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See also: Roman orator and advocate
.
At the age of nineteen he made his first speech at the See also: bar, and shortly afterwards successfully defended Nicomedes III. of See also: Bithynia, one of See also: Rome's dependants in the See also: East, who had been deprived of his See also: throne by his See also: brother
.
From that See also: time his reputation as an advocate was established
.
As the son-in-See also: law of Q
.
Lutatius See also: Catulus he was attached to the aristocratic party
.
During Sulla's ascendancy the courts of law were under the control of the senate, the See also: judges being themselves senators
.
To this circumstance perhaps, as well as to his own merits, Hortensius may have been indebted for much of his success
.
Many of his clients were the See also: governors of provinces which they were accused of having plundered
.
Such men were sure to find themselves brought before a friendly, not to say a corrupt, tribunal, and Hortensius, according to See also: Cicero (Div. in Caecil
.
7), was not ashamed to avail himself of this See also: advantage
.
Having served during two See also: campaigns (9o—89) in the Social War, he became quaestor in 81, See also: aedile in 75, praetor in 72, and See also: consul in 6o
.
In the See also: year before his consulship he came into collision with Cicero in the See also: case of See also: Verres, and from that time his supremacy at the bar was lost
.
After 63 Cicero was himself See also: drawn towards the party to which Hortensius belonged
.
Consequently, in See also: political cases, the two men were often engaged on the same See also: side (e.g. in defence of See also: Rabirius, See also: Murena, Publius Cornelius Sulla, and See also: Milo)
.
After See also: Pompey's return from the East in 61, Hortensius withdrew from public See also: life and devoted himself to his profession
.
In 5o, the year of his See also: death, he successfully defended Appius See also: Claudius Pulcher when accused of treason and corrupt practices by P
.
Cornelius See also: Dolabella, afterwards Cicero's son-in-law
.
Hortensius's speeches are not extant
.
His oratory, according to Cicero, was of the See also: Asiatic See also: style, a florid rhetoric, better to hear than to read
.
He had a wonderfully tenacious memory (Cicero, Brutus, 88, 95), and could retain every single point in his opponent's See also: argument
.
His See also: action was highly artificial, and his manner of folding his toga was noted by tragic actors of the See also: day (See also: Macrobius, Sat. iii
.
13
.
4)
.
He also possessed a See also: fine musical See also: voice, which he could skilfully command
.
The vast See also: wealth he had accumulated he spent on splendid villas, parks, See also: fish-ponds and costly entertainments
.
He was the first to introduce peacocks as a table delicacy at Rome
.
He was a See also: great buyer of See also: wine, pictures and See also: works of See also: art
.
He wrote a See also: treatise on general questions of oratory, erotic poems (Ovid, Tristia, ii
.
441), and an Annales, which gained him considerable reputation as an historian (Veil
.
Pat. ii
.
16
.
3)
.
His daughter HORTENSIA was also a successful orator
.
In 42 she spoke against the imposition of a See also: special tax on wealthy Roman matrons with such success that See also: part of it was remitted (Quint
.
Instit. i. r
.
6; Val
.
Max. viii . 3 . 3) . In addition to Cicero (passim), see Dio Cassius xxxviii. i6, xxxix . 37;See also: Pliny, Nat
.
Hist. ix
.
81, x
.
23, xiv
.
17, See also: xxxv
.
40; Varro, R.R. iii
.
13
.
17
.
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