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Lucius Papirius Cursor

Lucius Papirius Cursor (c.365–after 310 BC)[i] was a celebrated politician and general of the early Roman Republic, who was five times consul, three times magister equitum, and twice dictator. He was the most important Roman commander during the Second Samnite War (327–304 BC), during which he received three triumphs.

The Clemency of Lucius Papirius Cursor, by Gerard de Lairesse, 1688, depicting his quarrel with Fabius Rullianus.

He was a member of the patrician gens Papiria of ancient Rome. Cursor's strictness was proverbial; he was a man of immense bodily strength, while his bravery was beyond dispute. He was given the cognomen Cursor[1] from his swiftness of foot.[2]

Most of what is known of Cursor's life comes from the monumental History of Rome written by Livy during the reign of Augustus. Livy portrayed Cursor as an invincible hero, who avenged the humiliation of the Caudine Forks in 321 BC, when the Roman army had to pass under the yoke. In a famous digression, he even wrote that had Alexander the Great turned his army against Rome, he would have met his match with Cursor. With this narrative, Livy participated in the Roman propaganda sponsored by Augustus, which idealised several figures of the first part of the Republic. As a result, it is difficult to separate his life from the fiction elaborated by later Roman authors.

Family background

Cursor belonged to the patrician gens Papiria. The first Papirii of importance were Gaius and Manius Papirius, respectively the first Pontifex Maximus and Rex Sacrorum of the Republic in 509.[3] However, there is some doubt of the authenticity of these offices, as they could have been invented by a later Papirius to enhance the prestige of his family.[4] The Papirii were one of the last patrician gentes to reach the consulship, with Lucius Papirius Mugillanus, only elected in 444.[5][6] Cursor's grandfather was censor in 393, then consular tribune in 387 and 385.[7] Livy gives this man the cognomen Cursor, the first time it appears in history, but in a later statement says that the cognomen Cursor was first bestowed to his grandson because of his running speed.[8] It is therefore more likely that the cognomen of Cursor's grandfather was Mugillanus, the most important branch of the Papirii in the 5th and 4th centuries, because Cursor himself is sometimes called Mugillanus in ancient sources. The structure of Roman names was fluid at the time, and several contemporary changes of cognomen are recorded, such as Appius Claudius Caecus, initially named Crassus. Likewise, Cursor's initial name was probably Mugillanus.[9][10][11]

Cursor's father was named Spurius, but nothing is known on his life.[12] Robert Develin suggests that Cursor was born circa 365.[13]

Career

Magister equitum (340 BC)

The first mention of Cursor in history took place in 340 with his appointment as Magister equitum by his cousin, the dictator Lucius Papirius Crassus.[14][15] The reason for the appointment of a dictator was the death of the consul Publius Decius Mus while fighting the Latins, and the illness of the other, the famous Titus Manlius Torquatus. Since 341 Rome was waging the Latin War against its former Latin allies.[16] Livy says that an army from the city of Antium was operating in southern Latium, which the dictator Crassus was supposed to repel, but he did not engage them.[17] However, modern historians reject most of the details told by Livy on this war, as he made several anachronisms derived from the Social War of 91–87 BC.[16][18][19]

Praetor (332 BC)

 
Map of the Settlement made by Rome with Latin and Italian communities after the Latin War, including Acerrae.[20]

In 332, Cursor might have been the praetor who passed the law granting half-citizenship to the city of Acerrae in Campania, 16 km northeast of Naples.[21] Called lex Papiria de civitate Acerranorum, it is the oldest known law passed by a praetor.[22] However, it is also possible that this man, only named "Lucius Papirius" by Livy,[23] was the dictator of 340, or the future censor of 318, both named Lucius Papirius Crassus.[24][25][26] After its victory at the end of the Latin War, Rome overhauled its relationships with the cities under its domination, by using a range of different statuses. Campanian cities were given half-citizenship, called civitas sine suffragio ("citizenship without suffrage").[20] This policy was likely inspired by Quintus Publilius Philo, who was the leading proponent of the Roman expansion towards Campania, and also seating censor in 332.[27]

Consul I (326 BC)

The elections for 326 were subject to an intense political battle related to the Struggle of the Orders—the plebeians' campaign to obtain equal rights with the patricians, which took place during the fourth century. The consul elected first in the previous year, the plebeian Publilius Philo, was normally in charge of holding the elections, but as he was besieging Naples and could not come back to Rome, he appointed the plebeian Marcus Claudius Marcellus dictator for this purpose.[28] However, the all-patrician College of Augurs found that Marcellus had been faultily appointed and led to his resignation. This move was doubtless a political manoeuvre from the patricians, as by doing so the augurs forced the appointment of an interrex, who was always a patrician. Interreges typically occurred when a plebeian were in position to conduct the elections. However, Livy records 15 interreges in the elections for 326, the highest number ever in a single election, which means that the political struggle lasted for at least 70 days—as an interrex served for up to five days, and was replaced by another one if he could not succeed in holding the elections.[29][30]

The 15th interrex was Lucius Aemilius Mamercinus Privernas, who presided over the elections of Cursor and the plebeian Gaius Poetelius Libo Visolus. Poetelius was the consul prior, which means the Centuriate Assembly elected him before Cursor; it was the first time that a plebeian (Poetelius) was elected consul prior through an election held by a patrician.[31][32][33] Some sources make Poetelius the same as the man who was already consul in 360 and 346,[34] but such a gap is improbable and Cursor's colleague was more likely his son.[35] Aemilius Privernas and Cursor possibly belonged to a group of patricians headed by the Aemilii that supported the demands of the plebeian elite, at the time championed by Publilius Philo.[36][37]

Both consuls held command during the Second Samnite war, which had started the previous year after the Samnites took control of Naples.[38] Livy does not distinguish the consuls' activity; he says that they captured Allifae (modern Alife), Callifae (perhaps near Pratella), and Rufrium (likely Presenzano). All three cities are located in the valley of the Volturno in northern Campania.[39] However, the story can be doubted as Livy tells later that Allifae was still under Samnite control.[40]

The main feature of their consulship was the Lex Poetelia Papiria de nexis, which abolished nexum, a form of debt-bondage.

