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Gaius Porcius Cato (consul 114 BC)

Gaius Porcius Cato[i] (before 157 BC – after 109 BC in Tarraco) was a Roman politician and general, notably consul in 114 BC. He was the son of Marcus Porcius Cato Licinianus and grandson of Cato the Censor.

Denarius minted by Gaius Cato in 123 BC. On the obverse is Roma, while the reverse shows Victoria driving a biga.[1]

Initially a friend of the Gracchi brothers, Gaius betrayed Gaius Gracchus in the late 120s BC. He became consul in 114, but was crushed by the Scordisci in Thrace. His defeat led to a religious hysteria at Rome, and he was sentenced to pay a fine at his return. He was sued again in 109 before the Mamilian commission, which investigated possible bribes received by Roman politicians from the Numidian King Jugurtha. In fact the commission's members were former supporters of the Gracchi and made Gaius pay for his betrayal by forcing him into exile. Gaius left for Tarraco (modern Tarragona) in Spain, and became a citizen of that town.

Family background edit

Gaius Cato belonged to the plebeian gens Porcia, which became prominent at the beginning of the second century thanks to Cato the Censor, the grandfather of Gaius. Born before 157, his parents were Marcus Porcius Cato Licinianus and Aemilia Tertia, the youngest daughter of Aemilius Paullus.[2][3] As a result, Gaius was the nephew of Scipio Aemilianus, the eldest son of Aemilius Paullus and natural brother of his mother.[4] In addition, Gaius was the younger brother of Marcus Porcius Cato, consul in 118, who died during his office.[5]

Career edit

Early career edit

Gaius is first mentioned in the sources as a supporter of Tiberius Gracchus, the famous social reformer and tribune of the plebs in 133.[6][4] Gaius probably met him within the Scipionic Circle—the literate court of Scipio Aemilianus—as Tiberius was also Scipio's brother-in-law.[7] Gaius first recorded position was as triumvir monetalis in 123, the year of the first tribunate of Gaius Gracchus, which suggests he also supported Tiberius' younger brother.[8] It seems that he deserted the cause of the Gracchi soon after though, as he was later prosecuted by a Gracchan court.[9] Cicero describes him as a "mediocre orator".[10][11]

Nothing is known of his activities until his consulship in 114,[12] but Gaius was surely praetor by 117, as the Lex Villia required a three-year wait between holding magistracies.[13] His province was likely Sicily, as Cicero tells that Gaius' baggage was confiscated by the Mamertines, the inhabitants of Messina.[14] The reason is unknown, but Gaius was likely either on his way to or from his post in Syracuse.[15] Before an article published by Ernst Badian in 1993, the academic consensus was that Gaius lost his baggage c.110 on his way to serve as legate in Numidia during the Jugurthine War, but former consuls serving as legates are extremely rare, and it is more likely that Gaius was praetor in Sicily in 117.[16][17][18]

Consulship (114 BC) edit

Gaius was elected consul in 114, alongside the other plebeian Manius Acilius Balbus.[19] He is described as consul posterior while Balbus is consul prior, which means the Centuriate Assembly elected Balbus first.[20] Erich Gruen considers that Gaius was a supporter of the conservative Caecilii Metelli—the most powerful family at the time—even though Gaius Caecilius Metellus Caprarius was also candidate in the consular elections that year.[21] T. R. S. Broughton however suggests that Caprarius could have withdrawn his candidacy.[22]

Gaius was assigned Macedonia as his province, which was normally given to a praetor, but a war against the Scordisci—a Celtic or Illyrian tribe from east Serbia—had broken out and a consul was needed.[23][24] During the summer Gaius nevertheless suffered a crushing defeat against the Scordisci in northern Thrace, who then could enter Roman territory as far as Delphi and the Adriatic. It was the first major Roman defeat in a generation.[25]

The disaster triggered a "religious hysteria" at Rome, with a return to human sacrifice for the last time in Roman history.[26] Two couples (one Greek and one Celtic) were therefore buried alive under the Forum Boarium.[26] The defeat also led to the Trial of the Vestal Virgins, in which three vestals were accused of incestum. One vestal was sentenced to death in 114, but the acquittal of the other two was not accepted, and a tribune of the plebs forced their retrial in 113, which resulted in their death as well.[27][28][29]

Trials and exile (113–109 BC) edit

 
Location of Tarraco in Hispania Citerior.

