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Catilinarian conspiracy

The Catilinarian conspiracy, sometimes Second Catilinarian conspiracy, was an attempted coup d'état by Lucius Sergius Catilina (Catiline) to overthrow the Roman consuls of 63 BC – Marcus Tullius Cicero and Gaius Antonius Hybrida – and forcibly assume control of the state in their stead.

A 19th century depiction, by Cesare Maccari, of Cicero denouncing Catiline in the senate. Mary Beard notes that this idealised depiction is "a seductive fantasy of the occasion and the setting". There was no age gap: both men were in their forties.[1]

The conspiracy was formed after Catiline's defeat in the consular elections for 62, held in early autumn 63. He assembled a coalition of malcontents – aristocrats who had been denied political advancement by the voters, dispossessed farmers, and indebted veterans of Sulla – and planned to seize the consulship from Cicero and Antonius by force. In November 63, Cicero exposed the conspiracy, causing Catiline to flee from Rome and eventually to his army in Etruria. In December, Cicero uncovered nine more conspirators organising for Catiline in the city and, on advice of the senate, had them executed without trial. In early January 62 BC, Antonius defeated Catiline in battle, putting an end to the plot.

Modern views on the conspiracy vary. Uncovering the truth of the conspiracy is difficult. It is well accepted that the ancient sources were heavily biased against Catiline and demonised him in the aftermath of his defeat. The extent of the exaggeration is unclear and still debated. Most classicists agree that the conspiracy occurred as broadly described – rather than being a manipulative invention of Cicero's – but concede that its actual threat to the republic was exaggerated for Cicero's benefit and to heighten later dramatic narratives.

History edit

Catiline's conspiracy was the only major armed insurrection against Rome, between Sulla's civil war (83–81 BC) and Caesar's civil war (49–45 BC).[2] The main sources on it are both hostile: Sallust's monograph Bellum Catilinae and Cicero's Catilinarian orations.[3] Catiline, before the conspiracy, had been complicit in the Sullan regime. While his family had not reached the consulship since the fifth century BC,[4] he had strong connections to the aristocracy and was both a nobilis and a patrician.[5]

He had been prosecuted in 65 and 64 BC, but he was acquitted after several former consuls spoke in his defence. His influence even during his prosecutions was considerable. For example, Cicero had considered a joint candidacy with him in 65 BC. While some of the ancient sources claim Catiline was involved in a First Catilinarian conspiracy to overthrow the consuls of that year, modern scholars believe this first conspiracy is fictitious.[3][6]

Causes and formation edit

 
Bowls containing food distributed in electoral canvasses. The bowl to the right was commissioned by Lucius Cassius Longinus and distributed in support of Catiline's consular candidacy in 63 BC. The bowl on the left was distributed by Marcus Porcius Cato in a coeval campaign for the plebeian tribunate.[7]

Catiline had stood for the consulship three times by 63 BC and was rejected every time by the voters. Only after his defeat at the consular comitia in 63 – for consular terms starting in 62 BC – did Catiline start planning a coup to seize by force the consulship which had been denied to him.[8][9]

He enlisted into his circle a number of disreputable senators: Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura, a former consul ejected from the senate for immorality in 70 BC; Gaius Cornelius Cethegus, a Sertorian sympathiser with few prospects for promotion; Publius Autronius Paetus, a winning consular candidate in the elections of 66 BC who had his victory annulled and senate seat stripped after conviction on bribery charges; and two other senators expelled for immorality and corruption.[10] Other malcontents who had expected but had been denied advancement joined the conspiracy, such as Lucius Cassius Longinus, who had been praetor in 66 and defeated in consular elections in 63 BC, Lucius Calpurnius Bestia, and two Sullae.[11]

Non-senatorial men also filled the ranks. The classicist Erich Gruen describes these men as "mixed", adding, "single-minded purpose cannot readily be ascribed" to them.[12] Some were frustrated candidates for municipal elections, some may have been motivated by debts, others sought profit in the chaos, others were members of declining aristocratic families like Catiline.[13] What allowed them to raise a meaningful threat to the state was their mobilisation of men displaced by Sulla's civil war.[14] Joining those dispossessed in the Sullan proscriptions were landed Sullan veterans who expected monetary rewards and had fallen into debt after poor harvests.[15][16]

The ancient sources generally credit their involvement in the conspiracy with large debts that Catiline's putsch were supposedly to erase. But scholars reject this as a sole cause and consider the shame of unmet political ambitions indispensable.[17] None of the ancient sources, except Dio, mention any connection between Catiline and land reform. It is likely Dio is wrong, if Catiline had advocated for land reform, Cicero should have alluded to it.[18] Three of the conspirators had been repulsed at the consular elections. Another three had been ejected from the senate. Others found themselves unable to attain the same offices as their ancestors.[17]

The conspiracy was for Roman citizens only. It was not one for slaves. Although Cicero and others stoked fears of another servile rebellion – the last servile rebellion had been suppressed in 71 BC[19] – the evidence leans against their involvement.[20] Catiline planned not a social revolution, but a coup to place himself and his allies in charge of the republic.[21]

The defeat of the Rullan land reform bill early in 63 BC also must have stoked resentment: the bill would have confirmed Sullan settlers on their land, and allowed them to sell it to the state. It would have distributed new lands to poor dispossessed citizens. The failure of the relief bill at Rome contributed to the uprising's support among the poor.[22] This was coupled with a general financial and economic crisis stretching back at least to the First Mithridatic War, a quarter-century earlier.[23] With renewed demand for capital in the aftermath of stability secured by Pompey's victory in the Third Mithridatic War, moneylenders would have called in debts and increased interest rates, driving men into bankruptcy.[24]

Discovery edit

 
A 1st century AD depiction of Cicero, one of the consuls in 63 BC and one of the leaders of the response against Catiline, today in the Capitoline Museum.

The consul Cicero heard rumours of a plot from a woman named Fulvia in the autumn in 63 BC. The first concrete evidence was provided by Marcus Licinius Crassus, who handed over letters on 18 or 19 October which described plans to massacre prominent citizens.[25] Crassus' letters were corroborated by reports of armed men gathering in support of the conspiracy.[26][27] In response, the senate passed a decree declaring a tumultus (a state of emergency) and, after receipt of the reports of armed men gathering in Etruria, carried the senatus consultum ultimum instructing the consuls to do whatever it took to respond to the crisis.[28]

By 27 October, the senate had received reports that Gaius Manlius, a former centurion and leader of an army there, had taken up arms near Faesulae.[29] Some modern scholars have argued that Manlius' revolt was initially independent of Catiline's plans.[30] Berry 2020, p. 32, however, rejects this. In response, Cicero dispatched two nearby proconsuls and two praetors to respond to the possibility of armed insurrection with permission to levy troops and orders to maintain night watches.[31]

Catiline remained in the city. While named in the anonymous letters sent to Crassus, this was insufficient evidence for incrimination.[32] But after messages from Etruria connected him directly to the uprising, he was indicted under the lex Plautia de vi (public violence) in early November.[31] The conspirators met, probably on 6 November, and found two volunteers to make an attempt on Cicero's life. Cicero alleged that the conspirators plotted to engulf Rome in flames and destroy the city. Sallust reports this allegation allowed Cicero to turn the urban plebs against Catiline, but modern scholars do not believe that Catiline credibly wanted to destroy the city.[33]

