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Gaius Memmius (praetor 58 BC)

Gaius Memmius (c. 99 – c. 49 BC, incorrectly called Gemellus, "The Twin") was a Roman politician, orator and poet. He is most famous as the dedicatee of Lucretius' De Rerum Natura, and for his appearances in the poetry of Catullus.

Gaius Memmius
Bornc. 99 BC
Diedc. 49 BC
SpouseFausta Cornelia
ChildrenGaius Memmius
Parent
  • Lucius Memmius (father)

Life and career edit

Memmius was born around 99 BC,[1] a member of the prominent plebeian gens Memmia. His father was Lucius Memmius,[2] possibly the same Lucius Memmius who served as triumvir monetalis in 109 BC.[3]

Memmius first appears in the historical record as a Tribune of the Plebs for 66 BC, in which role he prosecuted Marcus Lucullus for his actions as quaestor under the rule of Sulla. More significantly, as Pompey the Great assumed command of the Roman armies in the Third Mithridatic War in the same year, Memmius led the opposition to Marcus Lucullus' brother, Lucius Licinius Lucullus, whom Pompey had replaced. Memmius, an ally of Pompey's both politically and through family connections,[4] charged Lucullus with embezzlement and needlessly protracting the war, and led the campaign against granting Lucullus a triumph.[5] He gave at least four public speeches against Lucullus' triumph;[6] after three years, the necessary law (lex curiata) was passed, but Lucullus had been forced to remain outside the pomerium throughout this period to avoid forfeiting his right to a triumph by entering Rome, effectively removing him from politics for this period.

Memmius served as praetor in 58 BC, during which year he and his colleague Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus raised an inquiry into Caesar's conduct during his consulship in the previous year, though the Senate refused to act upon it.[7] In 57-56 BC, he was a propraetorial governor in Bithynia and Pontus. His staff included the young poets Catullus and Helvius Cinna; on his return to Rome, Catullus wrote verses complaining of how Memmius denied his staff the expected opportunities to enrich themselves at the locals' expense.[8] His son Gaius Memmius later issued coins celebrating the elder Memmius as imperator, a title perhaps granted to him during this governorship.[9]

While at first a strong supporter of Pompey, by 54 BC Cicero described Memmius as having gone over to Caesar, Pompey's great rival, and 'being supported by all of Caesar's influence' in his campaign for the consulship of that year, as well as being popular among Caesar's soldiers.[10] However, following his defeat to Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus, also supported by Caesar, and Appius Claudius Pulcher, an ally of Pompey's, Memmius revealed in the Senate an alleged compact between the victorious consuls, himself and his fellow Caesarian candidate Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus that, if elected, Domitius and Memmius would falsify a lex curiata and a decree for the allocation of senatorial provinces.[11] Cicero records that this lost Memmius Caesar's favour, and that Memmius went on to prosecute Domitius himself.[12]

In 52 BC, now without a powerful ally, he was prosecuted along with others under the lex Pompeia de ambitu for taking and offering bribes during his consular election campaign.[13][14] Since the same law offered amnesty to anybody who brought a successful prosecution under it, Memmius then accused Metellus Scipio, Pompey's own father-in-law, of the same offence. However, Pompey publicly interceded on Metellus Scipio's behalf, calling all of the jurors to himself and putting on mourning garb in the traditional solicitation of sympathy and support, which led Memmius to withdraw his charge and go into exile in Athens.

In the first half of 51 BC, while in Athens, Memmius bought an estate on which were the ruins of Epicurus' house, and secured authorisation from the Areopagus to tear them down and build on the site.[15] The Epicureans, through their leader Patro, appealed to Cicero to intercede with Memmius, and Cicero wrote to him asking him to return the ruined house to the Epicureans. Memmius left Athens for Mytilene the day before Cicero's arrival, but a later letter of Cicero's claimed success in at least persuading Memmius to abandon his plan of constructing the new house.[16][17]

According to Cicero, Memmius seduced the wife of Marcus Lucullus early in 60 BC, leading to the latter's divorce from her.[18] Shortly after his failed prosecution of Metellus in 52 BC, he attempted to seduce Pompey's wife, Cornelia, by a letter, delivered by Curtias Nicias,[19] which Cornelia revealed to her husband. Prior to this, along with Pompey, Memmius had been instrumental in gaining Roman citizenship for Nicias, but in the fallout from the affair Pompey banished Nicias from his house.[20]

