Page:Marcus Aurelius (Haines 1916).djvu/443

INDEX OF PROPER NAMES, ETC.


 * Camillus, founder of the New Rome, 33
 * Capreae, an island off Campania, XII. 27. The supposed scene of Tiberius's debaucheries (Tacitus)
 * Carnuntum, II. 17 ad. fin. The headquarters of Marcus in the German war (171–3,, Eutrop. vin. 13) near Vienna, now Haimburg
 * Carpophorus, the Fruit-bearer,i.e., the Earth (or Demeter), vi. 43 Catullinus, Fabius, 27. Perhaps the consul of 130
 * Catulus, Cinna, a Stoic philosopher, 13
 * Cato, of Utica, 14; (?) the Censor,  33, cp. Fronto, ad Caes.,  13; Uni M. Porcio me dedicavi atque despondi atque delegavi (Marcus aged 23)
 * Cecrops, city of, (Athens) quotation from Aristophanes, 23
 * Celer, Caninius, a Greek rhetorician and Hadrian's secretary, 25; and one of the teachers of Marcus, see Capit.,  4
 * Chabrias, a freedman or favourite of Hadrian, 37
 * Chaldaeans (astrologers), 3
 * Charax, unknown, mentioned for his acuteness, 25
 * Christians, 3. See Index I.
 * Chrysippus, establisher of Stoicism, named with Socrates and Epictetus, 19; on the function of ribald lines in a play,  42 (quoted with disapproval); simile of cylinder (Aul. Cell.,  2, 1), x. 33, § 2
 * Cithaeron, (Soph. Oed. Rex, 1390), probably quoted from Epictetus 6
 * Cleanthes, a possible reference to his great hymn to Zeus, 28
 * Clotho, the Weaver of the Web of Fate, 34
 * Crates, a Theban Cynic, of caustic wit, quoted for a remark on Xenocrates (perhaps on ), 13; cp. under Monimus
 * Crito, friend of Socrates and Xenophon, 31
 * Croesus, type of departed grandeur, 27


 * Demetrius, the Platonist (for whom, and not to his credit, see Lucian, Calumn. 16), 25. But Arethas refers to this passage in a note on Lucian, De Salt. 63, where the Demetrius spoken of is the Cynic, the friend of Thrasea (cp. also, Lucian, Demon. 3; Adv. Ind. 19). Consequently  would seem to be an error for ; of Phalerum. the distinguished orator, statesman, and philosopher of Athens. circa 300,  29, but Schenkl obelizes
 * Democrates, a Pythagorean philosopher, from whom is taken (so Prof. Schenkl in loc.) the quotation, "The Universe is transformation, and Life is opinion," 3
 * Democritus of Abdera, death, by lice, 3; "do not many things,"  24; "all things by law,"  31; atoms,  31 (see also under "Epicurus")
 * Dentatus (Wyse's emendation for ), conqueror of the Samnites and Pyrrhus, 33
 * Diogenes, the Cynic, mentioned with Heraclitus and Socrates, 3, as writer of plays,  6
 * Diognetus, 6. Some connect him with the recipient of the Christian Epistle to Diognetus
 * Dion, 14, generally taken to be the Syracusan Dion. But Dion of Prusa was a truer philosopher and better man, and he matches better with Thrasea and Helvidius. Moreover, Arethas (?) twice quotes Marcus in notes to Dio (see under "Arethas," Index )
 * Diotimus, a freedman or favourite of Hadrian, 25, 37
 * Domitius (Dometius), 13. The Domitii were maternal (adoptive) ancestors of Marcus

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