As was customary with defeated commanders, Gaius was not prorogued in his province and returned to Rome in 113.[30] He was sued at his return for extortion under the provision of the Lex Acilia repetundarum. The sentence was particularly lenient, with a fine of only 8,000 sesterces.[31][32][33] Gaius probably benefited from the support of influential friends to escape harsher punishment,[34] but perhaps the plaintiffs were Macedonian provincials—which would mean that Gaius was only sued for some minor damages he caused in the province and not his defeat against the Scordisci, hence the mild verdict.[35]

Apparently, Gaius did not suffer from this conviction. He kept his seat in the Senate and remained politically active, as he was sued again in 109 by the Mamilian commission—named after the tribune of the plebs Gaius Mamilius Limetanus.[36] Officially, this special court was set up to investigate the bribes received by Roman politicians from Jugurtha, the King of Numidia, against whom Rome had been at war since 112.[37] However, the jurors were all equites and the targeted individuals were men associated with the demise of the Gracchi (the equites had been made jurors in the criminal courts by Gaius Gracchus).[38] The first man prosecuted was therefore Lucius Opimius, the consul who in 121 had ordered the murder of Gaius Gracchus and his supporters.[39] Then followed Lucius Calpurnius Bestia (consul in 111), Gaius Sulpicius Galba, Spurius Postumius Albinus (perhaps the consul of 110), and thus Gaius Porcius Cato—who all can be linked to the Gracchi, as enemies or turncoats.[40] Cicero makes it clear that they owed their condemnation to the Gracchan background of the jurors.[41][42] Gaius may have not even waited for the result of the trial and went into exile.[11]

Unlike most other exiled Romans, Gaius did not move to another city in Italy or the Greek East, but went instead to the less civilised Tarraco in Hispania Citerior, because the Porcii Catones had been the patrons of the city ever since Cato the Censor had served as consul and proconsul in Spain in 195–194.[43] The name Porcius is more frequently encountered on inscriptions in the area, an indication of the Catones' influence over the town.[44] Gaius' choice shows that he did not expect to be restored, because other exiles often remained closer to Italy in order to lobby for their return, such as Lucius Opimius who settled to Dyrrachium (now Durrës in Albania).[45] Gaius received the citizenship of Tarraco, and presumably died there.[46][11]

Gaius was possibly the grandfather of Gaius Porcius Cato, tribune of the plebs in 56 BC.[47]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ His name is hereafter shortened to Gaius, as this praenomen was particularly rare among the Porcii.

