in these
Priapea -- which correspond with the
Priapea in the large…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Appendix Vergiliana
(458 words)
[German version] In the 1st cent. AD, Lucan, Statius and Martial attributed the
Culex to Virgil, and Quintilian quotes
Catalepton 2 under his name. Perhaps with recourse to Suetonius, Donatus claims (vita Vergiliana 56-65) that Virgil wrote
Catalepton et Priapea et Epigrammata et Diras, item Cirim et Culicem, cum esset annorum XVI ... etiam de qua ambigitur Aetnam, and Servius (vita Vergiliana 14 f.) names
septem sive octo libros hos: Cirin Aetnam Culicem Priapea Catalepton Epigrammata Copam Diras. A complicated manuscript tradition [1] hands down these works as Virgi…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Nux
(141 words)
[German version] More than 60 MSS of the 11th-16th cents. contain a short poem made up of 91 elegiac distichs, many of them naming Ovid as the author and
Nux or a similar word as the title. In this work, a walnut tree laments the poor treatment it is receiving. Some see this as an allegory of Ovid's exile [1]. However, his authorship is questionable [2], even if it can hardly be ruled out conclusively [3]. The little poem is an intelligent creation and contains a number of interesting allusions. Richmond, John A. (Blackrock, VA) Bibliography Edition: F.W. Lenz, 21958 S. Wartena, 1928 (with com…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Halieuticon
(121 words)
[German version] Plin. HN 32,11. 152 mentions a work with this title (‘Fishing’, probably a gen. pl., Ἁλιευτικῶν;
Halieutikôn), which he says Ovid began in exile. Pliny's citations appear to paraphrase the 130 or so
Versus Ovidi de piscibus et feris that have been handed down in two MSS of the 8th/9th and 10th cents. On stylistic, linguistic, and metric grounds, the brief fragment cannot be attributed to Ovid. However, it seems very unlikely that it is a post-Plinian forgery. Ultimately, it draws on the ancient zoological tradition. Richmond, John A. (Blackrock, VA) Bibliography Editio…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Albinovanus
(212 words)
Plebeian gentilicium. [German version] [1] P. (1st cent BC) P. (?), one of the accusers of P. Sestius 56 BC
de vi (Cic. Vatin. 3,41). Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) [German version] [2] P. Legate 82 BC P., legate (?) of C. Norbanus in 82 BC (App. B Civ. 1,91). Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) [German version] [3] P., pontifex minor (middle of 1st cent. BC) P., pontifex minor before 69 BC until after 57 (MRR 2,71; 135; 3,14) identical with [1] or [2] ? Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) [German version] [4] Celsus, private secretary of the young Tiberius Celsus, private secretary (
comes scribaque) of th…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Bassus
(181 words)
[German version] [1] Friend of Ovid Among his best friends, Ovid mentions Propertius, Ponticus, and
Bassus quoque clarus iambis (Ov. Tr. 4,10,45-47). This B. could therefore likely be the addressee of Prop. 1,4,1 and perhaps Horace's friend (Carm. 1,36,14). No fragments exist whatsoever. It cannot be determined whether the iambographer is also identical with Iulius B., the rhetor mentioned by the older Seneca, who
consectari ... solebat res sordidas (Contr. 10,1,13). Richmond, John A. (Blackrock, VA) Bibliography H. Bardon, 2, 52. [German version] [2] Military aid to praef…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Lupus
(214 words)
[German version] [1] Roman proper name Rare Roman proper name (‘Wolf’) [3. 115], quite common as a
cognomen, in the Republican period of L. Cornelius [I 51] Lentulus L. (
cos. in 16 BC) and more widespread among the Rutilii in the Imperial period. Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) Bibliography
1 Degrassi, FCIR, 257
2 Kajanto, Cognomina, 327
3 Schulze. [German version] [2] Poet Is named by Ovid (Pont. 4,16,26) as the author of a poem about the return of Menelaus [1] and Helene [1] from Troy. It may be that L. is identical with the orator P. Rutilius Lupus or …
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Brill’s New Pauly
Montanus
(306 words)
Roman
cognomen, probably originally referring to an origin ‘in the mountains’; in the Republican period it was found in the family of the Tarpeii, in the Imperial period also among the Iulii and Venuleii. Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) [German version] [1] One of the proceres of Domitian One of the
proceres (‘leading men’), whom Domitianus [1], according to Juvenal (4,107; 131f.), gathered at his farm in the Alban Hills. He was certainly a senator; as a number of senators of this period bore the cognomen M., identification is uncertain, but he is most likely to have been T. Iunius M.,
cos. suff…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Plotius
(1,222 words)
Probably originally the vulgar Latin form of the Roman proper name Plautius, an independent
nomen gentile at the latest from the 1st cent. BC onwards. Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) I. Republican Period [German version] [I 1] P. Gallus, L. Lat. rhetoric teacher, 1st cent. BC The first teacher of Latin rhetoric attested for Rome at the beginning of the 1st cent. BC who held his classes in Latin and on Roman matters and was very popular (cf. Cic. in Suet. Gram. 26). An edict of the censors of 92 BC, especially Cicero's teacher Licinius [I 10]…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Arruntius
(838 words)
Lat. gentile name (Etruscan
arntni ?) also as Arentius in inscriptions, derived from the Etruscan name Arruns ([1]; ThLL 2,647). The
gens appeared in Rome in the 1st cent. BC, attained the consulate under Augustus and was then probably accepted into the patriciate at that time (see Stat. Silv. 1.2.71 concerning the poet Arruntius [II 12] Stella). I. Republic [German version] [I 1] A. Father and son, died 43 BC In 43 BC, father and son were proscribed outlaws by the Triumvirate and killed (App. B Civ. 4,86). Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) [German version] [I 2] A., L. (middle of 1st cent. BC) In…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Lucilius
(2,458 words)
Name of a Roman plebeian family, derived from the first name Lucius [II], widespread from the 2nd cent. BC onwards. The satirical poet L. is the best-known of them. [I 6]. Elvers, Karl-Ludwig (Bochum) I. Republican era [German version] [I 1] A friend of M. Iunius [I 10] Brutus, who wanted to protect the latter in 42 BC at Philippi by pretending to be him (App. B Civ. 4,542-545). After that he followed M. Antonius [I 9] with similar loyalty until they both died in the year 30. Fündling, Jörg (Bonn) [German version] [I 2] L., Sex. People's tribune 87 BC, thrown from the Tarpeian rock beca…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Furius
(3,311 words)
Name of an ancient Roman patrician lineage (on inscriptions also
Fourios), derived from the praenomen
Fusus and also occurring occasionally in the original form
Fusius in the literary tradition; the family perhaps came from Tusculum (cf. the family grave of the Furii ILLRP 895-903). The numerous members of the gens from the early Republic in the 5th/4th cents. BC are scarcely tangible as historical persons, and their history is in part later annalistic invention. Most well known is the ‘Saviour of Rome’ after the catas…
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Brill’s New Pauly