Memmius died, possibly having been recalled to Rome and restored to the Senate in 50 BC, a proposal made by the tribune Gaius Scribonius Curio,[21][22] around 49 BC.[23] If he lived as long as 49 BC, he would have been permitted to return by Caesar's recall of the exiles from 52, but there is no record either way of whether this affected him.[24][25]

Literary works and patronage edit

According to Ovid's Tristia,[26] published around AD 10, approximately sixty years after Memmius' death,[27] Memmius was the author of erotic poems. None survive, but Ovid alleges that 'among his works he names disgraceful things, and disgrace itself'.[28] While Ovid passes over the specifics of what Memmius may have written, he names him alongside several other poets, such as Catullus, Calvus and Tibullus, whose poems claimed to discuss their own extra-marital relationships, which suggests that Memmius' work may have treated a similar subject-matter.

Ovid's mention of Memmius alongside known and respected poets of the recent past may suggest that his work was well regarded after his death. It was certainly known and referenced by Pliny the Younger at the end of the 1st century AD, who cites Memmius' name in defence of his own composition of poetry considered to be vulgar.[29] In the early 2nd century AD, Aulus Gellius wrote that 'rather many Greeks' considered Memmius' work to be durus ('hard', in the sense of 'unrefined'), in unfavourable contrast to that of Catullus and Cinna.[30]

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, Cicero praised him as possessing considerable oratorical abilities, but judged that his contempt for Latin letters and preference for Greek models impaired his efficiency as an advocate.[31][32]

Memmius's most direct impact on Roman literature stems from his position as the dedicatee of Lucretius' didactic poem De rerum natura, in which the poet claims the purpose of converting Memmius to Epicurean philosophy and physics. Memmius' relationship to Lucretius is unclear: he has variously been argued as a potential patron of the poet and his work,[33] a speculative addressee whom Lucretius considered 'desperately needed conversion from a life of political ambition to the one of philosophical detachment',[34] and as a famously-corrupt political figure whom Lucretius chose to make 'the butt of his mocking exhortations.'[35]

Similarly, Memmius' relationship to Epicureanism is debated. While the general view is that Memmius was a "reluctant student" of Lucretius' Epicurean ideas,[36] if broadly sympathetic to its basic ideals, it has also been argued that Memmius may have been a practising Epicurean, whose quarrel with the Athenian Epicureans stemmed from a personal dislike of that group and their interpretation of the philosophy.[37]

Family edit

Gaius Memmius was married to Fausta Cornelia, the daughter of Lucius Cornelius Sulla.[38] They had at least one son, Gaius Memmius, suffect consul in 34 BC.[39] In 55 BC, Memmius divorced Fausta on the grounds of adultery, which helped to repair his rift with Caesar.[40]

His sister Memmia was married to Gaius Scribonius Curio.[41] This made Memmius the uncle of the younger Gaius Scribonius Curio, who would be killed in 49 BC fighting under Julius Caesar.