After the attempts on Cicero's life failed on 7 November 63 BC, he assembled the senate and delivered his first oration against Catiline, publicly denouncing the conspiracy. Catiline attempted to speak in his defence – attacking Cicero's ancestry – but was shouted down and promptly left the city to join Manlius' men in Etruria.[34] Writing a letter, likely preserved in Sallust, he committed his wife to the protection of a friend and left the city, justifying his actions in terms of honours unjustly denied to him and denying any alleged indebtedness.[35]

Manoeuvres edit

When Catiline arrived in Manlius' camp, he assumed consular regalia.[36] The senate responded immediately by declaring both Catiline and Manlius hostes (public enemies).[31][37] Cassius Dio's history adds that Catiline was promptly convicted on the pending charges of vis (public violence).[38] The senate dispatched Cicero's co-consul, Gaius Antonius Hybrida, to lead troops against Catiline and put Cicero in charge of defending the city.[39]

Execution of the conspirators edit

At this time, Cicero then discovered a plot led by Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura, one of the sitting praetors, to bring in the Allobroges, a Gallic tribe, to support the Catilinarians but the Allobroges revealed Lentulus' plans. Cicero, using the Allobroges' envoys as double agents, sought their cooperation in identifying as many members of the conspiracy in the city as possible.[39] With evidence provided by their help, on 2 or 3 December, five men were arrested: Lentulus, Cethegus, Statilius, Gabinius, and Caeparius. After the Gallic envoys divulged all they knew with promises of immunity before the senate, the prisoners confessed their guilt; Lentulus was forced to resign his magistracy and the others were committed to house arrest.[40][41]

An informer on 4 December attempted to incriminate Crassus in the Catilinarian plot but the informer was not believed and imprisoned.[42] The same day, an attempt was also made to free the prisoners; the senate responded by scheduling a debate on their fate – along with the fates of four other conspirators who had escaped – for the following day.[43]

The debate on the fate of the prisoners occurred in the Temple of Concord.[44] Cicero, as consul, had been empowered by the previously passed senatus consultum ultimum to take whatever steps he thought necessary to safeguard the state, but such decrees, while lending moral support for consular action, did not grant any kind of formal immunity. Cicero's goal in requesting senatorial advice was probably to transfer responsibility for any executions to the senate as a whole.[45] When later charged with killing citizens without trial, he justified his actions in terms of following the senate's non-binding advice.[46]

Calling the senate in order of seniority,[a] the consuls-elect and ex-consuls all spoke in favour of the death penalty. But when Julius Caesar, who then was praetor-elect, was called, he proposed either life imprisonment or custody pending trial.[49] Caesar's lenient position won many senators over to his side, although it too was illegal – life sentences not being permitted without trial – and impractical.[50] Cicero purports he then interrupted proceedings to deliver a speech urging immediate action[b] but the tide did not turn towards execution until Cato the Younger spoke.[51]

Plutarch's summary indicates that Cato gave a passionate and forceful speech inveighing against Caesar personally and implying that Caesar was in league with the conspirators.[53] Sallust's version has Cato rail against moral decline in the state and has him criticising the senators for failing to be strict and harsh like their ancestors. With the appeal that swift execution would cause defections among the Catilinarians and exaggerated claims that Catiline was to be upon them imminently, Cato's speech carried the day.[54]

With the senate ratifying Cicero's proposal to execute the conspirators without trial, Cicero had the sentences carried out, proclaiming at their conclusion, vixerunt (lit.'they have lived'). He was then hailed by his fellow senators as pater patriae ("father of the fatherland").[55]

Final defeat edit

After the five prisoners were killed, support fell away from Catiline and his army.[56] Some in Rome, such as the then-tribune Metellus Nepos, proposed transferring command from Antonius to Pompey, calling upon Pompey to save the state.[57] Early the next year, near Pistoria, Catiline's remaining men, numbering at least three thousand,[58] were engaged in battle by Antonius's forces. The now-proconsul claimed illness and Marcus Petreius was in actual command[59] – and defeated, ending the crisis.[56] Catiline was killed in the battle. Antonius was hailed as imperator.[60]

Conclusion edit

 
A denarius minted by Lucius Scribonius Libo in 62 BC. The portrayal of Bonus Eventus on the obverse likely commemorates the repression of Catiline's conspiracy.[61]
 
A denarius minted by Lucius Aemilius Paullus in 62 BC commemorating Catiline's defeat. It depicts the goddess Concordia, on the left. Berry 2020, p. 54 argues that Paullus attempted to connect Catiline's defeat to peace.

While Cicero was initially hailed for his role in saving the state, he did not accrue all the credit, to his dismay. Cato was also hailed as having roused the senate to act against the conspirators.[62] There were some turns against Cicero's actions in the immediate aftermath of the summary executions. At the close of the consular year, Cicero's valedictory speech was vetoed by two tribunes of the plebs.[63] One of the tribunes, Quintus Caecilius Metellus Nepos, sought to bring Cicero up on charges for executing citizens without trial. The senate prevented him from doing so, by threatening to declare anyone who brought a prosecution a public enemy.[64]

In the coming years, Cicero's enemies reorganised. Publius Clodius Pulcher, tribune in 58 BC, enacted a law banishing anyone who had executed a citizen without trial. Cicero promptly fled the city for Greece. His exile was eventually lifted and he was recalled to Rome the next year at Pompey's behest.[65][66] Views on Cicero's success in defending the republic are mixed: while Cicero argued that he had saved the commonwealth and many scholars have accepted his defence of necessary exigency, Harriet Flower, a classicist, writes he did so "by circumventing due process and the civil rights of citizens" while also revealing "the consul's complete lack of confidence in the court system on which the New Republic of Sulla was supposed to be based".[67]

Historiography edit

Bias in ancient accounts edit

The main sources for us on the conspiracy are Sallust's Bellum Catilinae, a monograph on the conspiracy, and Cicero's Catilinarian orations. As a whole, the sources – in ancient times – almost always took anti-Catilinarian perspectives.[68] The negative view of Catiline in the sources found its way into Roman imperial culture.[69]

Cicero's narrative is obviously one-sided and it is well established that he exaggerated the danger of Catiline's threat in his orations for political advantage.[70] He also recounted his side of the story – also an act of self-promotion – in a memoir and a three-book poem De consulatu suo.[68] Cicero's narrative casts Catiline in terms of immorality while eliding the economic hardships of the time.[71] The narratives also extend beyond attacks on Catiline but also into exaggerating and justifying Cicero's role and actions during the conspiracy. The orations were published, c. 60 BC, to defend Cicero from political backlash for his executions without trial.[72]

Sallust, who was active politically before and after the conspiracy, was not present in Rome in 63 BC, likely abroad on military service.[73][74] His history lies somewhat parallel to Cicero's Catilinarians, relying on extra-Ciceronean evidence, especially contemporary oral sources,[75] but Cicero's orations and a now-lost memoir are core sources for Sallust's monograph.[74][76][77]

Sallust's overarching focus on moral decline as a cause of the republic's collapse has him paint an ahistorical portrait of Catiline that elides details in favour of his larger narrative. J. T. Ramsey, in a commentary on the monograph, writes:[78]

S. [Sallust] fails to allow for a gradual shift in Catiline's strategy and aims as his hopes of reaching the consulship faded, because S. prefers to present Catiline as a through-going villain, the product of the corrupt age, who was bent on the destruction of the state from the very beginning...[78]