First dictatorship and the quarrel with Rullianus (325 BC)

The next year, Cursor was appointed dictator by the consul Lucius Furius Camillus because of his sickness that prevented him from leading the army against the Samnites.[41][42] Cursor in turn chose Quintus Fabius Maximus Rullianus as his magister equitum.[43]

Livy tells that while they were already campaigning in Samnium, Cursor learnt that the auspices had not been properly taken and he had to redo the process in Rome. He left Rullianus on the field, but forbade him to engage the enemy. Rullianus nevertheless disobeyed when he heard of the presence of a reckless Samnite army, which he crushed at Imbrinium. He then burnt the spoils to prevent Cursor from using them in a triumph, and sent a letter to the senate about his victory.[44] Once aware of his subordinate's disobedience, Cursor rushed to the camp and sentenced him to death. Despite supplications from the army, the senate, and the tribunes of the plebs, Cursor only withdrew his death order when Rullianus and his father Marcus Fabius Ambustus knelt and apologised before him.[45]

The story is very elaborate and most details are invented. Several modern historians have suggested it is an anticipation of the rivalry between the dictator Fabius Maximus (Rullianus' grandson) and his magister equitum Marcus Minucius Rufus in 217 BC. However, it is possible that the bare event—that Cursor and Rullianus quarrelled—is historical.[46] Livy mentions that the story was told by Fabius Pictor, the first Roman historian and a relative of Rullianus. Perhaps some details—such as the episode of the burnt spoils—come from family tradition, or private archives within the Fabii.[47]

At the end of his dictatorship, Cursor vowed the construction of the Temple of Quirinus, which was finally dedicated by his son during his first consulship on 17 February 293. The temple was built on the top of the Quirinal Hill, east of the current Palazzo Barberini. The reason for the long delay (32 years) was possibly that the construction had to be funded by Cursor and also because his son waited until he became consul to make the dedication. This ceremony could only be summoned by a magistrate with imperium. The vowing of a temple to Quirinus by Cursor was the first time in Roman history that an individual pledged to build a temple on private money alone. The few temples built before were funded by the state, but Cursor's example was rapidly followed by many others in the third century, thanks to the rapid conquest of Italy by the Republic, which brought considerable booty.[48]

Consul II (320 BC)

Like in 326, the elections for 320 were subject to trouble. In 321, the two consuls were trapped in a Samnite ambush and forced to pass under the yoke, a famous event known as the disaster of the Caudine Forks. They shut themselves in their home once they returned to Rome, and only appointed a dictator for holding the elections. However, the dictator Quintus Fabius Ambustus (perhaps the uncle of Fabius Rullianus)[49] was forced to resign after a fault was found during his appointment; his successor Marcus Aemilius Papus likewise resigned. This led the consuls to in turn abdicate; possibly followed by all the other magistrates.[50] The elections were then held immediately, without waiting until the end of the consular year. Two interreges are mentioned, Fabius Rullianus, then Marcus Valerius Corvus, who successfully presided over the elections. Following the early abdication of the consuls, the consular year started for some years in late autumn or early winter.[51]

Cursor was thus elected consul a second time, together with the plebeian Quintus Publilius Philo, consul for the third time. Livy states explicitly that Philo was the consul prior and Cursor posterior, but the Fasti Capitolini reverse the consuls' order and give Cursor the first place. The Fasti were made under Augustus by the College of Pontiffs, whose members often moved their ancestors to first place in order to enhance the prestige of their family—a policy supported by Augustus who tried to revive several prominent patrician gentes—since being elected prior was the subject of great pride.[52] Conversely, they moved to second place some men that had repeated consulships, such as Philo, to avoid the comparison with Augustus, who continuously held the consulship between 31 and 23 BC.[53]

The election of both consuls broke the Lex Genucia, passed in 342, which theoretically forbade iteration of a magistracy within ten years. Cursor had been consul in 326, and Philo in 327. However, Corey Brennan suggests that this law only forbade iteration within ten years, so it had lapsed by 332.[54][55] Philo is the only securely attested political ally of Cursor, as they are found together in office several times, and they likely ran in the elections together in a political ticket. This pattern of a patrician and a plebeian repeatedly sharing the consulship or other magistracies is a feature of Roman politics in the middle Republic, and multiple instances are known, including that of Cursor's son, who shared the consulship twice with Spurius Carvilius Maximus.[56][57] Cursor and Philo were at the time the most competent generals, and Livy writes it was the main reason behind their election because of the military situation after the Caudine Forks.[58] Stephen Oakley nevertheless doubts that their election was as unanimous as Livy tells.[59]

Philo received command of the army in Samnium, near Caudium, where he won a battle. Meanwhile, Cursor could advance unhindered to Arpi in Apulia, from where he besieged Luceria in order to recover the Roman hostages given to the Samnites after the Caudine Forks. Then Philo moved to Luceria and took over the siege, while Cursor destroyed the supply lines of the Samnites to force and engagement. At this point, a delegation of Taras attempted to mediate between the Romans and the Samnites, probably trying to favour the latter.[60] While pretending to consider the Tarentine offer, Cursor prepared for battle. The next day, the consuls rejected the peace offer and attacked the surprised Samnites, who were defeated. Cursor then resumed the siege of Luceria, which later surrendered. The Roman hostages were returned, the standards recovered, and Cursor forced the garrison to in turn pass under the yoke, so he could wash the humiliation of the Caudine Forks.[61]

This story told by Livy has nevertheless been strongly challenged by modern historians as early as 1870.[62] E. T. Salmon considers that Livy's story is "utterly incredible", because a peace treaty was concluded after the Caudine Forks and that five years of peace followed.[63] He assigns the events told by Livy in 320 to 315, when Cursor was also in charge of the military operations.[64] Other historians have moved to later years the events told by Livy, notably the Tarentine mediation.[65]

Consul III (319 BC)

Cursor was reelected consul in 319, this time as consul prior, with the plebeian Quintus Aulius Cerretanus, who had already been consul in 323.[66]

Consul IV (315 BC)

In 315, Cursor was elected to a fourth consulship, alongside his former colleague Publilius Philo, again as consul prior.[67] The Second Samnite War entered in its second phase that year, following the five year peace signed after the Caudine Forks, which is probably the main reason for the election of Philo and Cursor, as they were the two most experienced commanders at Rome.[68]

As explained above, Livy's description of the campaign for 320 mostly refer to events that took place in 315, so Cursor likely besieged and took Luceria that year. However, his account of the events for 315 are very confused: he says that Fabius Rullianus was appointed dictator and commanded the army for the whole year, while the consuls stayed in Rome, which is constitutionally impossible.[69] A more credible explanation is that Fabius became dictator only when the Samnite threat arose.[70][71]

Consul V (313 BC)

In 313, Cursor was elected consul prior alongside the plebeian Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus, who had already been consul in 317.[72]

Dictator (310 BC)

The final mention of Cursor in the sources took place in 310, when he was appointed dictator for the second time. He in turn appointed as magister equitum his former colleague Bubulcus Brutus.[73]

In 310 BC, when the Samnites again rose, Cursor was appointed dictator for the second time, and gained a decisive victory at Longula, in honour of which he celebrated a magnificent triumph.

