§§ 48–50a are devoted to Antony’s public career in the 50s BCE. At the opening of § 48, we are in Rome and the year is 58: Antony, Cicero claims, became a bosom friend of Clodius, who was tribune of the people at the time (about to drive Cicero into exile and burn down his house…) as well as married to Antony’s future wife Fulvia. The couple offered Antony excellent opportunities to pursue his imputed revolutionary and sexual passions: Cicero casts him as Clodius’ principal firebrand in the c..
On 1 January 42 BC, the Senate posthumously recognized Julius Caesar as a divinity of the Roman stat...
S. Litovchenko. The Armenian Embassy of Publius Clodius In his letters, Cicero says that in the fir...
Cicero continues to blast Antony for his conduct in Southern Italy. His attack is three-pronged: a b...
At the end of the previous paragraph, we left Antony with Caesar in furthest Gaul (54 BCE). Now we h...
Around 20 May 44 BCE, Antony returned to Rome — together with several thousand veterans settled at C...
Cicero now moves on to a vivid account of what happened on 15 February 44 BCE. He starts with Caesar...
In March 45, Antony left Narbo in Southern Gaul for a surprise visit to Rome that caused some conste...
In the face of Octavian's large and capable force, Antony saw the danger of staying in Rome and, to ...
This thesis examines the early life and political career of Marc Antony (Triumvir) from 62 to 44 BC....
Mark Antony was amassing political support, but Octavian still had the opportunity to rival him as t...
When one day the head of Cicero was brought to them [sc. Antony and his wife Fulvia] — he had been o...
With opinion in Rome turning against him and his year of consular power nearing its end, Antony atte...
Cicero follows up on his claim in the previous paragraph that Antony ought to have been killed a lon...
Cicero now returns to the issue of the (fake) auspices that Antony produced to challenge the validit...
Cicero continues to insinuate, wrongly, that Antony, during his recent sojourn in Southern Italy, tr...
On 1 January 42 BC, the Senate posthumously recognized Julius Caesar as a divinity of the Roman stat...
S. Litovchenko. The Armenian Embassy of Publius Clodius In his letters, Cicero says that in the fir...
Cicero continues to blast Antony for his conduct in Southern Italy. His attack is three-pronged: a b...
At the end of the previous paragraph, we left Antony with Caesar in furthest Gaul (54 BCE). Now we h...
Around 20 May 44 BCE, Antony returned to Rome — together with several thousand veterans settled at C...
Cicero now moves on to a vivid account of what happened on 15 February 44 BCE. He starts with Caesar...
In March 45, Antony left Narbo in Southern Gaul for a surprise visit to Rome that caused some conste...
In the face of Octavian's large and capable force, Antony saw the danger of staying in Rome and, to ...
This thesis examines the early life and political career of Marc Antony (Triumvir) from 62 to 44 BC....
Mark Antony was amassing political support, but Octavian still had the opportunity to rival him as t...
When one day the head of Cicero was brought to them [sc. Antony and his wife Fulvia] — he had been o...
With opinion in Rome turning against him and his year of consular power nearing its end, Antony atte...
Cicero follows up on his claim in the previous paragraph that Antony ought to have been killed a lon...
Cicero now returns to the issue of the (fake) auspices that Antony produced to challenge the validit...
Cicero continues to insinuate, wrongly, that Antony, during his recent sojourn in Southern Italy, tr...
On 1 January 42 BC, the Senate posthumously recognized Julius Caesar as a divinity of the Roman stat...
S. Litovchenko. The Armenian Embassy of Publius Clodius In his letters, Cicero says that in the fir...
Cicero continues to blast Antony for his conduct in Southern Italy. His attack is three-pronged: a b...