July 26, 2014

GAIUS ASINIUS POLLIO (47 BC)

Roman orator, poet and historian who wrote a contemporary history that, although lost, provided much of the material for Appian and Plutarch.

Pollio moved in the literary circle of Catullus and entered public life in 56 BC.
In 54 BC he impeached unsuccessfully the tribune C. Cato incurring Pompey´s displeasure.

In the Civil War he joined Caesar at the Rubicon and campaigned in Africa with Curio and (49-45 BC) in Greece, Africa, and Spain with Caesar for whom he held a praetorian command in Spain gainst Sextus Pompey (44 BC).

On Caesar´s death he followed Antony for whom he governed Cisalpine Gaul.
There he was friendly with Virgil and in distributing land to veterans saved the poet´s property from confiscation.

He stood aloof in the Perusine War but held his army firmly in Antony´s interests and shared in the negotiations leading to the pact of Brundisium between Antony and Octavian in 40 BC.
In that year he was consul and Virgil addressed his Fourth Eclogue to him.

In 39 Pollio subdued the Parthini an Illyrian people.

From the booty he built the first public library in Rome in the Atrium Libertatis which he restored.
With full honours he then retired form public life.

Unwilling to join Antony in the east, hoping for nothing from Octavian, he took no part in the Actium campaign (31) and subsequently maintained a position of republican dignity and independence.
He gave hospitality to the rhetorician Timagenes when the latter was in disgrace with Augustus.
This was the main period of his activity as an advocate and he devoted himself to the support of literature, organizing public recitations.

Pollio was a distinguished orator combining according to the Tacitus and Seneca, careful composition and dry Atticist elegance in strict presentation of his argument.
His style displeased Ciceronian critics and his speeches are lost.
As a poet he was accepted by Catullus, Helvius Cinna and Virgil.
He also wrote tragedies which Virgil and Horacle praised but he ceased to write serious verse when he turned to history shortly after 35.

His Historiae (History of the Civil Wars) covered the period from 60 probably to 42.
That is from the First Triumvirate to Philippi the period in which the Roman republic fell.

A stern critic of men and style he corrected Caesar, attacked Cicero, praised Brutus and reprimanded Sallust for archaism and Livy for Patavinitas (probably Provincialism).

Above all, he defended Roman libertas under the principatus of Augustus.

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