Cursor displayed the weapons captured from the Samnites in the triumphal procession, during which Livy tells that the Samnite gold-plated shields made a strong impression.[74] As a result, he gave them to the silversmiths on the Forum, in order to decorate the tabernae with enemy's spoils. This practice of publicly displaying enemy spoils was new at the time in Rome, and was inspired from the Greeks.[75] Livy adds that from this point on aediles regularly decorated the Forum for the Ludi Romani after the precedent set by Cursor.[76]

Several modern historians have nevertheless cast some doubts on the whole event, as many features of both the battle and its subsequent triumph closely resemble the later triumph of Cursor's son in 293, likewise against the Samnites.[77]

His cognomen, Cursor, means "The Runner", as he was able to walk over 50 Roman miles a day in full marching order and demanded the same from his soldiers. Legend says that when cavalry veterans came to him asking for some privileges, he gave them but one privilege:

That you may not say I never excuse you anything, I excuse you from rubbing your horses' backs when you dismount.[78]

Such harshness to his soldiers allowed them to be defeated initially. But later he had regained their good-will by more lenient treatment and lavish promises of booty; they fought with enthusiasm and gained a complete victory.

His son of the same name, also a distinguished general, completed the subjection of Samnium (272 BC). He set up a sundial, the first of its kind in Rome, in the temple of Quirinus.[79]

Legacy

Comparison with Alexander the Great

In the 9th book of his Ab Urbe Condita, Livy made a much-discussed disgression on Alexander the Great, who had died a few years before the events he describes. He says that Rome would have been able to withstand an attack from Alexander if he had attempted to conquer Rome. This passage comes just after he drew a panegyric of Cursor, and both men are implicitly compared. The disgression may originate from the real fear at the time in Rome of a Greek invasion of Italy. During the Pyrrhic War, Appius Caecus made a famous speech—the first ever recorded in Rome—in which he mentions this possibility.

In Augustus' Hall of Fame (2 BC)

In 2 BC, Augustus finished the construction of a new Forum around the Temple of Mars Ultor.[80] On either side of the forum were two galleries of marble statues; on the northeastern side he placed the statues of his ancestors and other members of his family, starting with Aeneas; on the southwestern side he placed a gallery of heroes, dubbed a "Hall of Fame", starting with Romulus, the first Roman king. Each statue had an elogium, a plaque telling the deeds of the man portrayed.[81] It is possible that Augustus was inspired by Virgil's Aeneid and Livy's Ab Urbe Condita—the two most important literary works of his reign—when making his choice of statues.[82][83] Cursor logically features among the list of heroes, and his elogium is partially preserved.[84] The surviving part tells about the quarel with Rullianus.

 
Fantasy portrait of Lucius Papirius, as depicted in the Nuremberg Chronicles, c. 1493 AD.

Modern Era

Cursor features in the Nuremberg Chronicle, an illustrated encyclopaedia composed by Hartmann Schedel and published in 1493. Schedel told about his quarrel with Rullianus.[85]

Named Lucio Papirio or Lucio Papirio dittatore, he is the subject of several Baroque operas.

The Dutch Golden Age painter Gerard De Lairesse pictured the famous story of Cursor's quarrel with Fabius Maximus Rullianus in 1688. The painting was part of an ensemble to decorate the Binnenhof in The Hague.

In the 18th century, Caleb Whitefoord published whimsical misreadings of newspaper texts over the signature "Papyrius Cursor."

Footnotes

  1. ^ This article uses the Varronian chronology, named after the Roman historian Marcus Terentius Varro. In order to solve an offset between several chronologies of the early period of the Roman Republic, Varro created four fictitious "dictator-years" in 333, 324, 309 and 301 BC, during which a dictator was the sole magistrate in charge. Dates before 300 BC are therefore wrong, but still used by convention in academic research. "Correct dates" can be found by removing up to four years from the Varronian date, eg. 340 (Varro) is 336 BC, 304 (Varro) is 303 BC.