References edit

  1. ^ Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, pp. 294, 295.
  2. ^ Elimar Klebs, RE, vol. 1, cols. 590, 592, 593; Franz Miltner, vol. 43, cols. 167, 168. Friedrich Münzer may have written the RE article, cf. Badian, "The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage", pp. 203, 204.
  3. ^ Sumner, Orators in Brutus, p. 63.
  4. ^ a b Gruen, Roman Politics, p. 66.
  5. ^ Broughton, Magistrates, vol. I, p. 527.
  6. ^ Cicero, De Amictia, 39.
  7. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, p. 126.
  8. ^ Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, p. 75.
  9. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, p. 146.
  10. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 108.
  11. ^ a b c Miltner, RE, vol. 43, col. 105.
  12. ^ Badian, "The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage", p. 204.
  13. ^ Broughton, Magistrates, vol. I, p. 529.
  14. ^ Cicero, In Verrem 2, iv. 10.
  15. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, p. 477, suggests Gaius stole something from the Mamertines.
  16. ^ Broughton, Magistrates, vol. I, p. 544, as example of the former view.
  17. ^ Badian, "The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage", p. 210.
  18. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, pp. 477, 704.
  19. ^ Broughton, Magistrates, vol. I, p. 533.
  20. ^ Taylor & Broughton, "The Order of the Two Consuls' Names", p. 6.
  21. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, pp. 126–127.
  22. ^ Broughton, "Candidates defeated", p. 9. Caprarius was finally elected consul in 113.
  23. ^ Wilkes, The Illyrians, pp. 82, 83.
  24. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, p. 522.
  25. ^ Eckstein, "Human Sacrifice", p. 73.
  26. ^ a b Eckstein, "Human Sacrifice", pp. 71–73.
  27. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, pp. 127–131.
  28. ^ Eckstein, "Human Sacrifice", p. 71.
  29. ^ Champion, Peace of the Gods, p. 168.
  30. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, pp. 522, 892 (note 81). Gaius' successor in Macedonia was Metellus Caprarius.
  31. ^ Alexander, Trials, p. 23 (n°45). The mention of "exile" is likely an error, coming from a confusion with Gaius' second trial. [cf. correction by Kelly, Exile, p. 171.]
  32. ^ Rosenstein, Imperatores Victi, p. 142, says the fine was "ludicrously small".
  33. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, p. 522, writes "a minor fine".
  34. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, pp. 126, 127.
  35. ^ Rosenstein, Imperatores Victi, p. 142.
  36. ^ Sherwin-White, "The Extortion Procedure Again", pp. 44, 45 (note 11).
  37. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, pp. 142, 143.
  38. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, pp. 90, 91 (equites' control of the courts), 144 (real motivation of the trials).
  39. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, pp. 145–147.
  40. ^ Gruen, Roman Politics, p. 144. There is some doubt on the identity of Postumius though.
  41. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 128, "[They] were all condemned by their judges, who were of the Gracchan party."
  42. ^ Kelly, Exile, p. 170.
  43. ^ Badian, Foreign Clientelae, p. 318.
  44. ^ Knapp, "The Origins of Provincial Prosopography", p. 199.
  45. ^ Kelly, Exile, pp. 77, 78, 81, 82.
  46. ^ Cicero, Pro Balbo, 28.
  47. ^ Miltner, RE, vol. 43, col. 106.

Bibliography edit

Ancient sources edit

Modern sources edit

  • Michael C. Alexander, Trials in the Late Roman Republic, 149 BC to 50 BC, University of Toronto Press, 1990, ISBN 9780802057877.
  • Ernst Badian, Foreign Clientelae (264–70 B.C.), Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1958, ISBN 978-0198142041.
  • ——, "The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, 1993, Bd. 42, H. 2, pp. 203–210.
  • T. Corey Brennan, The Praetorship in the Roman Republic, Oxford University Press, 2000, ISBN 9780195114607.
  • T. Robert S. Broughton, The Magistrates of the Roman Republic, American Philological Association, 1951–1952.
  • ——, "Candidates Defeated in Roman Elections: Some Ancient Roman "Also-Rans"", Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, 1991, Vol. 81, No. 4, pp. i–vi+1–64.
  • Craige Brian Champion, The Peace of the Gods: Elite Religious Practices in the Middle Roman Republic, Princeton University Press, 2017, ISBN 978-0691174853.
  • Michael Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage, Cambridge University Press, 1974, ISBN 9780521074926.
  • A. M. Eckstein, "Human Sacrifice and Fear of Military Disaster in Republican Rome", in American Journal of Ancient History, 1982, n°7, pp. 69–95.
  • Erich S. Gruen, Roman Politics and the Criminal Courts, 149–78 B.C., Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1978, ISBN 0-674-28420-8.
  • Gordon P. Kelly, A History of Exile in the Roman Republic, Cambridge University Press, 2006, ISBN 9780511584558.
  • Robert C. Knapp, "The Origins of Provincial Prosopography in the West", Ancient Society, 1978, Vol. 9, pp. 187–222.
  • August Pauly, Georg Wissowa, Elimar Klebs, Friedrich Münzer, Franz Miltner, et alii, Realencyclopädie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft (abbreviated RE), J. B. Metzler, Stuttgart, 1894–1980.
  • Nathan Rosenstein, Imperatores Victi, Military Defeat and Aristocratic Competition in the Middle and Late Republic, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1990, ISBN 978-0520069398.
  • A. N. Sherwin-White, "The Extortion Procedure Again", The Journal of Roman Studies, 1952, Vol. 42, Parts 1 and 2, pp. 43–55.
  • Graham Vincent Sumner, The Orators in Cicero's Brutus: Prosopography and Chronology, (Phoenix Supplementary Volume XI.), Toronto and Buffalo, University of Toronto Press, 1973, ISBN 978-0802052810.
  • Lily Ross Taylor and T. Robert S. Broughton, "The Order of the Two Consuls' Names in the Yearly Lists", Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, 1949, 19, pp. 3–14.
  • John Wilkes, The Illyrians, Oxford, Blackwell, 1995, ISBN 978-0631198079.
Political offices
Preceded by Roman consul
114 BC
With: Manius Acilius Balbus
Succeeded by

