Page:Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto volume 2 Haines 1920.djvu/359

 Tasurcus, an Inferior actor, contrasted with Roscius, II. 67

Taurus range, see Balcia, II. 214n.

Telamon, father of Ajax, words to his sons going out to the Trojan war (Ennius), II. 21

Terence, extracts from (? Fronto's), I. 80n.; copied, I. 298; see also Ehrenthal, Quaestiones Frontonianae, pp. 36 f.; Klussmann, Emendationes Frontonianae, p. 78; Schwierczina, Frontoniana, p. 22 f.; and Hertz, Renaissance und Rococo, note 77; rem omnem dilapidare, I. 158; conviciis proteiare, I. 62; ubique phaleris utendum, I. 106; suramus = intimus, II. 220, 234; fac periculum, I. 286, 290

Tereus, a Thracian king, type of criminality, II. 65

Teucer, arrow deflected by Apollo, I. 133

Themistocles, F. asked by M. to befriend him in Asia, I. 235

Theodorus, a rhetorician of Gadara, his emxtipyv-v-Ta, i. 39; II. 1O1n.; II. 109n.

Theophrastus (MS. Thucydides), Aristotle's successor, quotation as to lovers being blind, I. 109

Theopompus, rhetorician and historian (circa 333 B.C.), reputed the most eloquent of the Greeks, I. 143

Thersites, II. 59

Thrasymachus, a sophist, entrapped by Socrates (Plato's Republic and Phaedrus), I. 103

Thucydides, the memorable letter of Nicias, II. 143; his fifty years war (I. 89 ff.)„ II. 197; see also under Theophrastus

Thurselius, reading of m 1 Cod. Ambr. 62, I. 168 Tiber, canalised by an Etruscan (?), II. Ill

Tiberius, his library at Rome in the Palatium, i. 179; the notorious, II. 139

Tibur (Tivoli), temperature at nightfall moderate, I. 143

Tigris, crossed by Trajan, II. 201; ferry dues on, fixed by Trajan, II. 215

Timocrates, mentioned as a philosopher, II. 50

Tiro, reviser of Ciceronian MSS., I. 167

Titius, a poet, probably the Septimius Titius of Hor. Ep. i. 3, 9-14 (cp. Od. II. 6), I. 167

Titianus, on the Frontonians, Intr. xli

Trajan, delighted in actors, II. 9; war in Dacia, II. 121; hard drinker, II. 9; his general defeated by Parthians, II. 203; campaigns against Parthia, II. 205; knew his soldiers by name, ibid.; grudged his generals honours, II. 207; murder of Parthian King Parthamasiris at Rome, II. 213; provinces annexed by him surrendered by Hadrian, II. 207; ambitious of glory, II. 213; popularity in peace, II. 217; equally illustrious in peace and war, II. 215; mentioned in apocryphal letter, II. 315; fond of actors, II. 215

Tranquillus, not Suetonius, I. 307

Trebanius, coin of Gens Trebania (see Eckhel, v. 326), II. 113

Trinacria (Sicily), I. 92

Tullius, see Cicero

Turbo, Marcius, praef. praet. under Hadrian, friend of Censorius, I. 257

Tusculum, Cato's birthplace, I. 43; sunny mornings at, I. 143

Tuscus (?), II. 110

Ulpius Eurycles, curator of Ephesus, letter of M. to, II. 290

Ulpius, mentioned in a letter to Junius Maximus as friend of F., possibly Ulpius Marcellus, the jurist, II. 245

Ulysses, the "labyrinth" of, I. 93; eloquence of (Homer, II. in. 112); II. 59; in Pacuvius (Gellius), H. 267

Umbria, home of Victorinus, i. 215 343