References

  1. ^ Latin: cursor (“runner”) from currō (“run”) + -or (agentive suffix)
  2. ^ Aurelius Victor, De viris illustribus, 3
  3. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 4.
  4. ^ Rüpke, Fasti Sacerdotum, p. 826, who suggests the Papirius in question was Gaius Papirius Maso, pontifex in the middle of the 3rd century.
  5. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 53.
  6. ^ Forsythe, Critical History of Early Rome, p. 166.
  7. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 91, 99, 101.
  8. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. I, pp. 437, 438.
  9. ^ Münzer, RE, vol. 36, tome 2, pp. 1040, 1041.
  10. ^ Etcheto, "Cognomen et appartenance familiale", p. 462.
  11. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. I, pp. 437, 438; vol. II, p. 664; vol. IV, p. 578. Oakley initially stated that the problem of Cursor's cognomen was "insoluble", but in his following volumes he accepts Münzer's theory that his initial cognomen was likely Mugillanus.
  12. ^ Münzer, RE, vol. 36, tome 2, p. 1040.
  13. ^ Develin, Patterns in Office-Holding, p. 62.
  14. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 136.
  15. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, p. 73.
  16. ^ a b Tim Cornell, Cambridge Ancient History, vol. VII part 2, pp. 360, 361.
  17. ^ Livy, viii. 12.
  18. ^ Cornell, Beginnings of Rome, p. 348.
  19. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, p. 517, accepts the historicity of this dictatorship.
  20. ^ a b Cornell, Beginnings of Rome, pp. 349–351.
  21. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, p. 593.
  22. ^ Graeber, Auctoritas patrum, p. 45.
  23. ^ Livy, viii. 17.
  24. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 142 (note 2), favours one of the two Crassi.
  25. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. I, p. 50, makes Cursor the praetor for 332.
  26. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, pp. 725, 894, does not make a choice among the three possibilities.
  27. ^ Staveley, "The political aims of Appius Claudius Caecus", p. 426.
  28. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, p. 662, says that he was expected to appoint the other consul, the patrician Lucius Cornelius Lentulus.
  29. ^ Livy, viii. 23.
  30. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, pp. 661, 662, who says that Livy's story "seems wholly credible".
  31. ^ Taylor & Broughton, "The Order of the Two Consuls' Names", p. 6.
  32. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 136.
  33. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, pp. 20, 21.
  34. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 120, 131.
  35. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, pp. 149, 150.
  36. ^ Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties, pp. 37, 38.
  37. ^ Ferenczy, From the patrician state, pp. 52, 53.
  38. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, p. 218.
  39. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, pp. 676, 677.
  40. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, pp. 219, 220.
  41. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, p. 6 (note1), thinks this illness is suspect as it could have been an invention by a later annalist.
  42. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, p. 695, says there is no good reason to suspect Camillus' illness was invented.
  43. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 147.
  44. ^ Livy, viii. 29.
  45. ^ Livy, viii. 35.
  46. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, p. 696
  47. ^ Cornell et al., Fragments of the Roman Historians, vol. III, pp. 33, 34 (F17).
  48. ^ Ziolkowski, The Temples of Mid-Republican Rome, pp. 139–144, 239–243, 247, 307–310.
  49. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. II, p. 270.
  50. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. III, pp. 113, 114.
  51. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 150, 151.
  52. ^ Taylor & Broughton, "Order of the Consuls' Names", p. 166.
  53. ^ Taylor, "Augustan Editing", pp. 75, 78 (note 7), 79 (notes 11, 21).
  54. ^ Brennan, The Praetorship, pp. 65–67.
  55. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. IV, p. 543, writes that Brennan's "argument [...] has considerable force, but the standard view remains defensible."
  56. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 180, 197.
  57. ^ Forsythe, Critical History of Early Rome, p. 269.
  58. ^ Livy, ix. 7.
  59. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. III, p. 114.
  60. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. III, pp. 156, 157.
  61. ^ Livy, ix. 12–16.
  62. ^ Nissen, "Der Caudinische Friede", pp. 18–33.
  63. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, pp. 226–230.
  64. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, p. 228.
  65. ^ Ager, Interstate Arbitrations, pp. 52–54.
  66. ^ Broughton, vol. I, pp. 149, 154.
  67. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 156.
  68. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, p. 233.
  69. ^ Livy, ix. 22. Livy does not even name the consuls.
  70. ^ Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, p. 234, but does not comment on Rullianus' dictatorship.
  71. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. III, p. 282. cf. also p. 287 for the omission of their names by Livy (which may be a lacuna).
  72. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 158.
  73. ^ Broughton, vol. I, p. 162.
  74. ^ Livy, ix. 40.
  75. ^ Bastien, Le triomphe romain, pp. 158, 159, who cites the example of Alexander the Great displaying Persian armours on the Parthenon after the Battle of the Granicus.
  76. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. III, pp. 521–524.
  77. ^ Oakley, Commentary on Livy, vol. III, pp. 504–508.
  78. ^ Livy, 9.16
  79. ^ Livy x. 39–47; viii., ix. Pliny, Nat. Hist., vii. 60. Eutropius ii. 8. 9.
  80. ^ Geiger, Hall of Fame, p. 60.
  81. ^ Geiger, Hall of Fame, p. 61.
  82. ^ T. J. Luce, "Livy, Augustus, and the Forum Augustum", in Raaflaub & Toher (eds.), Between Republic and Empire, pp. 123–38. Luce writes that Augustus used a different source for the biographical details on the heroes, because they differ a lot from Livy's story. He nonetheless notes that Cursor's elogium matches Livy's record (p. 130, note 23).
  83. ^ Geiger, Hall of Fame, p. 63.
  84. ^ Geiger, Hall of Fame, pp. 141, 142.
  85. ^ Schedel, Nuremberg Chronicle, f. lxxix r.

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  • ——, "New Indications of Augustan Editing in the Capitoline Fasti", Classical Philology, Vol. 46, No. 2 (Apr., 1951), pp. 73–80.
  • —— and T. Robert S. Broughton, "The Order of the Consuls' Names in Official Republican Lists", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, vol. 17, part 2 (Apr., 1968), pp. 166–172.
  • Frank William Walbank, A. E. Astin, M. W. Frederiksen, R. M. Ogilvie (editors), The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. VII, part 2, The Rise of Rome to 220 B.C., Cambridge University Press, 1989.
  • Adam Ziolkowski, The Temples of Mid-Republican Rome and their Historical and Topographical Context, Rome, 1992.
Political offices
Preceded by
L. Cornelius Lentulus
Q. Publilius Philo
Roman consul
326 BC
With: Gaius Poetelius Libo Visolus
Succeeded by
L. Furius Camillus
D. Junius Brutus Scaeva
Preceded by Roman consul II
320 BC
With: Quintus Publilius Philo
Succeeded by
Q. Aulius Cerretanus
Lucius Papirius Cursor
Preceded by
Q. Publilius Philo
Lucius Papirius Cursor
Roman consul III
319 BC
With: Quintus Aulius Cerretanus
Succeeded by
M. Foslius Flaccinator
L. Plautius Venox
Preceded by
Sp. Nautius Rutilus
M. Popillius Laenas
Roman consul IV
315 BC
With: Quintus Publilius Philo
Succeeded by
M. Poetelius Libo
G. Sulpicius Longus
Preceded by
M. Poetelius Libo
G. Sulpicius Longus
Roman consul V
313 BC
With: Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus
Succeeded by
M. Valerius Maximus Corvinus
P. Decius Mus