gaius, porcius, cato, consul, gaius, porcius, cato, redirects, here, tribune, plebs, gaius, porcius, cato, tribune, plebs, gaius, porcius, cato, before, after, tarraco, roman, politician, general, notably, consul, marcus, porcius, cato, licinianus, grandson, c. Gaius Porcius Cato redirects here For the tribune of the plebs see Gaius Porcius Cato tribune of the plebs 56 BC Gaius Porcius Cato i before 157 BC after 109 BC in Tarraco was a Roman politician and general notably consul in 114 BC He was the son of Marcus Porcius Cato Licinianus and grandson of Cato the Censor Denarius minted by Gaius Cato in 123 BC On the obverse is Roma while the reverse shows Victoria driving a biga 1 Initially a friend of the Gracchi brothers Gaius betrayed Gaius Gracchus in the late 120s BC He became consul in 114 but was crushed by the Scordisci in Thrace His defeat led to a religious hysteria at Rome and he was sentenced to pay a fine at his return He was sued again in 109 before the Mamilian commission which investigated possible bribes received by Roman politicians from the Numidian King Jugurtha In fact the commission s members were former supporters of the Gracchi and made Gaius pay for his betrayal by forcing him into exile Gaius left for Tarraco modern Tarragona in Spain and became a citizen of that town Contents 1 Family background 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 Consulship 114 BC 2 3 Trials and exile 113 109 BC 3 Footnotes 4 References 5 Bibliography 5 1 Ancient sources 5 2 Modern sourcesFamily background editGaius Cato belonged to the plebeian gens Porcia which became prominent at the beginning of the second century thanks to Cato the Censor the grandfather of Gaius Born before 157 his parents were Marcus Porcius Cato Licinianus and Aemilia Tertia the youngest daughter of Aemilius Paullus 2 3 As a result Gaius was the nephew of Scipio Aemilianus the eldest son of Aemilius Paullus and natural brother of his mother 4 In addition Gaius was the younger brother of Marcus Porcius Cato consul in 118 who died during his office 5 Career editEarly career edit Gaius is first mentioned in the sources as a supporter of Tiberius Gracchus the famous social reformer and tribune of the plebs in 133 6 4 Gaius probably met him within the Scipionic Circle the literate court of Scipio Aemilianus as Tiberius was also Scipio s brother in law 7 Gaius first recorded position was as triumvir monetalis in 123 the year of the first tribunate of Gaius Gracchus which suggests he also supported Tiberius younger brother 8 It seems that he deserted the cause of the Gracchi soon after though as he was later prosecuted by a Gracchan court 9 Cicero describes him as a mediocre orator 10 11 Nothing is known of his activities until his consulship in 114 12 but Gaius was surely praetor by 117 as the Lex Villia required a three year wait between holding magistracies 13 His province was likely Sicily as Cicero tells that Gaius baggage was confiscated by the Mamertines the inhabitants of Messina 14 The reason is unknown but Gaius was likely either on his way to or from his post in Syracuse 15 Before an article published by Ernst Badian in 1993 the academic consensus was that Gaius lost his baggage c 110 on his way to serve as legate in Numidia during the Jugurthine War but former consuls serving as legates are extremely rare and it is more likely that Gaius was praetor in Sicily in 117 16 17 18 Consulship 114 BC edit Gaius was elected consul in 114 alongside the other plebeian Manius Acilius Balbus 19 He is described as consul posterior while Balbus is consul prior which means the Centuriate Assembly elected Balbus first 20 Erich Gruen considers that Gaius was a supporter of the conservative Caecilii Metelli the most powerful family at the time even though Gaius Caecilius Metellus Caprarius was also candidate in the consular elections that year 21 T R S Broughton however suggests that Caprarius could have withdrawn his candidacy 22 Gaius was assigned Macedonia as his province which was normally given to a praetor but a war against the Scordisci a Celtic or Illyrian tribe from east Serbia had broken out and a consul was needed 23 24 During the summer Gaius nevertheless suffered a crushing defeat against the Scordisci in northern Thrace who then could enter Roman