The fact that Gaius Memmius did not share his father's praenomen (Lucius) would suggest that he had at least one elder brother, probably called Lucius Memmius, since it was usual for the eldest son of a family to inherit the father's name. However, this putative brother does not appear in the historical record.[42]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Sumner, Graham (1973) The Orators in Cicero's Brutus: Prosopography and Chronology: Toronto: 11-27.
  2. ^ Cicero, Brutus 247
  3. ^ Zmeskal, K. (2009) Adfinitas: die Verwandtschaften der senatorischen Führungsschicht der römischen Republik von 218-31 v. Chr. Passau.
  4. ^ Memmius was married to Fausta Cornelia, the daughter of Sulla; Pompey had, until her death in 82 BC, been married to Aemilia, Sulla's stepdaughter.
  5. ^ Plutarch, Lucullus 37
  6. ^ Servius, ad Aeneid I.161, quotes from a written version of the fourth.
  7. ^ Suetonius, Divus Julius 23
  8. ^ Catullus 10 and 28
  9. ^ Grueber, Coins of the Roman Republic in the British Museum 1.495-496
  10. ^ Ad Atticum 4.15.7
  11. ^ Cicero, Ad Atticum 4.17
  12. ^ Cicero, Ad Atticum 4.17-18
  13. ^ Appian, Bellum Civile 2.24
  14. ^ Kelly, G.P. (2006) A History of Exile in the Roman Republic. Cambridge, p194
  15. ^ Cicero, Ad Fam. 13.1.
  16. ^ Ad Atticum 5.11
  17. ^ Cicero, Ad Fam. xiii. 1.
  18. ^ Ad Atticum 1.18.3
  19. ^ Suetonius, Lives of the Grammarians, 14.1
  20. ^ Hogan 2006.
  21. ^ Cicero, Ad Atticum 6.1
  22. ^ Kelly, G.P. (2006) A History of Exile in the Roman Republic. Cambridge, p195
  23. ^ No involvement of Memmius' is recorded in the events of Caesar's civil war, which began in 49 BC; in the Brutus, probably composed in 46, Cicero refers to Memmius in the past tense.
  24. ^ Caesar, Civil War 3.1.3-5
  25. ^ Farrell 2020, p. 235.
  26. ^ Trist. ii. 433.
  27. ^ Kenney, Edward (1998). "Ovid". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
  28. ^ Tristia 2.433f: apud quos rebus adest nomen nominibusque pudor
  29. ^ Pliny, Letters 5.3
  30. ^ Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 19.7
  31. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Memmius, Gaius" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 105.
  32. ^ Cicero, Brutus 70.
  33. ^ Sedley, David (2018). "Lucretius". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
  34. ^ Farrell 2020, p. 240.
  35. ^ Hendry, Michael (2018). "Lucretius' Dedication: Why Memmius?" (PDF). Curcilio: 1757.
  36. ^ Katharina Volk (2002) The Poetics of Latin Didactic: Lucretius, Vergil, Ovid, Manilius, Oxford: p74
  37. ^ Morgan, Llewellyn; Taylor, Barnaby (2017). "'Memmius the Epicurean'". Classical Quarterly. 67 (2): 528–541.
  38. ^ Lucretius (c. 99—c. 55 BCE) Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  39. ^ Zmeskal 2009.
  40. ^ Farrell 2020, p. 231.
  41. ^ Chester Louis, Neudling (1955). A Prosopography to Catullus. University of Virginia: Oxford. p. 126.
  42. ^ Salway 1994, p. 127.

Bibliography edit

  • Farrell, Joseph (2020). "Chapter 11: Was Memmius a Good King?". In O'Rourke, Donncha (ed.). Approaches to Lucretius: Traditions and Innovations in Reading the De Rerum Natura. Cambridge University Press. pp. 219–240.
  • Hogan, Patrick (2006). "Curtias Nicias". Lexicon of Greek Grammarians of Antiquity. Brill. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
  • Salway, Brent (1994). "What's In a Name? A Survey of Roman Onomastic Practice from c. 700 B.C. to A.D. 700". Journal of Roman Studies. 84: 124–145. doi:10.2307/300873. JSTOR 300873 – via JSTOR.
  • Zmeskal, K. (2009). Adfinitas: die Verwandtschaften der senatorischen Führungsschicht der römischen Republik von 218-31 v. Chr. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

External links edit

  • C. Memmius (8) in the Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic.