lucius, papirius, cursor, after, celebrated, politician, general, early, roman, republic, five, times, consul, three, times, magister, equitum, twice, dictator, most, important, roman, commander, during, second, samnite, during, which, received, three, triumph. Lucius Papirius Cursor c 365 after 310 BC i was a celebrated politician and general of the early Roman Republic who was five times consul three times magister equitum and twice dictator He was the most important Roman commander during the Second Samnite War 327 304 BC during which he received three triumphs The Clemency of Lucius Papirius Cursor by Gerard de Lairesse 1688 depicting his quarrel with Fabius Rullianus He was a member of the patrician gens Papiria of ancient Rome Cursor s strictness was proverbial he was a man of immense bodily strength while his bravery was beyond dispute He was given the cognomen Cursor 1 from his swiftness of foot 2 Most of what is known of Cursor s life comes from the monumental History of Rome written by Livy during the reign of Augustus Livy portrayed Cursor as an invincible hero who avenged the humiliation of the Caudine Forks in 321 BC when the Roman army had to pass under the yoke In a famous digression he even wrote that had Alexander the Great turned his army against Rome he would have met his match with Cursor With this narrative Livy participated in the Roman propaganda sponsored by Augustus which idealised several figures of the first part of the Republic As a result it is difficult to separate his life from the fiction elaborated by later Roman authors Contents 1 Family background 2 Career 2 1 Magister equitum 340 BC 2 2 Praetor 332 BC 2 3 Consul I 326 BC 2 4 First dictatorship and the quarrel with Rullianus 325 BC 2 5 Consul II 320 BC 2 6 Consul III 319 BC 2 7 Consul IV 315 BC 2 8 Consul V 313 BC 2 9 Dictator 310 BC 3 Legacy 3 1 Comparison with Alexander the Great 3 2 In Augustus Hall of Fame 2 BC 3 3 Modern Era 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 Ancient sources 6 2 Modern sourcesFamily background EditCursor belonged to the patrician gens Papiria The first Papirii of importance were Gaius and Manius Papirius respectively the first Pontifex Maximus and Rex Sacrorum of the Republic in 509 3 However there is some doubt of the authenticity of these offices as they could have been invented by a later Papirius to enhance the prestige of his family 4 The Papirii were one of the last patrician gentes to reach the consulship with Lucius Papirius Mugillanus only elected in 444 5 6 Cursor s grandfather was censor in 393 then consular tribune in 387 and 385 7 Livy gives this man the cognomen Cursor the first time it appears in history but in a later statement says that the cognomen Cursor was first bestowed to his grandson because of his running speed 8 It is therefore more likely that the cognomen of Cursor s grandfather was Mugillanus the most important branch of the Papirii in the 5th and 4th centuries because Cursor himself is sometimes called Mugillanus in ancient sources The structure of Roman names was fluid at the time and several contemporary changes of cognomen are recorded such as Appius Claudius Caecus initially named Crassus Likewise Cursor s initial name was probably Mugillanus 9 10 11 Cursor s father was named Spurius but nothing is known on his life 12 Robert Develin suggests that Cursor was born circa 365 13 Career EditMagister equitum 340 BC Edit The first mention of Cursor in history took place in 340 with his appointment as Magister equitum by his cousin the dictator Lucius Papirius Crassus 14 15 The reason for the appointment of a dictator was the death of the consul Publius Decius Mus while fighting the Latins and the illness of the other the famous Titus Manlius Torquatus Since 341 Rome was waging the Latin War against its former Latin allies 16 Livy says that an army from the city of Antium was operating in southern Latium which the dictator Crassus was supposed to repel but he did not engage them 17 However modern historians reject most of the details told by Livy on this war as he made several anachronisms derived from the Social War of 91 87 BC 16 18 19 Praetor 332 BC Edit Map of the Settlement made by Rome with Latin and Italian communities after the Latin War including Acerrae 20 In 332 Cursor might have been the praetor who passed the law granting half citizenship to the city of Acerrae in Campania 16 km northeast of Naples 21 Called lex Papiria de civitate Acerranorum it is the oldest known law passed by a praetor 22 However it is also possible that this man only named Lucius Papirius by Livy 23 was the dictator of 340 or the future censor of 318 both named Lucius Papirius Crassus 24 25 26 After its victory at the end of the Latin War Rome overhauled its relationships with the cities under its domination by using a range of different statuses Campanian cities were given half citizenship called civitas sine suffragio citizenship without suffrage 20 This policy was likely inspired by Quintus Publilius Philo who was the leading proponent of the Roman expansion towards Campania and also seating censor in 332 27 Consul I 326 BC Edit The elections for 326 were subject to an intense political battle related to the Struggle of the Orders the plebeians campaign to obtain equal rights with the patricians which took place during the fourth century The consul elected first in the previous year the plebeian Publilius Philo was normally in charge of holding the elections but as he was besieging Naples and could not come back to Rome he appointed the plebeian Marcus Claudius Marcellus dictator for this purpose 28 However the all patrician College of Augurs found that Marcellus had been faultily appointed and led to his resignation This move was doubtless a political manoeuvre from the patricians as by doing so the augurs forced the appointment of an interrex who was always a patrician Interreges typically occurred when a plebeian were in position to conduct the elections However Livy records 15 interreges in the elections for 326 the highest number ever in a single election which means that the political struggle lasted for at least 70 days as an interrex served for up to five days and was replaced by another one if he could not succeed in holding the elections 29 30 The 15th interrex was Lucius Aemilius Mamercinus Privernas who presided over the elections of Cursor and the plebeian Gaius Poetelius Libo Visolus Poetelius was the consul prior which means the Centuriate Assembly elected him before Cursor it was the first time that a plebeian Poetelius was elected consul prior through an election held by a patrician 31 32 33 Some sources make Poetelius the same as the man who was already consul in 360 and 346 34 but such a gap is improbable and Cursor s colleague was more likely his son 35 Aemilius Privernas and Cursor possibly belonged to a group of patricians headed by the Aemilii that supported the demands of the plebeian elite at the time championed by Publilius Philo 36 37 Both consuls held command during the Second Samnite war which had started the previous year after the Samnites took control of Naples 38 Livy does not distinguish the consuls activity he says that they captured Allifae modern Alife Callifae perhaps near Pratella and Rufrium likely Presenzano All three cities are located in the valley of the Volturno in northern Campania 39 However the story