territory as far as Delphi and the Adriatic It was the first major Roman defeat in a generation 25 The disaster triggered a religious hysteria at Rome with a return to human sacrifice for the last time in Roman history 26 Two couples one Greek and one Celtic were therefore buried alive under the Forum Boarium 26 The defeat also led to the Trial of the Vestal Virgins in which three vestals were accused of incestum One vestal was sentenced to death in 114 but the acquittal of the other two was not accepted and a tribune of the plebs forced their retrial in 113 which resulted in their death as well 27 28 29 Trials and exile 113 109 BC edit nbsp Location of Tarraco in Hispania Citerior As was customary with defeated commanders Gaius was not prorogued in his province and returned to Rome in 113 30 He was sued at his return for extortion under the provision of the Lex Acilia repetundarum The sentence was particularly lenient with a fine of only 8 000 sesterces 31 32 33 Gaius probably benefited from the support of influential friends to escape harsher punishment 34 but perhaps the plaintiffs were Macedonian provincials which would mean that Gaius was only sued for some minor damages he caused in the province and not his defeat against the Scordisci hence the mild verdict 35 Apparently Gaius did not suffer from this conviction He kept his seat in the Senate and remained politically active as he was sued again in 109 by the Mamilian commission named after the tribune of the plebs Gaius Mamilius Limetanus 36 Officially this special court was set up to investigate the bribes received by Roman politicians from Jugurtha the King of Numidia against whom Rome had been at war since 112 37 However the jurors were all equites and the targeted individuals were men associated with the demise of the Gracchi the equites had been made jurors in the criminal courts by Gaius Gracchus 38 The first man prosecuted was therefore Lucius Opimius the consul who in 121 had ordered the murder of Gaius Gracchus and his supporters 39 Then followed Lucius Calpurnius Bestia consul in 111 Gaius Sulpicius Galba Spurius Postumius Albinus perhaps the consul of 110 and thus Gaius Porcius Cato who all can be linked to the Gracchi as enemies or turncoats 40 Cicero makes it clear that they owed their condemnation to the Gracchan background of the jurors 41 42 Gaius may have not even waited for the result of the trial and went into exile 11 Unlike most other exiled Romans Gaius did not move to another city in Italy or the Greek East but went instead to the less civilised Tarraco in Hispania Citerior because the Porcii Catones had been the patrons of the city ever since Cato the Censor had served as consul and proconsul in Spain in 195 194 43 The name Porcius is more frequently encountered on inscriptions in the area an indication of the Catones influence over the town 44 Gaius choice shows that he did not expect to be restored because other exiles often remained closer to Italy in order to lobby for their return such as Lucius Opimius who settled to Dyrrachium now Durres in Albania 45 Gaius received the citizenship of Tarraco and presumably died there 46 11 Gaius was possibly the grandfather of Gaius Porcius Cato tribune of the plebs in 56 BC 47 Footnotes edit His name is hereafter shortened to Gaius as this praenomen was particularly rare among the Porcii References edit Crawford Roman Republican Coinage pp 294 295 Elimar Klebs RE vol 1 cols 590 592 593 Franz Miltner vol 43 cols 167 168 Friedrich Munzer may have written the RE article cf Badian The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage pp 203 204 Sumner Orators in Brutus p 63 a b Gruen Roman Politics p 66 Broughton Magistrates vol I p 527 Cicero De Amictia 39 Gruen Roman Politics p 126 Crawford Roman Republican Coinage p 75 Gruen Roman Politics p 146 Cicero Brutus 108 a b c Miltner RE vol 43 col 105 Badian The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage p 204 Broughton Magistrates vol I p 529 Cicero In Verrem 2 iv 10 Brennan The Praetorship p 477 suggests Gaius stole something from the Mamertines Broughton Magistrates vol I p 544 as example of the former view Badian The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage p 210 Brennan The Praetorship pp 477 704 Broughton Magistrates vol I p 533 