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MARCELLUS

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 685 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARCELLUS  , a

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Roman plebeian
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family belonging to the Claudian gens . Its most distinguished members were the following: I .
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MARCUS CLAUDIUS MARCELLUS (C . 268—208 B.C.), one of the Roman generals during the Second Punic War and conqueror of Syracuse . He first served against Hamilcar in Sicily . In his first consulship (222) he was engaged, with Cn . Cornelius Scipio as colleague, in war against the Insubrian Gauls, and won the spolia opima for the third and last time in Roman
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history by slaying their chief Viridomarus or Virdumarus (Polybius ii . 34; Propertius v. lo, 39) . In 216, after the defeat at Cannae, he took command of the remnant of the army at Canusium, and although he was unable to prevent Capua going over to Hannibal, he saved
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Nola and
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southern
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Campania . In 214 he was in Sicily as consul at the time of the revolt of Syracuse; he stormed Leontini and besieged Syracuse, but the skill of Archimedes repelled his attacks . After a two years' siege he gradually forced his way into the city and took it in the face of strong Punic reinforcements . He spared the lives of the inhabitants, but carried off their
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art treasures to Rome, the first instance of a practice afterwards
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common .

Consul again in 210, he took Salapia in

Apulia, which had revolted to Hannibal, by help of the Roman party there, and put to
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death the Numidian garrison . Proconsul in 209, he attacked Hannibal near Venusia, and after a desperate
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battle retired to that.
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town; he was accused of
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bad generalship, and had to leave the army to defend himself in Rome . In his last consulship (208), he and his colleague, while reconnoitring near Venusia, were unexpectedly attacked, and Marcellus was killed . His successes have been exaggerated by Livy, but the name often given to him, the " sword of Rome," was well deserved . Livy
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xxiii . 14—17, 41—46;
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xxiv . 27–32, 35-39;
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xxv . 5—7, 23—31;
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xxvi . 26, 29-32;
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xxvii . 1—5, 21—28; Polybius viii . 5—9, x . 32; Appian, Hannib .

50;

Florus ii . 6 . 2 . M . CLAUDIUS MARCELLUS, an inveterate opponent of
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Julius Caesar . During his consulship (51 B.C.) he proposed to remove Caesar from his army in March 49, but this decision was delayed by
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Pompey's irresolution and the skilful opposition of the tribune C . Curio (see CAESAR, JULIUS) . In
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January 49 he tried to put off declaring war against Caesar till an army could be got ready, but his advice was not taken . When Pompey
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left Italy, Marcus and his
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brother
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Gaius followed, while his cousin withdrew to
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Liternum . After Pharsalus M . Marcellus retired to Mytilene, where he practised rhetoric and studied philosophy . In 46 his cousin and the senate successfully appealed to Caesar to pardon him, and Marcellus reluctantly consented to return .

On this occasion

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Cicero's' speech
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Pro Marcello was delivered . Marcellus left for Italy, but was murdered in May by one of his own attendants, P . Magius Chilo, in the Peiraeus . Marcellus was a thorough aristocrat . He was an eloquent
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speaker (Cicero, Brutus, 71), and a man of
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firm character, although not
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free from avarice . See Cicero, Ad fam. iv . 4, 7, Io, and Ad Att. v . 11 (ed . Tyrrell and
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Purser) ; Caesar, B . C. i . 2 ; Suetonius, Caesar, 29; G._Boissier, Cicero and his Friends (Eng. trans., 1897) . 3 .

M . CLAUDIUS MARCELLUS (C . 43—23 B.C.), son of C . Marcellus and

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Octavia,
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sister of Augustus . In 25 he was adopted by the emperor and married to his daughter Julia . This seemed ed to mark him out as the heir to the
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throne, but Augustus,- when attacked by a serious illness, gave his signet to M . Vipsanius Agrippa . In 23 Marcellus, then curule aedile, died at Baiae . Livia was suspected of having poisoned him to get the
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empire for her son Tiberius .
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Great hopes had been built on the youth, and he was celebrated by many writers, especially by Virgil in a famous passage (Aeneid, vi . 86o) . He was buried in the Campus Martius, and Augustus himself pronounced the funeral oration .

The Theatrum Marcelli (remains of which can still be seen) was afterwards dedicated in his

honour . Horace, Odes, i . 12; Propertius iii . 18; Dio Cassius liii . 28, 30; Tacitus, Annals, ii . 41; Suetonius, Augustus, 63 ; Vell . Pat. ii . 93 .

End of Article: MARCELLUS
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