can be doubted as Livy tells later that Allifae was still under Samnite control 40 The main feature of their consulship was the Lex Poetelia Papiria de nexis which abolished nexum a form of debt bondage First dictatorship and the quarrel with Rullianus 325 BC Edit The next year Cursor was appointed dictator by the consul Lucius Furius Camillus because of his sickness that prevented him from leading the army against the Samnites 41 42 Cursor in turn chose Quintus Fabius Maximus Rullianus as his magister equitum 43 Livy tells that while they were already campaigning in Samnium Cursor learnt that the auspices had not been properly taken and he had to redo the process in Rome He left Rullianus on the field but forbade him to engage the enemy Rullianus nevertheless disobeyed when he heard of the presence of a reckless Samnite army which he crushed at Imbrinium He then burnt the spoils to prevent Cursor from using them in a triumph and sent a letter to the senate about his victory 44 Once aware of his subordinate s disobedience Cursor rushed to the camp and sentenced him to death Despite supplications from the army the senate and the tribunes of the plebs Cursor only withdrew his death order when Rullianus and his father Marcus Fabius Ambustus knelt and apologised before him 45 The story is very elaborate and most details are invented Several modern historians have suggested it is an anticipation of the rivalry between the dictator Fabius Maximus Rullianus grandson and his magister equitum Marcus Minucius Rufus in 217 BC However it is possible that the bare event that Cursor and Rullianus quarrelled is historical 46 Livy mentions that the story was told by Fabius Pictor the first Roman historian and a relative of Rullianus Perhaps some details such as the episode of the burnt spoils come from family tradition or private archives within the Fabii 47 At the end of his dictatorship Cursor vowed the construction of the Temple of Quirinus which was finally dedicated by his son during his first consulship on 17 February 293 The temple was built on the top of the Quirinal Hill east of the current Palazzo Barberini The reason for the long delay 32 years was possibly that the construction had to be funded by Cursor and also because his son waited until he became consul to make the dedication This ceremony could only be summoned by a magistrate with imperium The vowing of a temple to Quirinus by Cursor was the first time in Roman history that an individual pledged to build a temple on private money alone The few temples built before were funded by the state but Cursor s example was rapidly followed by many others in the third century thanks to the rapid conquest of Italy by the Republic which brought considerable booty 48 Consul II 320 BC Edit Like in 326 the elections for 320 were subject to trouble In 321 the two consuls were trapped in a Samnite ambush and forced to pass under the yoke a famous event known as the disaster of the Caudine Forks They shut themselves in their home once they returned to Rome and only appointed a dictator for holding the elections However the dictator Quintus Fabius Ambustus perhaps the uncle of Fabius Rullianus 49 was forced to resign after a fault was found during his appointment his successor Marcus Aemilius Papus likewise resigned This led the consuls to in turn abdicate possibly followed by all the other magistrates 50 The elections were then held immediately without waiting until the end of the consular year Two interreges are mentioned Fabius Rullianus then Marcus Valerius Corvus who successfully presided over the elections Following the early abdication of the consuls the consular year started for some years in late autumn or early winter 51 Cursor was thus elected consul a second time together with the plebeian Quintus Publilius Philo consul for the third time Livy states explicitly that Philo was the consul prior and Cursor posterior but the Fasti Capitolini reverse the consuls order and give Cursor the first place The Fasti were made under Augustus by the College of Pontiffs whose members often moved their ancestors to first place in order to enhance the prestige of their family a policy supported by Augustus who tried to revive several prominent patrician gentes since being elected prior was the subject of great pride 52 Conversely they moved to second place some men that had repeated consulships such as Philo to avoid the comparison with Augustus who continuously held the consulship between 31 and 23 BC 53 The election of both consuls broke the Lex Genucia passed in 342 which theoretically forbade iteration of a magistracy within ten years Cursor had been consul in 326 and Philo in 327 However Corey Brennan suggests that this law only forbade iteration within ten years so it had lapsed by 332 54 55 Philo is the only securely attested political ally of Cursor as they are found together in office several times and they likely ran in the elections together in a political ticket This pattern of a patrician and a plebeian repeatedly sharing the consulship or other magistracies is a feature of Roman politics in the middle Republic and multiple instances are known including that of Cursor s son who shared the consulship twice with Spurius Carvilius Maximus 56 57 Cursor and Philo were at the time the most competent generals and Livy writes it was the main reason behind their election because of the military situation after the Caudine Forks 58 Stephen Oakley nevertheless doubts that their election was as unanimous as Livy tells 59 Philo received command of the army in Samnium near Caudium where he won a battle Meanwhile Cursor could advance unhindered to Arpi in Apulia from where he besieged Luceria in order to recover the Roman hostages given to the Samnites after the Caudine Forks Then Philo moved to Luceria and took over the siege while Cursor destroyed the supply lines of the Samnites to force and engagement At this point a delegation of Taras attempted to mediate between the Romans and the Samnites probably trying to favour the latter 60 While pretending to consider the Tarentine offer Cursor prepared for battle The next day the consuls rejected the peace offer and attacked the surprised Samnites who were defeated Cursor then resumed the siege of Luceria which later surrendered The Roman hostages were returned the standards recovered and Cursor forced the garrison to in turn pass under the yoke so he could wash the humiliation of the Caudine Forks 61 This story told by Livy has nevertheless been strongly challenged by modern historians as early as 1870 62 E T Salmon considers that Livy s story is utterly incredible because a peace treaty was concluded after the Caudine Forks and that five years of peace followed 63 He assigns the events told by Livy in 320 to 315 when Cursor was also in charge of the military operations 64 Other historians have moved to later years the events told by Livy notably the Tarentine mediation 65 Consul III 319 BC Edit Cursor was reelected consul in 319 this time as consul prior with the plebeian Quintus Aulius Cerretanus who had already been consul in 323 66 Consul IV 315 BC Edit In 315 Cursor was elected to a fourth consulship alongside his former colleague Publilius Philo again as consul prior 67 The Second Samnite War entered in its second phase that year following the five year peace signed after the Caudine Forks which is