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QUINTUS AURELIUS SYMMACHUS (C. 345–410)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 286 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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QUINTUS AURELIUS
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SYMMACHUS (C. 345–410)
  , son of the last-named, was one of the most brilliant representatives in public
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life and in the literature of 4th-century paganism in Rome . He was educated in Gaul, and, having discharged the functions of praetor and quaestor, rose to higher offices, and in 373 was
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pro-consul of Africa (for his official career see C.I.L. vi . 1699) . His public dignities, which included that of
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pontifex maximus, his
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great
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wealth and high character, added to his reputation for eloquence, marked him out as the champion of the pagan senate against the
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measures which the Christian emperors directed against the old state religion of Rome . In 382 he was banished from Rome by Gratian for his protest against the removal of the statue and altar of Victory from the senate-house (see Gibbon, Decline and Fall, ch . 28), and in 384, when he was prefect of the city, he addressed to Valentinian II. a letter praying for the restoration of these symbols . This is the most interesting of his
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literary remains, and called forth two replies from St Ambrose, as well as a poetical refutation from Prudentius . After this
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Symmachus was involved in the
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rebellion of Maximus, but obtained his pardon from
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Theodosius, and appears to have continued in public life up to his
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death . In 391 he was Consul ordinarius . His honesty, both in public and in private affairs, and his amiability made him very popular . The only reproach that could be made against this last valiant defender of paganism is a certain aristocratic conservativeness, and an exaggerated love of the past . As his letters do not extend beyond the
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year 402, he probably died soon after that date .

Of his writings we possess: (I) Panegyrics, written in his youth in a very artificial

style, two on Valentinian I. and one on the youthful Gratian . (2) Nine books of Epistles, and two from the tenth
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book, published after his death by his son . The model followed by the writer is Pliny the Younger, and from a reference in the Saturnalia of Macrobius (bk. v., i . § 7), in which Symmachus is introduced as one of the interlocutors, it appears that his contemporaries deemed him second to none of the ancients in the " rich and florid " style . We find them vapid and tedious . (3) Fragments of Complimentary Orations, five from a
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palimpsest (also containing the Panegyrics), of which
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part is at Milan and part in the Vatican, discovered by Mai, who published the Milan fragments in 1815, the
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Roman in his Scriptorum veterum nova collectio, vol. i . (1825), and the whole in 1846 . (4) The Relations, which contain an interesting account of public life in Rome, composed for the emperor . In these official writings (reports as prefect of the city), Symmachus is not preoccupied by style and becomes sometimes eloquent; especially so in his remarkable report on the altar of Victory . His son,
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QUINTUS
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FABIUS MEMMIUS SYMMACHUS, was pro-consul of Africa (415) and prefect of the city (418) . He was probably the
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father of the Symmachus who was consul in 446, and whose son was QUINTUS AURELIUS MEMMIUS SYMMACHUS (d . 525), patrician, one of the most cultivated noblemen of Rome of the beginning of the 6th century, editor (e.g. of Macrobius, Somnium Scipionis) and historian, and especially celebrated for his
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building activity .

He was consul in 485 .

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Theodoric charged him with the restoration of the theatre of
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Pompey . He was father-in-law of Boetius (q.v.), and was involved in his
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fate, being disgraced and finally put to death by Theodoric in 525 . See E . Morin, Etudes sur Symmaque (1847); G . Boissier, La Fin du paganisme (1891), vol. ii.; T . R . Glover, Life and Letters in the
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Fourth Century (1901); S . Dill, Roman Society in the last century of the Western
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Empire (1898) ; T . Hodgkin, Italy and her Invaders, (188o–1899) vol. iii . (on the Boetius " conspiracy ") ; M . Schanz, Geschickte der romischen Litteratur (1904), vol. iv. pt .

I ; and

Teuffel-Schwabe, Hist. of Roman Literature (Eng. trans., 1900), pp . 425, 477, 4 . All
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editions. of the
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works of Symmachus are now superseded by that of O . Seeck in Monumenta Germaniae historica . Auctores antiquissimi (1883), vi . I, with introductions on his life, works and chronology, and a genealogical table of the
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family .

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