And more problematically, Sallust's reliance on Cicero's one-sided narrative leads him to accept Cicero's invective uncritically, exacerbating the portrait's hostility.[79]

Overemphasis edit

Both ancient and modern accounts have focused on the ways that Cicero turned the affair to his political advantage. The Pseudo-Sallustian Invective against Cicero, for example, alleges Cicero cynically transformed civil strife for his own political benefit.[80] Many scholars also dismiss the conspiracy and its clean-up as being a minor affair that did not present a serious threat to the republic.[81] For example, Louis E. Lord in the introduction to the 1937 Loeb Classical Library translation of Cicero's Catilinarian orations calls it "one of the best known and least significant episodes in Roman history".[82]

Scholars have also criticised over-estimation of the importance of Catiline's insurrection,[83] but others also stress that the affairs was not meaningless and that it jolted the republic into action.[84] Erich Gruen, in Last generation of the Roman republic, writes:

It is evident, in retrospect, that the event did not shake the foundations of the state. The government was in no real danger of toppling; the conspiracy, in fact, strengthened awareness of a common interest in order and stability. It is not, however, to be dismissed as a minor and meaningless episode. Motives of the leader may have been personal and less than admirable. But the movement itself called to notice a number of authentic social ills which had previously lacked effective expression...

The shape of the social structure remained basically unaffected... but the grievances had been brought to public attention... prominent leaders recognised the utility of responding to needs exposed in the Catilinarian affair. The grain bill sponsored by Cato in 62 obviously belongs in this context... Two major bills in 59 and another in 55 went a long way toward relief.[85]

Underlying causes edit

Some older historiography has viewed the conspiracy in terms of a party-political conflict between the so-called optimates and populares. This view is criticised as uncritically accepting confusing and empty ancient political slogans while ignoring Catiline's Sullan bona fides.[86][87] While sources sometimes put popularis speeches into the mouths of Catiline and others, the dyadic nature of the Roman constitution forced justification of anti-senatorial policies by appeal to popular sovereignty. Neither popular or senatorial advocates questioned the legitimacy of the other.[88] Scholars also dispute whether Catiline had a following among the urban plebs at all and question whether later Ciceronean speeches connecting Clodius with Catiline are merely political invective.[89]

While scholars accept that Catiline may have received some support from Crassus and Caesar, at least during his campaigns for the consulships of 63 and 62 BC, their support did not extend to the conspiracy.[90] Some older scholarship conceived of Catiline as being a Crasso-Caesarian puppet; this position "has long been discredited".[91]

Critical perspectives edit

The most critical historians have alleged that the entire conspiracy was invented or incited by Cicero for his own advantage.[92] Reevaluations and defences of Catiline started with Edward Spencer Beesly's 1878 book Catiline, Clodius, and Tiberius, though this initial defence was poorly received and lacked evidence.[93] The most often-cited modern defences are Waters 1970 and Seager 1973.[94]

In 1970, Kenneth Waters argued that the descriptions of the conspiracy were motivated mostly by Cicero's need to present himself as having achieved something during his consulship.[95] After detailing Catiline's purported plan, Waters argues that the description given of it is prima facie unbelievable and that, if true, the conspirators would have been implausibly incompetent.[96] He argues that Catiline was forced to depart Rome under a cloud of false allegations to Etruria, where he made common cause with a pre-existing group of rebels to fight against Cicero's political dominance.[97] Waters dismisses the Gallic evidence as setups by the consul meant to provide the senate with evidence of a plot[98] and views the execution in Rome of the conspirators and Sallust's reports that no prisoners were taken at Pistoria as Cicero cutting loose ends.[99]

Robin Seager argued in 1973 that Catiline's involvement in a plot against the state postdates Cicero's First Catilinarian and that when he left Rome in November, he had not yet fully committed to any rebellion.[100] He also argues that Manlius, who Cicero cast as Catiline's military attaché, acted independently of Catiline for separate reasons.[101] Only in Etruria, on Catiline's way to Massilia, did he join with Manlius after concluding that rebellion would protect his dignitas more than exile.[102] Seager also rejects a joint plan between Catiline and Lentulus, arguing Lentulus probably joined late in the conspiracy to capitalise on the disruption,[103] and pictures Cicero as attempting to purge Italy from unreliable elements in advance of Pompey's return to prevent him from taking over the state like Sulla.[104]

