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CATULUS , the name of a distinguished See also: family of See also: ancient See also: Rome
of the gens Lutatia
.
The following are its most important
I
.
GAITS LUTATIUS CATULUS, See also: Roman See also: commander during the First Punic War, See also: consul 242' B.C
.
He was sent with a See also: fleet of 200 See also: ships to Sicilian See also: waters, and almost without opposition occupied the harbours of Lilybaeum and Drepanum
.
A hurriedly equipped fleet sent out from See also: Carthage under See also: Hanno was intercepted by the praetor Publi us See also: Valerius Falto and totally defeated (See also: battle of the Aegates Islands, See also: March to, 241)
.
Catulus, who had been wounded at Drepanum, took no
See also: part in the operations, but on his return to Rome was accorded the honour of a See also: triumph, which against his will he shared with Valerius
.
(See PUNIC See also: WARS: First, ad fin.)
.
2
.
See also: QUINTUS LUTATIUS CATULUS, Roman general and consul with See also: Marius in 102 B.C
.
In the war against the See also: Cimbri and Teutones he was sent to defend the passage of the See also: Alps but found himself compelled to retreat over the Po, his troops having been reduced to a See also: state of panic (see MARIUS, See also: GAIUs)
.
In See also: lot the Cimbri were defeated on the Raudine plain, near Vercellae, by the See also: united armies of Catulus and Marius
.
The chief honour being ascribed to Marius, Catulus became his bitter opponent
.
He sided with Sulla in theSee also: civil war, was included in the proscription See also: list of 87, and when Marius declined to See also: pardon him, committed suicide
.
He was distinguished as an orator, poet and See also: prose writer, and was well versed in See also: Greek literature
.
He is said to have written the See also: history of his consul-See also: ship and the Cimbrian War after the manner of See also: Xenophon; two epigrams by him have been preserved, one on Roscius the celebrated actor (See also: Cicero, De Nat
.
Deorum, i
.
28), the other of an erotic character, imitated from See also: Callimachus (See also: Gellius xix
.
9)
.
He was a See also: man of See also: great See also: wealth, which he spent in beautifying Rome
.
Two buildings were known as " Monumenta Catuli ": the See also: temple of See also: Fortuna hujusce diei, to commemorate the See also: day of Vercellae, and the Porticus Catuli, built from the sale of the Cimbrian spoils
.
See Plutarch, Marius, Sulla; See also: Appian, B.C. i
.
74; Veil
.
Pat. ii
.
21; Florus iii
.
21; Val . Max. vi . 3, ix . 13; Cicero, De Oratore, iii, 3 . 8, Brutus, 35 . 3 . QUINTUS LUTATIUS CATULUS (C . I20—61 B.C.), sometimes called Capitolinus, son of the above, consul in 102 . He inherited hisSee also: father's hatred of Marius, and was a consistent though moderate supporter of the aristocracy
.
In 78 he was consul with See also: Marcus Aemilius See also: Lepidus, who after the See also: death of Sulla proposed the overthrow of his constitution, the re-establishment of the distribution of grain, the recall of the banished, and other democratic See also: measures
.
Catulus vigorously opposed this, and a temporary compromise was effected
.
But Lepidus, having levied troops in his province of Transalpine See also: Gaul, returned to Rome at the See also: head of an army
.
Catulus defeated him at the Mulvian See also: bridge and near See also: Cosa in See also: Etruria, and Lepidus made his escape to See also: Sardinia, where he died soon afterwards
.
In 67 and 66 Catulus unsuccessfully opposed, as prejudicial to constitutional freedom, the Gabinian 'and Manilian See also: laws, which conferred See also: special See also: powers upon See also: Pompey (q.v.)
.
He consistently opposed Caesar, whom he endeavoured to implicate in the Catilinarian conspiracy
.
Caesar, in return, accused him of embezzling public See also: money during the reconstruction of the temple on the Capitol, and proposed to obliterate his name from the inscription and deprive him of the office of See also: commissioner for its restoration
.
Catulus's supporters rallied round him, and Caesar dropped the See also: charge
.
Catulus was the last princeps senatus of republican times; he held the office of censor also, but soon resigned, being unable to agree with his colleague See also: Licinius Crassus
.
Although not a man of great abilities, Catulus exercised considerable influence through his See also: political consistency and his undoubted solicitude for the welfare of the state
.
See Sallust, Catilina, 35
.
49; Dio Cassius See also: xxxvi
.
13; Plutarch, Crassus; Suetonius, Caesar, 15
.
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