Page:Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto volume 2 Haines 1920.djvu/342

 Atrides, see Agamemnon

Atta, a writer of Roman comedies, notable for knowledge of women's language, I. 5

Attica, men of Attica and their thyme of Hymettus, I. 305; Marathon and Cephisia, demes of, II. 295, 7

Atticus, a transcriber of Cicero's works, I. 169

Aundius Victorinus, Gaius, see Victorinus

Augustus (Octavianus), nephew and successor of Julius Caesar and husband of Livia, II. 11, 137; his eloquence (residua elegantia saecuJi), II. 137 f.; his clemency, II. 319

Aulus Gellius, see Gellius

Aurelia (regio), F. bound for, I. 177

Aurelius Opellius, see Opellius

Autrico (m2 for aut Tiro), copyist of Cicero's works, I. 167, 168

Avernus, mentioned in margin of Cod. Ambr. 86, I. 98n.

Avidius Cassius, see Cassius

Baburiana, letter of F. to Arrius Antoninus about her, II. 189

Babylon, its destruction mooted by Alexander's successors, II. 111

Bacchus, defender (cognitor) of dithyrambs, II. 66; vine-bound thyrsus of, II. 85; (Liber) in favour of night, II. 15; called Brisaeus at Smyrna, II. 295

Baecola, a town in Spain m2 Cod. Ambr. 62, I. 168n.

Baiae, a resort on the coast of Campania, Marcus there, I. 93; steaming grottoes of, I. 87; mentioned in the margin of Cod. Ambr. 86

Balbus, Cornelius, apocryphal letter to, II. 313

Balcia Tauri, eastern part of range, words added by ma in Cod. Ambr. 260, II. 214n.

Barbus (?), mi Cod. Ambr. 62, for Balbus, I. 168n.

Bassaeus Rufus, praef. praet. (168-177) under Marcus, referred to by Cassius? II. 293; apocryphal letter of M. to, II. 3ll_

Bassianus, fiayi(TTpiavb<; Ttov fleitof o-4>iKia>i>, in apocryphal letter of Marcus, II. 301

Bithynians, speech of F. for, II. 89, 91, 99

Britanni, defeat of Hadrian's troops by, II. 23; war in Britain under Pius, II. 251

Brutus, M. Junius, the murderer of Caesar, his book (De Virtute?) sent to Cicero for correction, delights M., I. 101

Caecilius, a eunuch, II. 317

Caccilius, procurator in Asia, in apocrvphal letter of Marcus. II. 299

Caecilius, the corrector of the Codex, I., 174n.

Caecilius Statius, predecessor of Terence in Comedy, quoted by M. (incolumi inscientia), I. 142; chooses out his words, I. 5; commemoramentum, I. 56; incursim, II. 86

Caelius (or Coelius) Antipater, L., a jurist and historian contemporary with Gracchus, preferred by Hadrian to Sallust (Spart. Vit. Hadr. 16, § 6), wrote verbis singulis, II. 48;? M. reads <ex Coolio, I. 300; extract from, (or the poet Coelius), I. 19

Caelius Rufus, M., an orator, defended by Cicero pro Caelio, II. 158; see also, possibly, I. 19

Caelius Optatus, letter of F. to, recommending Saturninus, II. 240

Caesar, a title of the Emperor designate (e.g. Marcus Caesar) but also used of the reigning emperor (e.g., I. 126), II. 255; the duties of a Caesar, II. 58

Caesar, Gaius Julius, foe and lover of Cleopatra, u. 11; wrote military works and two careful books De Analogia (see note I. 29) in Gaul during his campaigns, II. 29, 265, 257; his eloquence 326