gaius, memmius, praetor, gaius, memmius, incorrectly, called, gemellus, twin, roman, politician, orator, poet, most, famous, dedicatee, lucretius, rerum, natura, appearances, poetry, catullus, gaius, memmiusbornc, bcdiedc, bcspousefausta, corneliachildrengaius. Gaius Memmius c 99 c 49 BC incorrectly called Gemellus The Twin was a Roman politician orator and poet He is most famous as the dedicatee of Lucretius De Rerum Natura and for his appearances in the poetry of Catullus Gaius MemmiusBornc 99 BCDiedc 49 BCSpouseFausta CorneliaChildrenGaius MemmiusParentLucius Memmius father Contents 1 Life and career 2 Literary works and patronage 3 Family 4 Footnotes 5 Bibliography 6 External linksLife and career editSee also Memmia gens Memmius was born around 99 BC 1 a member of the prominent plebeian gens Memmia His father was Lucius Memmius 2 possibly the same Lucius Memmius who served as triumvir monetalis in 109 BC 3 Memmius first appears in the historical record as a Tribune of the Plebs for 66 BC in which role he prosecuted Marcus Lucullus for his actions as quaestor under the rule of Sulla More significantly as Pompey the Great assumed command of the Roman armies in the Third Mithridatic War in the same year Memmius led the opposition to Marcus Lucullus brother Lucius Licinius Lucullus whom Pompey had replaced Memmius an ally of Pompey s both politically and through family connections 4 charged Lucullus with embezzlement and needlessly protracting the war and led the campaign against granting Lucullus a triumph 5 He gave at least four public speeches against Lucullus triumph 6 after three years the necessary law lex curiata was passed but Lucullus had been forced to remain outside the pomerium throughout this period to avoid forfeiting his right to a triumph by entering Rome effectively removing him from politics for this period Memmius served as praetor in 58 BC during which year he and his colleague Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus raised an inquiry into Caesar s conduct during his consulship in the previous year though the Senate refused to act upon it 7 In 57 56 BC he was a propraetorial governor in Bithynia and Pontus His staff included the young poets Catullus and Helvius Cinna on his return to Rome Catullus wrote verses complaining of how Memmius denied his staff the expected opportunities to enrich themselves at the locals expense 8 His son Gaius Memmius later issued coins celebrating the elder Memmius as imperator a title perhaps granted to him during this governorship 9 While at first a strong supporter of Pompey by 54 BC Cicero described Memmius as having gone over to Caesar Pompey s great rival and being supported by all of Caesar s influence in his campaign for the consulship of that year as well as being popular among Caesar s soldiers 10 However following his defeat to Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus also supported by Caesar and Appius Claudius Pulcher an ally of Pompey s Memmius revealed in the Senate an alleged compact between the victorious consuls himself and his fellow Caesarian candidate Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus that if elected Domitius and Memmius would falsify a lex curiata and a decree for the allocation of senatorial provinces 11 Cicero records that this lost Memmius Caesar s favour and that Memmius went on to prosecute Domitius himself 12 In 52 BC now without a powerful ally he was prosecuted along with others under the lex Pompeia de ambitu for taking and offering bribes during his consular election campaign 13 14 Since the same law offered amnesty to anybody who brought a successful prosecution under it Memmius then accused Metellus Scipio Pompey s own father in law of the same offence However Pompey publicly interceded on Metellus Scipio s behalf calling all of the jurors to himself and putting on mourning garb in the traditional solicitation of sympathy and support which led Memmius to withdraw his charge and go into exile in Athens In the first half of 51 BC while in Athens Memmius bought an estate on which were the ruins of Epicurus house and secured authorisation from the Areopagus to tear them down and build on the site 15 The Epicureans through their leader Patro appealed to Cicero to intercede with Memmius and Cicero wrote to him asking him to return the ruined house to the Epicureans Memmius left Athens for Mytilene the day before Cicero s arrival but a later letter of Cicero s claimed success in at least persuading Memmius to abandon his plan of constructing the new house 16 17 According to Cicero Memmius seduced the wife of Marcus Lucullus early in 60 BC leading to the latter s divorce from her 18 Shortly after his failed prosecution of Metellus in 52 BC he attempted to seduce Pompey s wife Cornelia by a letter delivered by Curtias Nicias 19 which Cornelia revealed to her husband Prior to this along with Pompey Memmius had been instrumental in gaining Roman citizenship for Nicias but in the fallout from the affair Pompey banished Nicias from his house 20 Memmius died possibly having been recalled to Rome and restored to the Senate in 50 BC a proposal made by the tribune Gaius Scribonius Curio 21 22 around 49 BC 23 If he lived as long as 49 BC he would have been permitted to return by Caesar s recall of the exiles from 52 but there is no record either way of whether this affected him 24 25 Literary works and patronage editAccording to Ovid s Tristia 26 published around AD 10 approximately sixty years after Memmius death 27 Memmius was the author of erotic poems None survive but Ovid alleges that among his works he names disgraceful things and disgrace itself 28 While Ovid passes over the specifics of what Memmius may have written he names him alongside several other poets such as