Most scholars, however, reject Waters' and Seager's reconstructions and accept the broader historicity of Catiline's plot in 63 BC.[105]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In Cicero's day, speaking order started with the princeps senatus, then the consuls-elect, followed by the ex-consuls in an order set by the presiding consuls at the start of the year.[47] Each grade of magistrates then followed: ex-praetors, praetors, and so descending.[48]
  2. ^ The interrupting speech was the Fourth Catilinarian.[51] Berry 2020, p. 191 believes the speech as preserved to be fictitious: the speech is too long and contains anachronistic allusions to events.[52]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Beard 2015, p. 31–33.
  2. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 416, explaining, "the insurrections of Lepidus and Sertorious were... both outgrowths of and essentially continuous with [Sulla's civil war]. Spartacus' uprising was not an attack on Rome, but [an attempt] to [escape] Italy".
  3. ^ a b Gruen 1995, p. 417.
  4. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 417. The Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic reports a single Sergius reaching the consulship, Lucius Sergius Fidenas, who was twice consul in 437 and 429 BC. Three other Sergii had served as consular tribunes.
  5. ^ Berry 2020, p. 9, citing Sall. Cat., 5.1.
  6. ^ Seager, Robin (1964). "The First Catilinarian Conspiracy". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 13 (3): 338–347. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4434844. It is now widely held that the conspiracy is wholly fictitious.
  7. ^ Berry 2020, pp. 21–25.
  8. ^ Berry 2020, pp. 2, 5–6 (citing Cic. Cael. 12–14).
  9. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 418.
  10. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 417–18.
  11. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 419.
  12. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 422.
  13. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 422–23.
  14. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 424.
  15. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 424–25.
  16. ^ Berry 2020, p. 27.
  17. ^ a b Gruen 1995, p. 420.
  18. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 429 n. 110.
  19. ^ Salmon, ET; Lintott, Andrew (2012). "Spartacus". In Hornblower, Simon; et al. (eds.). The Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.6030. ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8. OCLC 959667246.
  20. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 428–49, explaining: Cicero would have mentioned actual involvement of slaves rather than simply alleging that Catiline planned to recruit them; Cicero disclaimed any involvement of slaves after the rebellion was crushed; Catiline himself rejected use of slaves.
  21. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 429.
  22. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 425.
  23. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 426.
  24. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 427.
  25. ^ Berry 2020, p. 31.
  26. ^ Beard 2015, p. 30.
  27. ^ Golden 2013, p. 127.
  28. ^ Berry 2020, p. 32; Golden 2013, p. 128.
  29. ^ Golden 2013, p. 128.
  30. ^ Seager 1973, pp. 241–42.
  31. ^ a b c Golden 2013, p. 129.
  32. ^ Berry 2020, p. 33.
  33. ^ Berry 2020, p. 34.
  34. ^ Beard 2015, p. 30; Golden 2013, p. 129.
  35. ^ Berry 2020, pp. 38–40, citing, Sall. Cat., 35.
  36. ^ Berry 2020, p. 42.
  37. ^ Sall. Cat., 36.1.
  38. ^ Golden 2013, pp. 129–30.
  39. ^ a b Golden 2013, p. 130.
  40. ^ Golden 2013, p. 131; Tempest 2011, pp. 96–97.
  41. ^ Berry 2020, pp. 44–46. However, see Berry 2020, pp. 72–73 discussing the possibility that the claim that Lentulus resigned was later inserted by Cicero to defend himself against charges of sacrilege in killing a sitting praetor. See generally Barlow, Jonathan (1994). "Cicero's Sacrilege in 63 BC". In Deroux, C (ed.). Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History. Vol. 7. Brussels. pp. 180–89.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  42. ^ Berry 2020, p. 47.
  43. ^ Berry 2020, p. 48; Golden 2013, p. 131.
  44. ^ Beard 2015, p. 35.
  45. ^ Drogula 2019, p. 68.
  46. ^ Berry 2020, p. 50.
  47. ^ Tempest 2011, p. 103.
  48. ^ Lintott, Andrew (1999). The constitution of the Roman Republic. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-1981-5068-8.
  49. ^ Beard 2015, p. 35 (life imprisonment); Drogula 2019, pp. 68–69 (custody pending trial).
  50. ^ Berry 2020, p. 49 ("utterly impractical"); Tempest 2011, p. 98 ("both impractical and illegal").
  51. ^ a b Drogula 2019, p. 70.
  52. ^ Berry 2020, p. 192.
  53. ^ Drogula 2019, p. 71, citing Plut. Cat. Min. 23.3.
  54. ^ Drogula 2019, pp. 72–73.
  55. ^ Drogula 2019, p. 70; Beard 2015, p. 35.
  56. ^ a b Golden 2013, p. 131.
  57. ^ Flower 2010, p. 146.
  58. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 430, also dismissing Appian's claim (App. BCiv. 2.7) of twenty thousand as "grossly inflated".
  59. ^ Sall. Cat., 59.4.
  60. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 175.
  61. ^ Crawford 1974, pp. 441–42; Berry 2020, pp. 52–53.
  62. ^ Drogula 2019, p. 84.
  63. ^ Beard 2015, pp. 35–36.
  64. ^ Golden 2013, p. 132.
  65. ^ Tempest, Kathryn (28 January 2022). "Tullius Cicero, Marcus, life". Oxford Classical Dictionary. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.6597. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  66. ^ Beard 2015, p. 36.
  67. ^ Flower 2010, p. 147, adding, "when Cicero [later] declared salus rei publicae suprema lex... this was no more than a hollow political slogan that portended the end of constitutional government".
  68. ^ a b Ramsey 2007, p. 8.
  69. ^ Beard 2015, pp. 42–43, describing Catiline as a "byword for villainy" in Roman literature and "as a nickname for unpopular emperors".
  70. ^ Beard 2015, pp. 47–48.
  71. ^ Beard 2015, p. 45.
  72. ^ Berry 2020, p. xxi.
  73. ^ Earl, DC (1966). "The Early Career of Sallust". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 15 (3): 307–309. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4434936.
  74. ^ a b Mellor 2002, p. 37.
  75. ^ Berry 2020, p. 198.
  76. ^ Dyck, Andrew R (2008). Introduction. Catilinarians. By Cicero. Translated by Dyck, Andrew R. Cambridge University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0521832861. OCLC 123079329.
  77. ^ McGushin 1977, p. 8.
  78. ^ a b Ramsey 2007, pp. 16–17.
  79. ^ McGushin 1977, pp. 8–9.
  80. ^ Beard 2015, pp. 48, 540, citing Ps.-Sall. Cic. 2.
  81. ^ Golden 2013, p. 126.
  82. ^ Golden 2013, p. 126, citing Lord, Louis E. Introduction. In Cicero (1937).
  83. ^ Yavetz, Z (1963). "The failure of Catiline's conspiracy". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 12 (4): 485–499. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4434810. The importance of Catiline's conspiracy is over-estimated by some modern historians.
  84. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 431–432, positively cited by Golden 2013, p. 126.
  85. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 431–432, positively cited by Golden 2013, p. 126.
  86. ^ Yavetz, Z (1963). "The Failure of Catiline's Conspiracy". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 12 (4): 485–499. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4434810.
  87. ^ Waters 1970, p. 207.
  88. ^ Mouritsen, H (2017). Politics in the Roman republic. Cambridge University Press. p. 161. ISBN 978-1107651333.
  89. ^ Harrison, Ian (2008). "Catiline, Clodius, and popular politics at Rome during the 60s and 50s BCE". Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. 51: 95–118. doi:10.1111/j.2041-5370.2008.tb00277.x. ISSN 0076-0730. JSTOR 43646709.
  90. ^ Mellor 2002, pp. 36–37.
  91. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 429 n. 107, unfavourably citing Salmon, ET (1935). "Catiline, Crassus, and Caesar". The American Journal of Philology. 56 (4): 302–316. doi:10.2307/289968. JSTOR 289968.
  92. ^ Beard 2015, p. 48.
  93. ^ Berry 2020, p. 3.
  94. ^ Berry 2020, p. 4 n. 3, noting also, "Kaplan 1968 (Catiline as a precursor of Caesar); Fini 1996 (Catiline as the opponent of senatorial corruption); Galassi 2014 (too full of errors to make an effective case)".
  95. ^ Waters 1970, p. 196.
  96. ^ Waters 1970, p. 202.
  97. ^ Waters 1970, pp. 208, 213.
  98. ^ Waters 1970, p. 214.
  99. ^ Waters 1970, p. 215.
  100. ^ Seager 1973, pp. 247–248.
  101. ^ Seager 1973, p. 241.
  102. ^ Seager 1973, p. 248.
  103. ^ Seager 1973, p. 245.
  104. ^ Seager 1973, p. 246.
  105. ^ Cf Berry 2020, p. 3 n. 4; Beard 2015, p. 48, calling attention to Pistoria as indicative of a real plot but conceding possible exaggeration on Cicero's part; McGushin 1977, p. 9, "it is no solution to aver that the conspiracy was largely a figment of Cicero's imagination"; Phillips 1976.

Modern sources edit

  • Beard, Mary (2015). SPQR: a history of ancient Rome (1st ed.). New York: Liveright Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87140-423-7. OCLC 902661394.
  • Berry, DH (2020). Cicero's Catilinarians. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-751081-0. LCCN 2019048911. OCLC 1126348418.
  • Broughton, Thomas Robert Shannon (1952). The magistrates of the Roman republic. Vol. 2. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Crawford, Michael (1974). Roman Republican Coinage. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-07492-6. OCLC 450398085.
  • Drogula, Fred K (2019). Cato the Younger: life and death at the end of the Roman republic. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-086902-1. OCLC 1090168108.
  • Flower, Harriet (2010). Roman republics. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-14043-8. LCCN 2009004551.
  • Golden, Gregory K (2013). Crisis management during the Roman Republic. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-05590-2. OCLC 842919750.
  • Gruen, Erich (1995). The last generation of the Roman republic. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-02238-6.
  • McGushin, Patrick (1977). C. Sallustius Crispus, Bellum Catilinae: a commentary. Mnemosyne Supplements. Vol. 45. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-32762-7. OCLC 707605311.
  • Mellor, Ronald (2002) [1999]. The Roman historians. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-203-29442-4. OCLC 50553430.
  • Phillips, EJ (1976). "Catiline's Conspiracy". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 25 (4): 441–448. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4435521.
  • Ramsey, JT (2007). "Commentary". Sallust's Bellum Catilinae. By Sallust (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-4356-3337-7. OCLC 560589383.
  • Seager, Robin (1973). "Iusta Catilinae". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 22 (2): 240–248. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4435332.
  • Tempest, Kathryn (2011). Cicero: politics and persuasion in ancient Rome. Continuum Books. ISBN 978-1-84725-246-3. OCLC 712128599.
  • Waters, KH (1970). "Cicero, Sallust and Catiline". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 19 (2): 195–215. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4435130.