probably the main reason for the election of Philo and Cursor as they were the two most experienced commanders at Rome 68 As explained above Livy s description of the campaign for 320 mostly refer to events that took place in 315 so Cursor likely besieged and took Luceria that year However his account of the events for 315 are very confused he says that Fabius Rullianus was appointed dictator and commanded the army for the whole year while the consuls stayed in Rome which is constitutionally impossible 69 A more credible explanation is that Fabius became dictator only when the Samnite threat arose 70 71 Consul V 313 BC Edit In 313 Cursor was elected consul prior alongside the plebeian Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus who had already been consul in 317 72 Dictator 310 BC Edit The final mention of Cursor in the sources took place in 310 when he was appointed dictator for the second time He in turn appointed as magister equitum his former colleague Bubulcus Brutus 73 In 310 BC when the Samnites again rose Cursor was appointed dictator for the second time and gained a decisive victory at Longula in honour of which he celebrated a magnificent triumph Cursor displayed the weapons captured from the Samnites in the triumphal procession during which Livy tells that the Samnite gold plated shields made a strong impression 74 As a result he gave them to the silversmiths on the Forum in order to decorate the tabernae with enemy s spoils This practice of publicly displaying enemy spoils was new at the time in Rome and was inspired from the Greeks 75 Livy adds that from this point on aediles regularly decorated the Forum for the Ludi Romani after the precedent set by Cursor 76 Several modern historians have nevertheless cast some doubts on the whole event as many features of both the battle and its subsequent triumph closely resemble the later triumph of Cursor s son in 293 likewise against the Samnites 77 His cognomen Cursor means The Runner as he was able to walk over 50 Roman miles a day in full marching order and demanded the same from his soldiers Legend says that when cavalry veterans came to him asking for some privileges he gave them but one privilege That you may not say I never excuse you anything I excuse you from rubbing your horses backs when you dismount 78 Such harshness to his soldiers allowed them to be defeated initially But later he had regained their good will by more lenient treatment and lavish promises of booty they fought with enthusiasm and gained a complete victory His son of the same name also a distinguished general completed the subjection of Samnium 272 BC He set up a sundial the first of its kind in Rome in the temple of Quirinus 79 Legacy EditComparison with Alexander the Great Edit In the 9th book of his Ab Urbe Condita Livy made a much discussed disgression on Alexander the Great who had died a few years before the events he describes He says that Rome would have been able to withstand an attack from Alexander if he had attempted to conquer Rome This passage comes just after he drew a panegyric of Cursor and both men are implicitly compared The disgression may originate from the real fear at the time in Rome of a Greek invasion of Italy During the Pyrrhic War Appius Caecus made a famous speech the first ever recorded in Rome in which he mentions this possibility In Augustus Hall of Fame 2 BC Edit In 2 BC Augustus finished the construction of a new Forum around the Temple of Mars Ultor 80 On either side of the forum were two galleries of marble statues on the northeastern side he placed the statues of his ancestors and other members of his family starting with Aeneas on the southwestern side he placed a gallery of heroes dubbed a Hall of Fame starting with Romulus the first Roman king Each statue had an elogium a plaque telling the deeds of the man portrayed 81 It is possible that Augustus was inspired by Virgil s Aeneid and Livy s Ab Urbe Condita the two most important literary works of his reign when making his choice of statues 82 83 Cursor logically features among the list of heroes and his elogium is partially preserved 84 The surviving part tells about the quarel with Rullianus Fantasy portrait of Lucius Papirius as depicted in the Nuremberg Chronicles c 1493 AD Modern Era Edit Cursor features in the Nuremberg Chronicle an illustrated encyclopaedia composed by Hartmann Schedel and published in 1493 Schedel told about his quarrel with Rullianus 85 Named Lucio Papirio or Lucio Papirio dittatore he is the subject of several Baroque operas The Dutch Golden Age painter Gerard De Lairesse pictured the famous story of Cursor s quarrel with Fabius Maximus Rullianus in 1688 The painting was part of an ensemble to decorate the Binnenhof in The Hague In the 18th century Caleb Whitefoord published whimsical misreadings of newspaper texts over the signature Papyrius Cursor Footnotes Edit This article uses the Varronian chronology named after the Roman historian Marcus Terentius Varro In order to solve an offset between several chronologies of the early period of the Roman Republic Varro created four fictitious dictator years in 333 324 309 and 301 BC during which a dictator was the sole magistrate in charge Dates before 300 BC are therefore wrong but still used by convention in academic research Correct dates can be found by removing up to four years from the Varronian date eg 340 Varro is 336 BC 304 Varro is 303 BC References Edit Latin cursor runner from currō run or agentive suffix Aurelius Victor De viris illustribus 3 Broughton vol I p 4 Rupke Fasti Sacerdotum p 826 who suggests the Papirius in question was Gaius Papirius Maso pontifex in the middle of the 3rd century Broughton vol I p 53 Forsythe Critical History of Early Rome p 166 Broughton vol I pp 91 99 101 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol I pp 437 438 Munzer RE vol 36 tome 2 pp 1040 1041 Etcheto Cognomen et appartenance familiale p 462 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol I pp 437 438 vol II p 664 vol IV p 578 Oakley initially stated that the problem of Cursor s cognomen was insoluble but in his following volumes he accepts Munzer s theory that his initial cognomen was likely Mugillanus Munzer RE vol 36 tome 2 p 1040 Develin Patterns in Office Holding p 62 Broughton vol I p 136 Brennan The Praetorship p 73 a b Tim Cornell Cambridge Ancient History vol VII part 2 pp 360 361 Livy viii 12 Cornell Beginnings of Rome p 348 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II p 517 accepts the historicity of this dictatorship a b Cornell Beginnings of Rome pp 349 351 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II p 593 Graeber Auctoritas patrum p 45 Livy viii 17 Broughton vol I p 142 note 2 favours one of the two Crassi Oakley Commentary on Livy vol I p 50 makes Cursor the praetor for 332 Brennan The Praetorship pp 725 894 does not make a choice among the three possibilities Staveley The political aims of Appius Claudius Caecus p 426 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II p 662 says that he was expected to appoint the other consul the patrician Lucius Cornelius Lentulus Livy viii 23 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II pp 661 662 who says that Livy s story seems wholly credible Taylor amp Broughton The Order of the Two Consuls Names p 6 Broughton vol I p 136 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II