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Browsing named entities in M. Tullius Cicero, Orations, Three orations on the Agrarian law, the four against Catiline, the orations for Rabirius, Murena, Sylla, Archias, Flaccus, Scaurus, etc. (ed. C. D. Yonge).
Found 1,239 total hits in 312 results.
France (France) (search for this): text Font., chapter 14
Ancona (Italy) (search for this): text Clu., chapter 14
What more? Did not your father, O Oppianicus, beyond all question, murder your grandmother
Dinea, whose heir you are? who, when he had brought to her his own physician, a well-tried man
and often victorious, (by whose means indeed he had slain many of his enemies,) exclaimed that
she positively would not be attended by that man, through whose attention she had lost all her
friends. Then immediately he goes to a man of Ancona, Lucius Clodius, a travelling quack, who had come by accident at that
time to Larinum, and arranges with him for four
hundred sesterces, as was shown at the time by his account-books. Lucius Clodius, being a man
in a hurry, as he had many more market towns to visit, did the business off-hand, as soon as
he was introduced; he took the woman off with the first draught he gave her, and did not stay
at Larinum a moment afterwards. When this Dinea was making her will, Oppianicus, who was her son-in-law,
Larinum (Italy) (search for this): text Clu., chapter 14
Rome (Italy) (search for this): text Clu., chapter 14
Herculaneum (Italy) (search for this): text Agr., chapter 14
Minturnae (Italy) (search for this): text Agr., chapter 14
Rome (Italy) (search for this): text Font., chapter 15
Pontus (search for this): text Man., chapter 15
Asia (search for this): text Man., chapter 15
Sicily (Italy) (search for this): text Clu., chapter 15
There were some officers at Larinum called
Martiales, the public ministers of Mars, and consecrated to that god by the old institutions
and religious ceremonies of the people of Larinum. And as there was a great number of them, and as, just as there were many
slaves of Venus in Sicily, these also at Larinum were reckoned part of the household of Mars, on a
sudden Oppianicus began to urge on their behalf, that they were all free men, and Roman
citizens. The senators of Larinum and all the citizens of that municipality were very
indignant at this. Accordingly they requested Habitus to undertake the cause and to maintain
the public rights of the city. Habitus, although he had entirely retired from public life,
still, out of regard to the place and the antiquity of his family, and because he thought that
he was born not for his own advantage only, but also for that of his fellow-citizens, and of
his other friends, he was unw