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PISO , the name of a distinguished See also: Roman plebeian See also: family of the Calpurnian gens which continued in existence till the end of the 2nd century A.D
.
Nearly fifty of its members were prominent in Roman See also: history, but the following deserve particular mention.See also: LUCIUS See also: CALPURNIUS PISO CAESONINUS, Roman statesman,
was the See also: father-in-See also: law of See also: Julius Caesar
.
In 58 B.C., when See also: consul, he and his colleague Aulus See also: Gabinius entered into a compact with P
.
See also: Clodius, with the See also: object of getting See also: Cicero out of the way
.
Psio's See also: reward was the province of See also: Macedonia, which he administered from 57 to the beginning of 55, when he was recalled, perhaps in consequence of the violent attack made upon him by Cicero in the senate in his speech De provinciis consularibus
.
On his return Piso addressed the senate in his defence, and Cicero replied with the coarse and exaggerated invective known as In Pisonem
.
Piso issued a pamphlet by way of rejoinder, and there the See also: matter dropped, Cicero being afraid to bring the father-in-law of Caesar to trial
.
At the outbreak of the See also: civil war Piso offered his services as mediator, but when Caesar marched upon See also: Rome he See also: left the city by way of protest
.
He did not, however, definitely declare for See also: Pompey, but remained neutral, without forfeiting the respect of Caesar
.
After the See also: murder of the dictator he insisted on the provisions of his will being strictly carried out, and for a See also: time opposed Antony
.
Subsequently, however, he became one of his supporters, and is mentioned as taking See also: part in an See also: embassy to Antony's See also: camp at Mutina with the object of bringing about a reconciliation
.
1
.
Lucius CALPURNIUS Piso, surnamed Frugi (the worthy), Roman statesman and historian, was tribune in 149 B.C . He is known chiefly for his lex Calpurnia repetundarum, which brought about theSee also: system of quaestiones per petuae and a new phase of criminal procedure
.
As praetor (136) and consul (133) Piso fought against the slaves in See also: Sicily
.
He energetically opposed Gains See also: Gracchus,especially inconnexion'withhis corn law
.
See ANNALISTS; C
.
Cichorius in Pauly-Wissowa's Real encyclopadie (1897), vol. iii., pt
.
1; H
.
See also: Peter, Historicorum romanorum reliquiae (187o), vol. i.; Teuffel-See also: Schwabe, Hist. of Roman Lit
.
(Eng. trans.), § 132, 4
.
On the lex Calpurnia, Corpus inscr. latinarum, i., No
.
198, with See also: Mommsen's commentary; A
.
H
.
J . Greenidge, Hist. of Rome, 133–104 B.C . (1904) . 2 . GNAEUS CALPURNIUS Piso, Roman statesman, was consul in 7 B.C., and subsequently governor ofSee also: Spain and proconsul of See also: Africa
.
In A.D
.
17 Tiberius appointed him governor of See also: Syria, with secret instructions to thwart Germanicus, to whom the eastern provinces had been assigned
.
The indignation of the See also: people at the See also: death of Germanicus, and the suspicion that Piso had poisoned him, forced Tiberius to See also: order an investigation
.
Piso committed suicide, though it was rumoured that Tiberius, fearing incriminating disclosures, had put him to death
.
See H
.
Schiller, Geschichle der romischen Kaiserzeit (1883), vol. i
.
3
.
See also: GAIUS CALPURNIUS Piso, Roman statesman, orator and See also: patron of literature in the 1st century A.D., is known chiefly for his share in the conspiracy of A.D
.
65 against See also: Nero (q.v.)
.
He was one of the most popular men in Rome, partly for his skill in See also: poetry and See also: music, partly for his love of luxury and generosity
.
It is probably the last-named who is referred to by Ca4purnius Siculus under the name of Meliboeus, and he is the subject of the See also: panegyric De laude Pisonis
.
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