INDEX OF NAMES
imperatorial, II. 136; his pre-eminent genius and purity of style, II. 255; discusses the use in singular and plural of caelum, triticum, quadrigae, arena, II. 257; Fronto puts Caesar's case for latter word, II. 259; the first emperor, II. 137
Caieta, on the sea coast of Latium, M. going to it, I. 193; Fronto at, I. 191
Calamis, a Greek statuary, his statues "softer" than those of Canachus (Cic. Brut. 70); Fronto, II. 49, implies, according to Hauler's reading lepturga (m* for Turena, which must surely be wrong as a contrast to Etrusca in the vis-a-vis), that Calamis did not do delicate work, but Dion Halicarn. de Isocr. 3 attributes to him XeirTorrjs and xapi? and says > he worked ev tois iKarroiTi. Ktu ai^pwirivois. Yet Calamis made colossal statues of gods.
Calliope, the Muse, instructress of Homer, II. 67
Callistus, a doubtful reading in a mutilated passage, II. 246
Calpurnius, a friend of Lucius, I. 305
Calpurnius, a messenger of Faustina, II. 317
Calpurnius Julianus, see Julianus
Calvisius, Publius, M.'s grandfather, I. 61
Calvus, C. Licinius Macer, orator and poet, born 82 B.C., his style at the bar quarrelsome (rixatur). H. 48
Camillus, type of military leader, II. 151 Campania, I. 175
Canachus, a Sicyonian statuary of the fifth century B.C., Fr. implies that he did not make statues of the gods, II. 49; but there are certainly such attributed to him.
Cannae, defeat of the Romans by the Gauls, 2 Aug. 216, II. 21, 29
Canusium, a town in Apulia, where Lucius was taken ill with apoplexy, II. 85
Capitolinus, M, Manlius, Baviour of the Capitol from the Gauls, II. 151
Capitolinus, Julius, in his life of Marcus seems to draw from Fr., I. 207n.; II. 133n.; [II. 289]; II. 208n.
Capreolus, a pleader in the case against Herodes, I. 67
Carrhae in Mesopotamia, defeat of Crassus at in 52 B.C., II. 21
Carthage, speech of thanks for restoration of, II. 281; Roman rings sent to, II. 29; Gracchus colonises, II. 141
Cassius, Avidius, the conqueror of the Parthians, took Dausara and Nicephorium (and Seleucia and Ctesiphon), II. 133; letter of F. to, II. 191; his discipline, vigour, and military instinct, II. 193; commissioned by Lucius to draw up memoranda of the war, II. 195; letters in the life of, by Vulc. Gallicanus, II. 292; revolt of, II. 292; in command of Syrian army (apocryphal letter), II. 307: plans revolt before death of Lucius (?), II. 309; his character as general, II. 311; his wife and children mentioned in apocryphal letter, II. 319
Catiline, Sallust's and Cicero's description of, II. 159 f.; Cassius in apocryphal letter likens himself to, II. 293
Cato, M. Porcius, called the Censor, on Galba's acquittal, I. 173; speech on The Property of Pulchra (Cod. m« Dulcha); speech impeaching a tribune, I. 179 *, his Agriculture, I. 181; his Origins, II. 201; attributed ploughs to Agrigentines, ibid.; speech De Sumptu Suo quoted, II. 45; Against Lepidus quoted, II. 3; unknown work on his campaigns quoted, II. 151; sayings (?) of his in a mutilated passage, I. 169, II. 81; intempesta nox praecipitat, I. 144; uses praeter-propter, II. 275; favourite use of atque, imitated by M., I. 152; wrote verbis muUiiugis, II. 48; harangued