Taylor amp Broughton The Order of the Two Consuls Names p 6 Gruen Roman Politics pp 126 127 Broughton Candidates defeated p 9 Caprarius was finally elected consul in 113 Wilkes The Illyrians pp 82 83 Brennan The Praetorship p 522 Eckstein Human Sacrifice p 73 a b Eckstein Human Sacrifice pp 71 73 Gruen Roman Politics pp 127 131 Eckstein Human Sacrifice p 71 Champion Peace of the Gods p 168 Brennan The Praetorship pp 522 892 note 81 Gaius successor in Macedonia was Metellus Caprarius Alexander Trials p 23 n 45 The mention of exile is likely an error coming from a confusion with Gaius second trial cf correction by Kelly Exile p 171 Rosenstein Imperatores Victi p 142 says the fine was ludicrously small Brennan The Praetorship p 522 writes a minor fine Gruen Roman Politics pp 126 127 Rosenstein Imperatores Victi p 142 Sherwin White The Extortion Procedure Again pp 44 45 note 11 Gruen Roman Politics pp 142 143 Gruen Roman Politics pp 90 91 equites control of the courts 144 real motivation of the trials Gruen Roman Politics pp 145 147 Gruen Roman Politics p 144 There is some doubt on the identity of Postumius though Cicero Brutus 128 They were all condemned by their judges who were of the Gracchan party Kelly Exile p 170 Badian Foreign Clientelae p 318 Knapp The Origins of Provincial Prosopography p 199 Kelly Exile pp 77 78 81 82 Cicero Pro Balbo 28 Miltner RE vol 43 col 106 Bibliography editAncient sources edit Cicero Brutus Laelius De Amictia translation on Wikisource In Verrem translation by C D Yonge on Wikisource Pro Balbo Modern sources edit Michael C Alexander Trials in the Late Roman Republic 149 BC to 50 BC University of Toronto Press 1990 ISBN 9780802057877 Ernst Badian Foreign Clientelae 264 70 B C Oxford Clarendon Press 1958 ISBN 978 0198142041 The Legend of the Legate Who Lost His Luggage Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 1993 Bd 42 H 2 pp 203 210 T Corey Brennan The Praetorship in the Roman Republic Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 9780195114607 T Robert S Broughton The Magistrates of the Roman Republic American Philological Association 1951 1952 Candidates Defeated in Roman Elections Some Ancient Roman Also Rans Transactions of the American Philosophical Society New Series 1991 Vol 81 No 4 pp i vi 1 64 Craige Brian Champion The Peace of the Gods Elite Religious Practices in the Middle Roman Republic Princeton University Press 2017 ISBN 978 0691174853 Michael Crawford Roman Republican Coinage Cambridge University Press 1974 ISBN 9780521074926 A M Eckstein Human Sacrifice and Fear of Military Disaster in Republican Rome in American Journal of Ancient History 1982 n 7 pp 69 95 Erich S Gruen Roman Politics and the Criminal Courts 149 78 B C Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1978 ISBN 0 674 28420 8 Gordon P Kelly A History of Exile in the Roman Republic Cambridge University Press 2006 ISBN 9780511584558 Robert C Knapp The Origins of Provincial Prosopography in the West Ancient Society 1978 Vol 9 pp 187 222 August Pauly Georg Wissowa Elimar Klebs Friedrich Munzer Franz Miltner et alii Realencyclopadie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft abbreviated RE J B Metzler Stuttgart 1894 1980 Nathan Rosenstein Imperatores Victi Military Defeat and Aristocratic Competition in the Middle and Late Republic Berkeley University of California Press 1990 ISBN 978 0520069398 A N Sherwin White The Extortion Procedure Again The Journal of Roman Studies 1952 Vol 42 Parts 1 and 2 pp 43 55 Graham Vincent Sumner The Orators in Cicero s Brutus Prosopography and Chronology Phoenix Supplementary Volume XI Toronto and Buffalo University of Toronto Press 1973 ISBN 978 0802052810 Lily Ross Taylor and T Robert S Broughton The Order of the Two Consuls Names in the Yearly Lists Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 1949 19 pp 3 14 John Wilkes The Illyrians Oxford Blackwell 1995 ISBN 978 0631198079 Political officesPreceded byM Aemilius ScaurusM Caecilius Metellus Roman consul114 BC With Manius Acilius Balbus Succeeded byC Caecilius Metellus CaprariusCn Papirius Carbo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaius Porcius Cato consul 114 BC amp oldid 1204998485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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