pp 20 21 Broughton vol I pp 120 131 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II pp 149 150 Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties pp 37 38 Ferenczy From the patrician state pp 52 53 Salmon Samnium and the Samnites p 218 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II pp 676 677 Salmon Samnium and the Samnites pp 219 220 Salmon Samnium and the Samnites p 6 note1 thinks this illness is suspect as it could have been an invention by a later annalist Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II p 695 says there is no good reason to suspect Camillus illness was invented Broughton vol I p 147 Livy viii 29 Livy viii 35 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II p 696 Cornell et al Fragments of the Roman Historians vol III pp 33 34 F17 Ziolkowski The Temples of Mid Republican Rome pp 139 144 239 243 247 307 310 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol II p 270 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol III pp 113 114 Broughton vol I pp 150 151 Taylor amp Broughton Order of the Consuls Names p 166 Taylor Augustan Editing pp 75 78 note 7 79 notes 11 21 Brennan The Praetorship pp 65 67 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol IV p 543 writes that Brennan s argument has considerable force but the standard view remains defensible Broughton vol I pp 180 197 Forsythe Critical History of Early Rome p 269 Livy ix 7 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol III p 114 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol III pp 156 157 Livy ix 12 16 Nissen Der Caudinische Friede pp 18 33 Salmon Samnium and the Samnites pp 226 230 Salmon Samnium and the Samnites p 228 Ager Interstate Arbitrations pp 52 54 Broughton vol I pp 149 154 Broughton vol I p 156 Salmon Samnium and the Samnites p 233 Livy ix 22 Livy does not even name the consuls Salmon Samnium and the Samnites p 234 but does not comment on Rullianus dictatorship Oakley Commentary on Livy vol III p 282 cf also p 287 for the omission of their names by Livy which may be a lacuna Broughton vol I p 158 Broughton vol I p 162 Livy ix 40 Bastien Le triomphe romain pp 158 159 who cites the example of Alexander the Great displaying Persian armours on the Parthenon after the Battle of the Granicus Oakley Commentary on Livy vol III pp 521 524 Oakley Commentary on Livy vol III pp 504 508 Livy 9 16 Livy x 39 47 viii ix Pliny Nat Hist vii 60 Eutropius ii 8 9 Geiger Hall of Fame p 60 Geiger Hall of Fame p 61 T J Luce Livy Augustus and the Forum Augustum in Raaflaub amp Toher eds Between Republic and Empire pp 123 38 Luce writes that Augustus used a different source for the biographical details on the heroes because they differ a lot from Livy s story He nonetheless notes that Cursor s elogium matches Livy s record p 130 note 23 Geiger Hall of Fame p 63 Geiger Hall of Fame pp 141 142 Schedel Nuremberg Chronicle f lxxix r Bibliography EditAncient sources Edit Livy Ab Urbe Condita English translation by Rev Canon Roberts on Wikisource Modern sources Edit Sheila L Ager Interstate Arbitrations in the Greek World 337 90 B C Berkeley University of California Press 1996 Jean Luc Bastien Le triomphe romain et son utilisation politique a Rome aux trois derniers siecles de la Republique Rome Collection de l Ecole francaise de Rome 2007 T Corey Brennan The Praetorship in the Roman Republic Oxford University Press 2000 T Robert S Broughton The Magistrates of the Roman Republic American Philological Association 1951 1952 Timothy J Cornell The Beginnings of Rome Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars c 1000 264 BC London Routledge 1995 Robert Develin Patterns in Office Holding 366 49 B C Brussels Latomus 1979 Henri Etcheto Cognomen et appartenance familiale dans l aristocratie medio republicaine a propos de l identite du consul patricien de 328 av J C in Athenaeum 91 2 2003 pp 445 468 Endre Ferenczy From the patrician state to the patricio plebeian state Amsterdam A M Hakkert 1976 Gary Forsythe A Critical History of Early Rome from Prehistory to the First Punic War Berkeley University of California Press 2005 Joseph Geiger The First Hall of Fame A Study of the Statues in the Forum Augustum Leiden Boston Brill 2008 Andreas Graeber Auctoritas patrum Formen und Wege der Senatsherrschaft zwischen Politik und Tradition Berlin Springer Verlag 2001 Friedrich Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties and Families translated by Therese Ridley Johns Hopkins University Press 1999 originally published in 1920 H Nissen Der Caudinische Friede in Rheinisches Museum fur Philologie 1870 Neue Folge Vol 25 1870 pp 1 65 Stephen P Oakley A Commentary on Livy Books VI X Volume I Introduction and Book VI Oxford University Press 1997 A Commentary on Livy Books VI X Volume II Books VI VIII Oxford University Press 1998 A Commentary on Livy Books VI X Volume III Book IX Oxford University Press 2005 A Commentary on Livy Books VI X Volume IV Book X Oxford University Press 2005 August Pauly Georg Wissowa Friedrich Munzer et alii Realencyclopadie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft abbreviated RE J B Metzler Stuttgart 1894 1980 K A Raaflaub amp M Toher editors Between Republic and Empire Interpretations of Augustus and his Principate Berkeley 1990 Jorg Rupke Anne Glock David Richardson translator Fasti Sacerdotum A Prosopography of Pagan Jewish and Christian Religious Officials in the City of Rome 300 BC to AD 499 Oxford University Press 2008 Edward Togo Salmon Samnium and the Samnites Cambridge University Press 1967 Hartmann Schedel Liber Chronicarum Nuremberg Chronicle Nuremberg 1493 digital scan on Cambridge University Library website E Stuart Staveley The political aims of Appius Claudius Caecus in Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Bd 8 H 4 Oct 1959 pp 410 433 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 19 1949 pp 3 14 New Indications of Augustan Editing in the Capitoline Fasti Classical Philology Vol 46 No 2 Apr 1951 pp 73 80 and T Robert S Broughton The Order of the Consuls Names in Official Republican Lists Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte vol 17 part 2 Apr 1968 pp 166 172 Frank William Walbank A E Astin M W Frederiksen R M Ogilvie editors The Cambridge Ancient History vol VII part 2 The Rise of Rome to 220 B C Cambridge University Press 1989 Adam Ziolkowski The Temples of Mid Republican Rome and their Historical and Topographical Context Rome 1992 Political officesPreceded byL Cornelius LentulusQ Publilius Philo Roman consul326 BC With Gaius Poetelius Libo Visolus Succeeded byL Furius CamillusD Junius Brutus ScaevaPreceded byT Veturius CalvinusSp Postumius Albinus Caudinus Roman consul II320 BC With Quintus Publilius Philo Succeeded byQ Aulius CerretanusLucius Papirius CursorPreceded byQ Publilius PhiloLucius Papirius Cursor Roman consul III319 BC With Quintus Aulius Cerretanus Succeeded byM Foslius FlaccinatorL Plautius VenoxPreceded bySp Nautius RutilusM Popillius Laenas Roman consul IV315 BC With Quintus Publilius Philo Succeeded byM Poetelius LiboG Sulpicius LongusPreceded byM Poetelius LiboG Sulpicius Longus Roman consul V313 BC With Gaius Junius Bubulcus Brutus Succeeded byM Valerius Maximus CorvinusP Decius Mus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lucius Papirius Cursor amp oldid 1064872478, wikipedia, wiki, 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