Ancient sources edit

  • Sallust (1921) [1st century BC]. "Bellum Catilinae". Sallust. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rolfe, John C. Cambridge: Harvard University Press – via LacusCurtius.
  • Cicero (1856). "Against Catiline". Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero. Vol. 2. Translated by Yonge, Charles Duke. London: Henry G. Bohn – via Perseus Digital Library.
  • Cicero (1937). In Catilinam 1-4. Pro Murena. Pro Sulla. Pro Flacco. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Lord, Louis E. Harvard University Press.

catilinarian, conspiracy, fictitious, conspiracy, first, sometimes, second, attempted, coup, état, lucius, sergius, catilina, catiline, overthrow, roman, consuls, marcus, tullius, cicero, gaius, antonius, hybrida, forcibly, assume, control, state, their, stead. For the fictitious conspiracy in 65 BC see First Catilinarian conspiracy The Catilinarian conspiracy sometimes Second Catilinarian conspiracy was an attempted coup d etat by Lucius Sergius Catilina Catiline to overthrow the Roman consuls of 63 BC Marcus Tullius Cicero and Gaius Antonius Hybrida and forcibly assume control of the state in their stead A 19th century depiction by Cesare Maccari of Cicero denouncing Catiline in the senate Mary Beard notes that this idealised depiction is a seductive fantasy of the occasion and the setting There was no age gap both men were in their forties 1 The conspiracy was formed after Catiline s defeat in the consular elections for 62 held in early autumn 63 He assembled a coalition of malcontents aristocrats who had been denied political advancement by the voters dispossessed farmers and indebted veterans of Sulla and planned to seize the consulship from Cicero and Antonius by force In November 63 Cicero exposed the conspiracy causing Catiline to flee from Rome and eventually to his army in Etruria In December Cicero uncovered nine more conspirators organising for Catiline in the city and on advice of the senate had them executed without trial In early January 62 BC Antonius defeated Catiline in battle putting an end to the plot Modern views on the conspiracy vary Uncovering the truth of the conspiracy is difficult It is well accepted that the ancient sources were heavily biased against Catiline and demonised him in the aftermath of his defeat The extent of the exaggeration is unclear and still debated Most classicists agree that the conspiracy occurred as broadly described rather than being a manipulative invention of Cicero s but concede that its actual threat to the republic was exaggerated for Cicero s benefit and to heighten later dramatic narratives Contents 1 History 1 1 Causes and formation 1 2 Discovery 1 3 Manoeuvres 1 3 1 Execution of the conspirators 1 3 2 Final defeat 1 4 Conclusion 2 Historiography 2 1 Bias in ancient accounts 2 2 Overemphasis 2 3 Underlying causes 2 4 Critical perspectives 3 Notes 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Modern sources 4 3 Ancient sourcesHistory editCatiline s conspiracy was the only major armed insurrection against Rome between Sulla s civil war 83 81 BC and Caesar s civil war 49 45 BC 2 The main sources on it are both hostile Sallust s monograph Bellum Catilinae and Cicero s Catilinarian orations 3 Catiline before the conspiracy had been complicit in the Sullan regime While his family had not reached the consulship since the fifth century BC 4 he had strong connections to the aristocracy and was both a nobilis and a patrician 5 He had been prosecuted in 65 and 64 BC but he was acquitted after several former consuls spoke in his defence His influence even during his prosecutions was considerable For example Cicero had considered a joint candidacy with him in 65 BC While some of the ancient sources claim Catiline was involved in a First Catilinarian conspiracy to overthrow the consuls of that year modern scholars believe this first conspiracy is fictitious 3 6 Causes and formation edit nbsp Bowls containing food distributed in electoral canvasses The bowl to the right was commissioned by Lucius Cassius Longinus and distributed in support of Catiline s consular candidacy in 63 BC The bowl on the left was distributed by Marcus Porcius Cato in a coeval campaign for the plebeian tribunate 7 Catiline had stood for the consulship three times by 63 BC and was rejected every time by the voters Only after his defeat at the consular comitia in 63 for consular terms starting in 62 BC did Catiline start planning a coup to seize by force the consulship which had been denied to him 8 9 He enlisted into his circle a number of disreputable senators Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura a former consul ejected from the senate for immorality in 70 BC Gaius Cornelius Cethegus a Sertorian sympathiser with few prospects for promotion Publius Autronius Paetus a winning consular candidate in the elections of 66 BC who had his victory annulled and senate seat stripped after conviction on bribery charges and two other senators expelled for immorality and corruption 10 Other malcontents who had expected but had been denied advancement joined the conspiracy such as Lucius Cassius Longinus who had been praetor in 66 and defeated in consular elections in 63 BC Lucius Calpurnius Bestia and two Sullae 11 Non senatorial men also filled the ranks The classicist Erich Gruen describes these men as mixed adding single minded purpose cannot readily be ascribed to them 12 Some were frustrated candidates for municipal elections some may have been motivated by debts others sought profit in the chaos others were members of declining aristocratic families like Catiline 13 What allowed them to raise a meaningful threat to the state was their mobilisation of men displaced by Sulla s civil war 14 Joining those dispossessed in the Sullan proscriptions were landed Sullan veterans who expected monetary rewards and had fallen into debt after poor harvests 15 16 The ancient sources generally credit their involvement in the conspiracy with large debts that Catiline s putsch were supposedly to erase But scholars reject this as a sole cause and consider the shame of unmet political ambitions indispensable 17 None of the ancient sources except Dio mention any connection between Catiline and land reform It is likely Dio is wrong if Catiline had advocated for land reform Cicero should have alluded to it 18 Three of the conspirators had been repulsed at the consular elections Another three had been ejected from the senate Others found themselves unable to attain the same offices as their ancestors 17 The conspiracy was for Roman citizens only It was not one for slaves Although Cicero and others stoked fears of another servile rebellion the last servile rebellion had been suppressed in 71 BC 19 the evidence leans against their involvement 20 Catiline planned not a social revolution but a coup to place himself and his allies in charge of the republic 21 The defeat of the Rullan land reform bill early in 63 BC also must have stoked resentment the bill would have confirmed Sullan settlers on their land and allowed them to sell it to the state It would have distributed new lands to poor dispossessed citizens The failure of the relief bill at Rome contributed to the uprising s support among the poor 22 This was coupled with a general financial and economic crisis stretching back at least to the First Mithridatic War a quarter century earlier 23 With renewed demand for capital in the aftermath of stability secured by Pompey s victory in the Third Mithridatic War moneylenders would have called in debts and increased interest rates driving men into bankruptcy 24 Discovery edit nbsp A 1st century AD depiction of Cicero one of the consuls in 63 BC and one of the leaders of the response against Catiline today in the Capitoline Museum The consul Cicero heard rumours of a plot from a woman named Fulvia in the autumn in 63 BC The first concrete evidence was provided by Marcus Licinius Crassus who handed over letters on 18 or 19 October which described plans to massacre prominent citizens 25 Crassus letters were corroborated by reports of armed men gathering