Catullus Calvus and Tibullus whose poems claimed to discuss their own extra marital relationships which suggests that Memmius work may have treated a similar subject matter Ovid s mention of Memmius alongside known and respected poets of the recent past may suggest that his work was well regarded after his death It was certainly known and referenced by Pliny the Younger at the end of the 1st century AD who cites Memmius name in defence of his own composition of poetry considered to be vulgar 29 In the early 2nd century AD Aulus Gellius wrote that rather many Greeks considered Memmius work to be durus hard in the sense of unrefined in unfavourable contrast to that of Catullus and Cinna 30 According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition Cicero praised him as possessing considerable oratorical abilities but judged that his contempt for Latin letters and preference for Greek models impaired his efficiency as an advocate 31 32 Memmius s most direct impact on Roman literature stems from his position as the dedicatee of Lucretius didactic poem De rerum natura in which the poet claims the purpose of converting Memmius to Epicurean philosophy and physics Memmius relationship to Lucretius is unclear he has variously been argued as a potential patron of the poet and his work 33 a speculative addressee whom Lucretius considered desperately needed conversion from a life of political ambition to the one of philosophical detachment 34 and as a famously corrupt political figure whom Lucretius chose to make the butt of his mocking exhortations 35 Similarly Memmius relationship to Epicureanism is debated While the general view is that Memmius was a reluctant student of Lucretius Epicurean ideas 36 if broadly sympathetic to its basic ideals it has also been argued that Memmius may have been a practising Epicurean whose quarrel with the Athenian Epicureans stemmed from a personal dislike of that group and their interpretation of the philosophy 37 Family editGaius Memmius was married to Fausta Cornelia the daughter of Lucius Cornelius Sulla 38 They had at least one son Gaius Memmius suffect consul in 34 BC 39 In 55 BC Memmius divorced Fausta on the grounds of adultery which helped to repair his rift with Caesar 40 His sister Memmia was married to Gaius Scribonius Curio 41 This made Memmius the uncle of the younger Gaius Scribonius Curio who would be killed in 49 BC fighting under Julius Caesar The fact that Gaius Memmius did not share his father s praenomen Lucius would suggest that he had at least one elder brother probably called Lucius Memmius since it was usual for the eldest son of a family to inherit the father s name However this putative brother does not appear in the historical record 42 Footnotes edit Sumner Graham 1973 The Orators in Cicero s Brutus Prosopography and Chronology Toronto 11 27 Cicero Brutus 247 Zmeskal K 2009 Adfinitas die Verwandtschaften der senatorischen Fuhrungsschicht der romischen Republik von 218 31 v Chr Passau Memmius was married to Fausta Cornelia the daughter of Sulla Pompey had until her death in 82 BC been married to Aemilia Sulla s stepdaughter Plutarch Lucullus 37 Servius ad Aeneid I 161 quotes from a written version of the fourth Suetonius Divus Julius 23 Catullus 10 and 28 Grueber Coins of the Roman Republic in the British Museum 1 495 496 Ad Atticum 4 15 7 Cicero Ad Atticum 4 17 Cicero Ad Atticum 4 17 18 Appian Bellum Civile 2 24 Kelly G P 2006 A History of Exile in the Roman Republic Cambridge p194 Cicero Ad Fam 13 1 Ad Atticum 5 11 Cicero Ad Fam xiii 1 Ad Atticum 1 18 3 Suetonius Lives of the Grammarians 14 1 Hogan 2006 Cicero Ad Atticum 6 1 Kelly G P 2006 A History of Exile in the Roman Republic Cambridge p195 No involvement of Memmius is recorded in the events of Caesar s civil war which began in 49 BC in the Brutus probably composed in 46 Cicero refers to Memmius in the past tense Caesar Civil War 3 1 3 5 Farrell 2020 p 235 Trist ii 433 Kenney Edward 1998 Ovid Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 19 November 2022 Tristia 2 433f apud quos rebus adest nomen nominibusque pudor Pliny Letters 5 3 Aulus Gellius Attic Nights 19 7 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Memmius Gaius Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 105 Cicero Brutus 70 Sedley David 2018 Lucretius Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 19 November 2022 Farrell 2020 p 240 Hendry Michael 2018 Lucretius Dedication Why Memmius PDF Curcilio 1757 Katharina Volk 2002 The Poetics of Latin Didactic Lucretius Vergil Ovid Manilius Oxford p74 Morgan Llewellyn Taylor Barnaby 2017 Memmius the Epicurean Classical Quarterly 67 2 528 541 Lucretius c 99 c 55 BCE Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Zmeskal 2009 Farrell 2020 p 231 Chester Louis Neudling 1955 A Prosopography to Catullus University of Virginia Oxford p 126 Salway 1994 p 127 Bibliography editFarrell Joseph 2020 Chapter 11 Was Memmius a Good King In O Rourke Donncha ed Approaches to Lucretius Traditions and Innovations in Reading the De Rerum Natura Cambridge University Press pp 219 240 Hogan Patrick 2006 Curtias Nicias Lexicon of Greek Grammarians of Antiquity Brill Retrieved 19 November 2022 Salway Brent 1994 What s In a Name A Survey of Roman Onomastic Practice from c 700 B C to A D 700 Journal of Roman Studies 84 124 145 doi 10 2307 300873 JSTOR 300873 via JSTOR Zmeskal K 2009 Adfinitas die Verwandtschaften der senatorischen Fuhrungsschicht der romischen Republik von 218 31 v Chr Cambridge Cambridge University Press External links editC Memmius 8 in the Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaius Memmius praetor 58 BC amp oldid 1215976339, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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