in support of the conspiracy 26 27 In response the senate passed a decree declaring a tumultus a state of emergency and after receipt of the reports of armed men gathering in Etruria carried the senatus consultum ultimum instructing the consuls to do whatever it took to respond to the crisis 28 By 27 October the senate had received reports that Gaius Manlius a former centurion and leader of an army there had taken up arms near Faesulae 29 Some modern scholars have argued that Manlius revolt was initially independent of Catiline s plans 30 Berry 2020 p 32 however rejects this In response Cicero dispatched two nearby proconsuls and two praetors to respond to the possibility of armed insurrection with permission to levy troops and orders to maintain night watches 31 Catiline remained in the city While named in the anonymous letters sent to Crassus this was insufficient evidence for incrimination 32 But after messages from Etruria connected him directly to the uprising he was indicted under the lex Plautia de vi public violence in early November 31 The conspirators met probably on 6 November and found two volunteers to make an attempt on Cicero s life Cicero alleged that the conspirators plotted to engulf Rome in flames and destroy the city Sallust reports this allegation allowed Cicero to turn the urban plebs against Catiline but modern scholars do not believe that Catiline credibly wanted to destroy the city 33 After the attempts on Cicero s life failed on 7 November 63 BC he assembled the senate and delivered his first oration against Catiline publicly denouncing the conspiracy Catiline attempted to speak in his defence attacking Cicero s ancestry but was shouted down and promptly left the city to join Manlius men in Etruria 34 Writing a letter likely preserved in Sallust he committed his wife to the protection of a friend and left the city justifying his actions in terms of honours unjustly denied to him and denying any alleged indebtedness 35 Manoeuvres edit When Catiline arrived in Manlius camp he assumed consular regalia 36 The senate responded immediately by declaring both Catiline and Manlius hostes public enemies 31 37 Cassius Dio s history adds that Catiline was promptly convicted on the pending charges of vis public violence 38 The senate dispatched Cicero s co consul Gaius Antonius Hybrida to lead troops against Catiline and put Cicero in charge of defending the city 39 Execution of the conspirators edit At this time Cicero then discovered a plot led by Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura one of the sitting praetors to bring in the Allobroges a Gallic tribe to support the Catilinarians but the Allobroges revealed Lentulus plans Cicero using the Allobroges envoys as double agents sought their cooperation in identifying as many members of the conspiracy in the city as possible 39 With evidence provided by their help on 2 or 3 December five men were arrested Lentulus Cethegus Statilius Gabinius and Caeparius After the Gallic envoys divulged all they knew with promises of immunity before the senate the prisoners confessed their guilt Lentulus was forced to resign his magistracy and the others were committed to house arrest 40 41 An informer on 4 December attempted to incriminate Crassus in the Catilinarian plot but the informer was not believed and imprisoned 42 The same day an attempt was also made to free the prisoners the senate responded by scheduling a debate on their fate along with the fates of four other conspirators who had escaped for the following day 43 The debate on the fate of the prisoners occurred in the Temple of Concord 44 Cicero as consul had been empowered by the previously passed senatus consultum ultimum to take whatever steps he thought necessary to safeguard the state but such decrees while lending moral support for consular action did not grant any kind of formal immunity Cicero s goal in requesting senatorial advice was probably to transfer responsibility for any executions to the senate as a whole 45 When later charged with killing citizens without trial he justified his actions in terms of following the senate s non binding advice 46 Calling the senate in order of seniority a the consuls elect and ex consuls all spoke in favour of the death penalty But when Julius Caesar who then was praetor elect was called he proposed either life imprisonment or custody pending trial 49 Caesar s lenient position won many senators over to his side although it too was illegal life sentences not being permitted without trial and impractical 50 Cicero purports he then interrupted proceedings to deliver a speech urging immediate action b but the tide did not turn towards execution until Cato the Younger spoke 51 Plutarch s summary indicates that Cato gave a passionate and forceful speech inveighing against Caesar personally and implying that Caesar was in league with the conspirators 53 Sallust s version has Cato rail against moral decline in the state and has him criticising the senators for failing to be strict and harsh like their ancestors With the appeal that swift execution would cause defections among the Catilinarians and exaggerated claims that Catiline was to be upon them imminently Cato s speech carried the day 54 With the senate ratifying Cicero s proposal to execute the conspirators without trial Cicero had the sentences carried out proclaiming at their conclusion vixerunt lit they have lived He was then hailed by his fellow senators as pater patriae father of the fatherland 55 Final defeat edit After the five prisoners were killed support fell away from Catiline and his army 56 Some in Rome such as the then tribune Metellus Nepos proposed transferring command from Antonius to Pompey calling upon Pompey to save the state 57 Early the next year near Pistoria Catiline s remaining men numbering at least three thousand 58 were engaged in battle by Antonius s forces The now proconsul claimed illness and Marcus Petreius was in actual command 59 and defeated ending the crisis 56 Catiline was killed in the battle Antonius was hailed as imperator 60 Conclusion edit nbsp A denarius minted by Lucius Scribonius Libo in 62 BC The portrayal of Bonus Eventus on the obverse likely commemorates the repression of Catiline s conspiracy 61 nbsp A denarius minted by Lucius Aemilius Paullus in 62 BC commemorating Catiline s defeat It depicts the goddess Concordia on the left Berry 2020 p 54 argues that Paullus attempted to connect Catiline s defeat to peace While Cicero was initially hailed for his role in saving the state he did not accrue all the credit to his dismay Cato was also hailed as having roused the senate to act against the conspirators 62 There were some turns against Cicero s actions in the immediate aftermath of the summary executions At the close of the consular year Cicero s valedictory speech was vetoed by two tribunes of the plebs 63 One of the tribunes Quintus Caecilius Metellus Nepos sought to bring Cicero up on charges for executing citizens without trial The senate prevented him from doing so by threatening to declare anyone who brought a prosecution a public enemy 64 In the coming years Cicero s enemies reorganised Publius Clodius Pulcher tribune in 58 BC enacted a law banishing anyone who had executed a citizen without trial Cicero promptly fled the city for Greece His exile was eventually lifted and he was recalled to Rome the next year at Pompey s behest 65 66 Views on Cicero s success in defending the republic are mixed while Cicero argued that he had saved the commonwealth and many scholars have accepted his defence of necessary exigency Harriet Flower a classicist writes he did so by circumventing due process and the civil rights of citizens while also revealing the consul s complete lack of confidence in the court system on which the New Republic of Sulla was supposed to be based 67 Historiography editBias in ancient accounts edit The main sources for us on the conspiracy are Sallust s Bellum Catilinae a monograph on the conspiracy and Cicero s Catilinarian orations As a whole the sources in ancient times almost always took anti Catilinarian perspectives 68 The negative view of Catiline in the sources found its way into Roman imperial culture 69 Cicero s narrative is obviously one sided and it is well established that he exaggerated the danger of Catiline s threat in his orations for political advantage 70 He also recounted his side of the story also an act of self promotion in a memoir and a three book poem De consulatu suo 68 Cicero s narrative casts Catiline in terms of immorality while eliding the economic hardships of the time 71 The narratives also extend beyond attacks on Catiline but also into exaggerating and justifying Cicero s role and actions during the conspiracy The orations were published c 60 BC to defend Cicero from political backlash for his executions without trial 72 Sallust who was active politically before and after the conspiracy was not present in Rome in 63 BC likely abroad on military service 73 74 His history lies somewhat parallel to Cicero s Catilinarians relying on extra Ciceronean evidence especially contemporary oral sources 75 but Cicero s orations and a now lost memoir are core sources for Sallust s monograph 74 76 77 Sallust s overarching focus on moral decline as a cause of the republic s collapse has him paint an ahistorical portrait of Catiline that elides details in favour of his larger narrative J T Ramsey in a commentary on the monograph writes 78 S Sallust fails to allow for a gradual shift in Catiline s strategy and aims as his hopes of reaching the consulship faded because S prefers to present Catiline as a through going villain the product of the corrupt age who was bent on the destruction of the state from the very beginning 78 And more problematically Sallust s reliance on Cicero s one sided narrative leads him to accept Cicero s invective uncritically exacerbating the portrait s hostility 79 Overemphasis edit Both ancient and modern accounts have focused on the ways that Cicero turned the affair to his political advantage The Pseudo Sallustian Invective against Cicero for example alleges Cicero cynically transformed civil strife for his own political benefit 80 Many scholars also dismiss the conspiracy and its clean up as being a minor affair that did not present a serious threat to the republic 81 For example Louis E Lord in the introduction to the 1937 Loeb Classical Library translation of Cicero s Catilinarian orations calls it one of the best known and least significant episodes in Roman history 82 Scholars have also criticised over estimation of the importance of Catiline s insurrection 83 but others also stress that the affairs was not meaningless and that it jolted the republic into action 84 Erich Gruen in Last generation of the Roman republic writes It is evident in retrospect that the event did not shake the foundations of the state The government was in no real danger of toppling the conspiracy in fact strengthened awareness of a common interest in order and stability It is not however to be dismissed as a minor and meaningless episode Motives of the leader may have been personal and less than admirable But the movement itself called to notice a number of authentic social ills which had previously lacked effective expression The shape of the social structure remained basically unaffected but the grievances had been brought to public attention prominent leaders recognised the utility of responding to needs exposed in the Catilinarian affair The grain bill sponsored by Cato in 62 obviously belongs in this context Two major bills in 59 and another in 55 went a long way toward relief 85 Underlying causes edit Some older historiography has viewed the conspiracy in terms of a party political conflict between the so called optimates and populares This view is criticised as uncritically accepting confusing and empty ancient political slogans while ignoring Catiline s Sullan bona fides 86 87 While sources sometimes put popularis speeches into the mouths of Catiline and others the dyadic nature of the Roman constitution forced justification of anti senatorial policies by appeal to popular sovereignty Neither popular or senatorial advocates questioned the legitimacy of the other 88 Scholars also dispute whether Catiline had a following among the urban plebs at all and question whether later Ciceronean speeches connecting Clodius with Catiline are merely political invective 89 While scholars accept that Catiline may have received some support from Crassus and Caesar at least during his campaigns for the consulships of 63 and 62 BC their support did not extend to the conspiracy 90 Some older scholarship conceived of Catiline as being a Crasso Caesarian puppet this position has long been discredited 91 Critical perspectives edit The most critical historians have alleged that the entire conspiracy was invented or incited by Cicero for his own advantage 92 Reevaluations and defences of Catiline started with Edward Spencer Beesly s 1878 book Catiline Clodius and Tiberius though this initial defence was poorly received and lacked evidence 93 The most often cited modern defences are Waters 1970 and Seager 1973 94 In 1970 Kenneth Waters argued that the descriptions of the conspiracy were motivated mostly by Cicero s need to present himself as having achieved something during his consulship 95 After detailing Catiline s purported plan Waters argues that the description given of it is prima facie unbelievable and that if true the conspirators would have been implausibly incompetent 96 He argues that Catiline was forced to depart Rome under a cloud of false allegations to Etruria where he made common cause with a pre existing group of rebels to fight against Cicero s political dominance 97 Waters dismisses the Gallic evidence as setups by the consul meant to provide the senate with evidence of a plot 98 and views the execution in Rome of the conspirators and Sallust s reports that no prisoners were taken at Pistoria as Cicero cutting loose ends 99 Robin Seager argued in 1973 that Catiline s involvement in a plot against the state postdates Cicero s First Catilinarian and that when he left Rome in November he had not yet fully committed to any rebellion 100 He also argues that Manlius who Cicero cast as Catiline s military attache acted independently of Catiline for separate reasons 101 Only in Etruria on Catiline s way to Massilia did he join with Manlius after concluding that rebellion would protect his dignitas more than exile 102 Seager also rejects a joint plan between Catiline and Lentulus arguing Lentulus probably joined late in the conspiracy to capitalise on the disruption 103 and pictures Cicero as attempting to purge Italy from unreliable elements in advance of Pompey s return to prevent him from taking over the state like Sulla 104 Most scholars however reject Waters and Seager s reconstructions and accept the broader historicity of Catiline s plot in 63 BC 105 Notes edit In Cicero s day speaking order started with the princeps senatus then the consuls elect followed by the ex consuls in an order set by the presiding consuls at the start of the year 47 Each grade of magistrates then followed ex praetors praetors and so descending 48 The interrupting speech was the Fourth Catilinarian 51 Berry 2020 p 191 believes the speech as preserved to be fictitious the speech is too long and contains anachronistic allusions to events 52 References editCitations edit Beard 2015 p 31 33 Gruen 1995 p 416 explaining the insurrections of Lepidus and Sertorious were both outgrowths of and essentially continuous with Sulla s civil war Spartacus uprising was not an attack on Rome but an attempt to escape Italy a b Gruen 1995 p 417 Gruen 1995 p 417 The Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic reports a single Sergius reaching the consulship Lucius Sergius Fidenas who was twice consul in 437 and 429 BC Three other Sergii had served as consular tribunes Berry 2020 p 9 citing Sall Cat 5 1 Seager Robin 1964 The First Catilinarian Conspiracy Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 13 3 338 347 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4434844 It is now widely held that the conspiracy is wholly fictitious Berry 2020 pp 21 25 Berry 2020 pp 2 5 6 citing Cic Cael 12 14 Gruen 1995 p 418 Gruen 1995 pp 417 18 Gruen 1995 p 419 Gruen 1995 p 422 Gruen 1995 pp 422 23 Gruen 1995 p 424 Gruen 1995 pp 424 25 Berry 2020 p 27 a b Gruen 1995 p 420 Gruen 1995 p 429 n 110 Salmon ET Lintott Andrew 2012 Spartacus In Hornblower Simon et al eds The Oxford classical dictionary 4th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 6030 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 OCLC 959667246 Gruen 1995 pp 428 49 explaining Cicero would have mentioned actual involvement of slaves rather than simply alleging that Catiline planned to recruit them Cicero disclaimed any involvement of slaves after the rebellion was crushed Catiline himself rejected use of slaves Gruen 1995 p 429 Gruen 1995 p 425 Gruen 1995 p 426 Gruen 1995 p 427 Berry 2020 p 31 Beard 2015 p 30 Golden 2013 p 127 Berry 2020 p 32 Golden 2013 p 128 Golden 2013 p 128 Seager 1973 pp 241 42 a b c Golden 2013 p 129 Berry 2020 p 33 Berry 2020 p 34 Beard 2015 p 30 Golden 2013 p 129 Berry 2020 pp 38 40 citing Sall Cat 35 Berry 2020 p 42 Sall Cat 36 1 Golden 2013 pp 129 30 a b Golden 2013 p 130 Golden 2013 p 131 Tempest 2011 pp 96 97 Berry 2020 pp 44 46 However see Berry 2020 pp 72 73 discussing the possibility that the claim that Lentulus resigned was later inserted by Cicero to defend himself against charges of sacrilege in killing a sitting praetor See generally Barlow Jonathan 1994 Cicero s Sacrilege in 63 BC In Deroux C ed Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History Vol 7 Brussels pp 180 89 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Berry 2020 p 47 Berry 2020 p 48 Golden 2013 p 131 Beard 2015 p 35 Drogula 2019 p 68 Berry 2020 p 50 Tempest 2011 p 103 Lintott Andrew 1999 The constitution of the Roman Republic Oxford Clarendon Press p 78 ISBN 978 0 1981 5068 8 Beard 2015 p 35 life imprisonment Drogula 2019 pp 68 69 custody pending trial Berry 2020 p 49 utterly impractical Tempest 2011 p 98 both impractical and illegal a b Drogula 2019 p 70 Berry 2020 p 192 Drogula 2019 p 71 citing Plut Cat Min 23 3 Drogula 2019 pp 72 73 Drogula 2019 p 70 Beard 2015 p 35 a b Golden 2013 p 131 Flower 2010 p 146 Gruen 1995 p 430 also dismissing Appian s claim App BCiv 2 7 of twenty thousand as grossly inflated Sall Cat 59 4 Broughton 1952 p 175 Crawford 1974 pp 441 42 Berry 2020 pp 52 53 Drogula 2019 p 84 Beard 2015 pp 35 36 Golden 2013 p 132 Tempest Kathryn 28 January 2022 Tullius Cicero Marcus life Oxford Classical Dictionary Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 6597 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 27 May 2022 Beard 2015 p 36 Flower 2010 p 147 adding when Cicero later declared salus rei publicae suprema lex this was no more than a hollow political slogan that portended the end of constitutional government a b Ramsey 2007 p 8 Beard 2015 pp 42 43 describing Catiline as a byword for villainy in Roman literature and as a nickname for unpopular emperors Beard 2015 pp 47 48 Beard 2015 p 45 Berry 2020 p xxi Earl DC 1966 The Early Career of Sallust Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 15 3 307 309 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4434936 a b Mellor 2002 p 37 Berry 2020 p 198 Dyck Andrew R 2008 Introduction Catilinarians By Cicero Translated by Dyck Andrew R Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0521832861 OCLC 123079329 McGushin 1977 p 8 a b Ramsey 2007 pp 16 17 McGushin 1977 pp 8 9 Beard 2015 pp 48 540 citing Ps Sall Cic 2 Golden 2013 p 126 Golden 2013 p 126 citing Lord Louis E Introduction In Cicero 1937 Yavetz Z 1963 The failure of Catiline s conspiracy Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 12 4 485 499 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4434810 The importance of Catiline s conspiracy is over estimated by some modern historians Gruen 1995 pp 431 432 positively cited by Golden 2013 p 126 Gruen 1995 pp 431 432 positively cited by Golden 2013 p 126 Yavetz Z 1963 The Failure of Catiline s Conspiracy Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 12 4 485 499 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4434810 Waters 1970 p 207 Mouritsen H 2017 Politics in the Roman republic Cambridge University Press p 161 ISBN 978 1107651333 Harrison Ian 2008 Catiline Clodius and popular politics at Rome during the 60s and 50s BCE Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 51 95 118 doi 10 1111 j 2041 5370 2008 tb00277 x ISSN 0076 0730 JSTOR 43646709 Mellor 2002 pp 36 37 Gruen 1995 p 429 n 107 unfavourably citing Salmon ET 1935 Catiline Crassus and Caesar The American Journal of Philology 56 4 302 316 doi 10 2307 289968 JSTOR 289968 Beard 2015 p 48 Berry 2020 p 3 Berry 2020 p 4 n 3 noting also Kaplan 1968 Catiline as a precursor of Caesar Fini 1996 Catiline as the opponent of senatorial corruption Galassi 2014 too full of errors to make an effective case Waters 1970 p 196 Waters 1970 p 202 Waters 1970 pp 208 213 Waters 1970 p 214 Waters 1970 p 215 Seager 1973 pp 247 248 Seager 1973 p 241 Seager 1973 p 248 Seager 1973 p 245 Seager 1973 p 246 Cf Berry 2020 p 3 n 4 Beard 2015 p 48 calling attention to Pistoria as indicative of a real plot but conceding possible exaggeration on Cicero s part McGushin 1977 p 9 it is no solution to aver that the conspiracy was largely a figment of Cicero s imagination Phillips 1976 Modern sources edit Beard Mary 2015 SPQR a history of ancient Rome 1st ed New York Liveright Publishing ISBN 978 0 87140 423 7 OCLC 902661394 Berry DH 2020 Cicero s Catilinarians Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 751081 0 LCCN 2019048911 OCLC 1126348418 Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1952 The magistrates of the Roman republic Vol 2 New York American Philological Association Crawford Michael 1974 Roman Republican Coinage Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 07492 6 OCLC 450398085 Drogula Fred K 2019 Cato the Younger life and death at the end of the Roman republic New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 086902 1 OCLC 1090168108 Flower Harriet 2010 Roman republics Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 14043 8 LCCN 2009004551 Golden Gregory K 2013 Crisis management during the Roman Republic Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 05590 2 OCLC 842919750 Gruen Erich 1995 The last generation of the Roman republic Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 02238 6 McGushin Patrick 1977 C Sallustius Crispus Bellum Catilinae a commentary Mnemosyne Supplements Vol 45 Brill ISBN 978 90 04 32762 7 OCLC 707605311 Mellor Ronald 2002 1999 The Roman historians London Routledge ISBN 0 203 29442 4 OCLC 50553430 Phillips EJ 1976 Catiline s Conspiracy Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 25 4 441 448 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4435521 Ramsey JT 2007 Commentary Sallust sBellum Catilinae By Sallust 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 4356 3337 7 OCLC 560589383 Seager Robin 1973 Iusta Catilinae Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 22 2 240 248 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4435332 Tempest Kathryn 2011 Cicero politics and persuasion in ancient Rome Continuum Books ISBN 978 1 84725 246 3 OCLC 712128599 Waters KH 1970 Cicero Sallust and Catiline Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 19 2 195 215 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4435130 Ancient sources edit Sallust 1921 1st century BC Bellum Catilinae Sallust Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rolfe John C Cambridge Harvard University Press via LacusCurtius Cicero 1856 Against Catiline Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero Vol 2 Translated by Yonge Charles Duke London Henry G Bohn via Perseus Digital Library Cicero 1937 In Catilinam 1 4 Pro Murena Pro Sulla Pro Flacco Loeb Classical Library Translated by Lord Louis E Harvard University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catilinarian conspiracy amp oldid 1221515756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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